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#每天來點斯多葛(21)

In a culture obsessed with curating a perfect life, this piece from The Daily Stoic offers a jarringly beautiful counter-narrative: that the "bad" notes in your life are not errors to be edited out, but essential components of the masterpiece. Ryan Holiday, channeling Michel de Montaigne, argues that true maturity isn't about avoiding dissonance, but mastering the art of harmonizing it. For the busy professional facing inevitable setbacks, this isn't just comfort; it's a strategic framework for resilience.

The Music of Necessity

Holiday begins by reframing the human condition through a musical metaphor borrowed from Montaigne. He writes, "Life is like the harmony of the world, composed of opposing things — various tones, sweet, harsh, sharp, flat, lively, and solemn." This is a deliberate pivot away from the modern obsession with optimization. Instead of viewing life as a project to be streamlined, Holiday suggests we view it as a composition where every element has a role.

#每天來點斯多葛(21)

The author's core argument rests on the idea that we cannot cherry-pick our experiences. "A musician who only likes some of the tones — what can he do? He must know how to use all of them, blending them together," Holiday writes. This is a powerful visual for anyone feeling stuck in a career crisis or personal loss. The piece suggests that the instinct to eliminate the "harsh" or "flat" tones is actually a misunderstanding of how harmony works. By insisting that "our attitude toward good and bad things must be the same, because good and bad things share the same nature as our lives," Holiday forces a radical acceptance of reality.

"True wisdom and maturity lie not in being good at pursuing success and avoiding failure, but in recognizing the value of all life experiences and learning to blend them into one's own 'life symphony'."

This framing is effective because it removes the moral judgment from suffering. It doesn't say pain is good; it says pain is necessary for the whole to function. However, a counterargument worth considering is that this perspective can sometimes veer into toxic positivity, potentially minimizing the very real need to fight against systemic injustice or preventable harm. Not all "harsh tones" are meant to be harmonized; some are meant to be silenced.

The Stoic Filter

Holiday then bridges Montaigne's humanism with the stricter logic of Stoicism, noting that while modern books often conflate the two, the core mechanism is the same. He points out that "adversity itself has no good or bad; it is our evaluation and reaction to them that determines whether they are beneficial or harmful." This distinction is the engine of the entire piece. It shifts the locus of control entirely inward.

The author acknowledges the difficulty of this mental shift, admitting, "I think to be able to do this requires a person to have a more comprehensive, more inclusive perspective, and a higher degree of psychological and emotional maturity." This is a crucial admission. Holiday isn't selling a quick fix. He is describing a lifelong discipline. The text reminds readers that "the challenges and dilemmas of life are no longer 'bad things' to be avoided or eliminated, but indispensable elements that constitute 'harmony' and 'beauty'."

Critics might argue that this internal locus of control ignores the external realities that constrain our choices. If the "harsh tone" is a policy decision that destroys a livelihood, simply reframing it as part of a symphony may feel like a surrender to the status quo. Yet, Holiday's point remains that our response is the only variable we truly own.

Bottom Line

The strongest part of Holiday's argument is its refusal to treat suffering as a glitch in the system; instead, it treats suffering as a feature of the human experience that demands a skilled conductor. Its vulnerability lies in the gap between intellectual acceptance and emotional reality, a gap that requires more than just a quote to bridge. For the listener, the takeaway is clear: stop trying to mute the noise, and start learning how to play the whole song.

Sources

#每天來點斯多葛(21)

by Ryan Holiday · The Daily Stoic · Read full article

#每天來點斯多葛(21).

By 一個斯多葛主義者的日常課題

今天的思考題是:「我們必須學會忍受無法避免的事。人生就像這個世界的和諧狀態,是由彼此對立的事物所組成——包括各種不同的音調,如甜美的、刺耳的、尖銳的、平淡的、活潑的和莊嚴的。

只喜愛其中一些音調的音樂家——他能做什麼呢?他必須知道如何利用所有的音調,將它們融合在一起。我們對好事和壞事的態度也必須如此,因為好事與壞事和我們的人生具有相同的本質。」

這一段話是來自於蒙田的著作,他將人生比作一首包含各種音調的音樂作品。這樣的比喻不僅強調人生的多樣性和複雜性,而且也突出了接受和適應的重要性。

在這個視角下,人生的挑戰和困境不再是需要避免或消除的「壞事」,而是構成「和諧」和「美」的不可或缺的元素。

我看許多現代講斯多葛的書籍,都會提到蒙田的觀點與斯多葛哲學有著某種相似性,例如這段話是在談如何看待逆境和挑戰方面。

就像斯多葛哲學也提倡用理性和內在的美德來面對生活的困境,強調逆境本身沒有好壞之分,而是我們對它們的評價和反應決定了其對我們有益還是有害。(這個觀點反覆強調到讓我很難忘記XD)

而蒙田的這種「音樂性」的人生觀也提醒我們,真正的智慧和成熟不僅僅是善於追求成功和避免失敗,而是能夠認識到生活中所有經歷的價值,並學會將它們融入自己的「人生樂章」中。

但是,我覺得要能做到這樣,是需要這個人有一種更全面、更包容的視角,以及更高度的心理和情感成熟才行。