How To Practice The Virtue Of Temperance In Stoicism

How To Practice The Virtue Of Temperance In Stoicism

They say sitting is the new smoking. But how can this be? Our bodies are highly evolved survival machines. We emerged as the dominant species on this planet not in small part because we can run long distances. We can maneuver through and manipulate our environment in sophisticated ways. Surely our bodies can handle sitting in a chair. Of course, the act of resting our asses on a seat is not harmful. It’s only harmful when we sit for eight, ten, even fourteen hours a day. This is excessive. This is the opposite of the virtue of temperance.

 

What is temperance in Stoicism?

 

The ancient Stoics gave us their 4 Stoic Virtues, one of which is temperance. The Stoics describe temperance as moderation and active resistance against anything that is harmful in excess. Essentially, temperance is balance. 

 

I’d like to take a deep dive into the virtue of temperance, because finding balance in life is a central pursuit of this blog. In this article, I’ll attempt to share practical tips and strategies for applying temperance to areas of life that I feel are susceptible to harmful excess: decision making, time management, and work life balance.

 

What did the Stoics say about temperance? 

 

In a passage of Meditations about dealing with other peoples’ shamelessness, Marcus Aurelius wrote: 

 

“What qualities has nature given us to counter that defect? As an antidote to unkindness it gave us kindness. And other qualities to balance other flaws.” 

 

He’s saying that there are always two sides of every coin. Exercising the virtue of temperance can be as simple as looking to the opposite of what’s excessive. Is there too much inactivity in your life because of your office job? The simple antidote is the opposite: exercise. Do you work too hard? The simple antidote is true, mindful rest. 

 

Related article: Ambitious Habit Energy & Finding Rest Anywhere

 

Applying Temperance To Time Management

How to practice the virtue of temperance 

 

Two birds with one stone: practicing temperance with time management

 

Our mortality is both the source of life’s greatest fears and life’s greatest beauty. Our limited time on earth is a defining human characteristic that we all share. We must not squander our time with cheap and frivolous entertainment, nor can we allow the sharp edge of productivity to shave it all away. 

 

This is an incredibly difficult balance to strike—one that requires temperance. 

 

Capitalism is an effective testing and training ground for one’s self-actualization, but we all know there are more important areas of life that cannot be measured by market value: connection with others, quiet time to reflect, creativity without a desired material outcome, etc.

 

One strategy that I use in an attempt to marry my desire to be successful with my desire to live a mindful and healthy life is finding activities that support both goals simultaneously. I used to love playing organized sports, even as an adult. I also used to love lifting weights at the gym. As my work responsibilities grew (less free time) and my cost of living increased suddenly (greater expenses) when I moved to a very expensive city, I had to make changes to mitigate these losses. I also noticed that my office job was creating an imbalance in terms of excessive time spent indoors. I used to run occasionally, but just as a sort of necessary chore of maintaining cardiovascular fitness.

 

Stack habits and behaviors to serve multiple purposes

 

Here, I found myself with the following requirements at the same time: recreational competition, physical exercise, saving money, and more fresh air. So, I decided to become a trail runner to meet all of these needs simultaneously. I realized that by signing up for some tough long-distance trail races, I was creating a fun challenge for myself in a competitive sport, while saving money and gaining more time outdoors by saying goodbye to the gym. 

Memento mori life tracker

The Mindful Stoic blog is another example of this ‘killing two birds’ methodology, albeit one that I had not considered when I started the blog. 

 

The company I work for places a very high value on writing skills. When we have new ideas, we always develop and present them in writing. Although the content and style of writing is very different between this blog and my day job, I am most likely practicing the written word a lot more than my colleagues who don’t own and operate a blog as a hobby. 

 

Also, writing about mindfulness and Stoicism helps me keep these practices top of mind. Writing about these practices not only provides me with a creative outlet, but it’s also helped them really take root in my life. 

 

The ‘killing-two-birds method’ tenets

 

  1. The activity should meet or support multiple needs or objectives at one time. 
  2. The activity must be done for the love of the activity itself. 
  3. If there is a measurable outcome, you should still ‘win’ even if the outcome is not successful.
  4. The activity should allow you to get better at something you can use in other areas of life. 

 

Designing our leisure activities and hobbies in this way allows us to practice temperance when it comes to managing our finite time and balancing ambition with mindful living. 

 

Sure, with enough discipline and habit building, we could spend all of our waking hours working, studying and striving toward some material end. But, there’s more to being human than producing and getting rewarded for it on the market. So, finding healthy hobbies that we truly love doing for the sake of it, but with a little flavor of useful support in other areas of life, is one way to maximize our time. 

Applying Temperance To Decision Making

How to practice the virtue of temperance with decision making 

 

A simple technique for practicing temperance regarding difficult decisions is to quickly identify at least one alternative. For any decision that involves internal conflict, try to think of at least one better alternative early in the process, leaving you with at least two options. 

 

This technique is especially helpful when it comes to cravings or decisions motivated by fatigue or passivity. Here’s a hypothetical situation to help illustrate: after a long day of work, you discover that food in the fridge is in low supply. The idea of going to the nearest fast food restaurant strikes you, but you also know it is not a healthy option. Now is the moment to quickly identify an alternative. You could also go to the grocery store and pick up something quick and easy to prepare. The grocery store option will be cheaper and healthier. 

 

Quickly identifying an alternative does something significant. Instead of allowing your tired mind to wrestle with the sole option of satisfying fast food, your brain now has another outlet. Urges and temptations are most powerful when there are no other options presented, or when the other options don’t satisfy the underlying need. This approach allows us to practice temperance when it comes to all kinds of conflicting decisions. 

 

There is always a middle path

 

Here are a few more examples of identifying alternatives to practice temperance with decision making:

 

I’m incredibly tired today, so exercising is probably not a good idea.

Some stretching or yoga will do the trick.

 

These t-shirts have a buy-2-get-1-free deal.

One is cheaper than two, and I really only need one.

 

I wonder if I should cut carbs entirely from my diet, but I’ve found conflicting research.

Cutting down on carbs by 40-50% is a sensible compromise.

 

I’ve been presented with an interesting investment idea, but I’m worried I’ll lose my money.

Define your risk tolerance, i.e. how much money you can tolerate losing, and invest only that much. 

 

I should eat less sugar.

Make a rule for yourself. Decide that you simply will not eat products with more than 20g of sugar per 100g serving. 

 

The powerful aftereffect that accompanies this technique is that by choosing the more positive alternative, sometimes we gain a second wind and end up snowballing with the good behavior. To take the above exercise example, you may successfully negotiate some stretching rather than sitting on the couch, and you may end up feeling great doing the stretching to the point that you regain the desire to exercise more rigorously. 

At the very least, you will feel good about having done something, leaving you in a better mood and therefore in a better mindset for the following day. To take the above investing example, you have a zero percent chance of profiting by doing nothing, but by taking a calculated risk, you can reap the rewards if there is a positive return and only suffer a tolerable loss if the return is negative. 

Practicing the virtue of temperance with work-life balance

 

Work life balance has become somewhat of a cliché topic. But, an idea only becomes a cliché if it’s repeated in the culture. If it’s repeated in the culture, then there’s undoubtedly some truth or value behind it. Finding balance in all areas of life is a central theme of this blog, and work life balance is certainly a major part of that. 

 

We all know someone who suffers in life because they let fear or plain laziness prevent them from working and they struggle to meet their needs. 

 

Conversely, we all know someone who works too hard and then suffers in their relationships or health. We must practice the virtue of temperance by balancing between excessive work and excessive passivity. 

 

Work is not just about monetary gain, either. When done in correct proportions and environments, work can provide a sense of pride, challenges that lead to personal growth, and some mental stimulus that keeps our brains healthy. 

 

Here are some practices I find helpful for striking a balance between work and mindful living: 

 

Work life balance tenets

 

  1. You must accept the fact that you will never finish. There will always be work left undone at the end of the day. You need to be able to embrace this and shut off at the day’s end. Related article: How To Switch Off After Work.
  2. Be wary of technology and turn it off. My grandfather was an incredibly hard worker. But, he never had to contend with email at any hour in any place. 
  3. Don’t compare yourself to others and don’t place value on working long hours. Strive to be more efficient than your competition and don’t worry if it appears as if you’re working less. 
  4. Out of sight out of mind. Place work related objects in a drawer, closet or separate room at the end of the day. 
  5. Acknowledge that a job that’s 100% enjoyable is practically non-existent. The grass is not always greener on the other side, so always attempt to find the good in what you do, accept and overcome the bad before making major changes. 
  6. Bring structure and organization to your life outside of work. You have project trackers, schedules, and monthly reviews for your work. But, do you have such mechanisms for your family life? We often say ‘I should spend more time with family’, but how often do we apply our organizational and time management skills to ensure that quality time actually happens? Related article: Your Core Values: Turning Good Intentions Into Good Results
  7. Be acutely aware of the distinction between rest and work. When you begin working, say to yourself ‘now I am working’. When you finish work, say to yourself ‘now I am resting’. All too often we transition from work to rest mindlessly, allowing our work energy and stress to follow us when it should be left where it belongs. Mindfulness is incredibly simple yet powerful. 

 

Final thoughts

Temperance, moderation, and balance are elusive. You can find philosophy and religion attempting to guide people to a middle path all throughout history. Any time we see consistency across cultures and throughout history when it comes to ideas, it’s a good indication that the idea is worth exploring. 

 

I’ve attempted here to write practically about practicing the Stoic virtue of temperance with time management, decision making, and work life balance. I chose these three areas because I feel they lend themselves to the magnetism, often created by culture, that pulls us away from the middle path. But, these are not the only areas in which the virtue of temperance is needed. 

Look for any excess in your life and find ways of applying the virtue of temperance to counterbalance it. Take some time to identify these areas of excess, ideally on paper in a journal, and come up with your own strategies and techniques. The world is a chaotic and evolving place to navigate, but the ability to walk a straight line, never losing sight of the middle path, is certainly an advantage that we should afford to ourselves. 

 

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How To Manage Expectations About Life

How To Manage Expectations About Life

Are you where you want to be in life today? Does your bar for success and happiness continue to rise just a bit further out of reach with each passing year? We all love to ‘should on ourselves’. We all wrestle with expectations; whether it’s in comparison with distant daydreams, current projects, or the digital masterpiece of other people’s lives as presented on social media. There are cultural expectations like marital status and raising a family. There are economic ones like the magnetic pull to earn more money or to own a home. Even when we earn a decent living, we want more. Happiness is perhaps the most elusive of pursuits that falls into our scope of expectation. So how do we manage expectations about life? Everything is relative, but if you don’t know where you’ve placed your bar, you don’t know how high you need to jump.

 

We’ll explore ideas like the notion that happiness is a lousy thing to chase. We’ll examine the effect that social media is having on our sense of self-worth. If you’re like me, you have dozens of little ‘shoulds’ running around your head all the time. Don’t worry; we’ll examine that, too. Believing you can improve your position is a good thing. We just need to learn how to harness the guiding potential of those shoulds. This is something I will attempt to lay out clearly in the form of a practical exercise. Through all of this, we’ll embed everything about how to manage expectations about life in the bedrock of the present moment. Being here, now, mindfully is the most potent way to quell not only comparative anxiety but also to get to where you want to go more effectively. 

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Manage expectations

Manage expectations specifically 

 

Imagine if your boss came to you and asked you about your future salary expectations and you gave the following one-dimensional answer: ‘more’. It’s not very specific, to say the least, and it would likely result in a short and unproductive conversation. In this context, we see that being unspecific about important things is ridiculous. Yet we do this constantly with the notion of happiness. We know we want it, but we can rarely define it in concrete terms. The best way to get a grasp on what happiness means to you is to work it out on paper. Take your time, adjust it as you evolve as a person, but most importantly, break the concept of happiness down into specific and measurable elements.

 

Try this brainstorming exercise to help you define happiness more specifically. Grab a pen and paper and do a flowing brain dump of the things that make you feel happy. Here’s what that looked like for me: family, freedom, the right amount of challenge, adventure, cats, friendship, good food.

Memento mori life tracker

A practical exercise to help manage expectations

 

Now that you have a list of broad elements, elaborate on each one with simple “When I can…” statements. These statements should describe the condition upon which you enable the associated feeling of happiness. For example, “when I can fly to see my family three times a year, I feel happy”. Similarly, “when I have enough money to pay for new education to secure a career change, I feel a sense of freedom”. The critical part of this elaboration exercise is that it takes an abstract concept like freedom and specifies it into something measurable. I can measure how much money it costs and how much vacation time I need to visit my family three times a year. I can measure how much it will cost to attend a certain educational program and how much savings I would need to sustain myself during the program.

 

If you’ve not already paused to try this simple exercise on paper, I encourage you to do it now. If you have, you may be thinking ‘this is overwhelming because I’m so far off from some of my ‘when I can conditions’. I hear you. I’m far from achieving some of my own happiness conditions as well. However, the empowering feature of this exercise is not to realize that we’ve made it and the work is done. The purpose of the exercise is to have a more specific answer than ‘more’ when it comes to managing expectations. There’s nothing worse than chasing an undefined ‘more’. When we sit down and calculate what we need in order to align our current reality with our expectations, we can work towards them more effectively. If we can measure it, we can solve it.  

Gratitude and awareness of the present moment are the bedrock

We’ve established that working toward something specific is better than entering the rat race blindfolded. But this still doesn’t solve the sense of relative inferiority or failure, because striving implies that we are not there yet. The means of relaxing this tension between where you are now and where you want to be is by grounding yourself in the present moment and constantly taking stock of everything in your life that inspires gratitude. A major theme of The Mindful Stoic blog is that striving and contentment can coexist. Admittedly, there is an inherent tension between wanting more and being more, but I believe it can be a healthy one. 

 

Planning is such a crucial element when it comes to striking this balance between expectation and reality.

“If you do not change direction, you may end up where you are heading.” – Lao Tzu

Manage expectations for life

Once you’ve established the measurable elements that enable conditions for happiness, the next step is to draft plans that will help you get there. If you are not making enough money, you may need an intelligent and realistic plan for a career change or a side hustle. If you need companionship, you need a plan to expose yourself to more valuable social situations, such as special interest clubs or sports. 

 

Plans change

 

There are two critical aspects to consider when drafting plans. First, they must be in written format and they must contain time-bound actions. Include in your plans realistic and achievable actions that are likely to move you closer to your goals and set dates by which you must complete them. Secondly, plans change. Set reminders in your calendar, perhaps twice a year, to revisit your plans. You evolve and grow as a person. Your expectations and goals may change depending on life circumstances. Abandoning a plan or goal because it is no longer relevant is much more productive than sticking to it for discipline’s sake. The idea here, again, is to bring structure to how you manage expectations about life.  

 

The final point I would like to make about how to manage expectations more effectively is to stop comparing yourself to others. We see more communication (recently with documentary films such as The Social Dilemma) on the fact that social media has amplified comparative anxiety. There is the organic factor embedded in the fact that we all tend to present only the best versions of ourselves on social media. We only post pictures and stories about our exotic vacations, our expensive nights out, or our disciplined workout routines. We know people do this, yet it has the effect when scrolling through our feeds that leads to the subconscious conclusion that everyone else is amazing all the time. 

 

Then, there is the artificial intelligence factor, which we don’t fully understand. Social media companies invest billions of dollars and use intimate information about us to feed algorithms designed to keep us scrolling.

Be specific in your comparisons 

 

The Stoics and many Eastern philosophers prescribed that we should not compare ourselves to others but that we compare ourselves to ourselves. 

 

“The only one you should compare yourself to is you. Your mission is to become better today than you were yesterday.” – John C. Maxwell

 

This is more than a simple epithet. When you break it down and think about it, the only logical reference point for improvement is your past performance. If I am training for a marathon, I cannot fixate on the previous times of other competitors in my area. Perhaps they are much taller than I am, have been doing it for much longer, or perhaps even had been taking performance-enhancing drugs.

Moreover, I have no insight into their training regimen and therefore no actual data on the process by which they transformed themselves from a non-marathon runner into a marathon runner. Conversely, I do have all the data on my own progress. I can measure how far I ran yesterday or last week. Again, the idea here is to be specific and measurable. The only way you can assess your performance with the highest quality of data is if that data comes from your life. 

 

Learning how to manage expectations for yourself is a win-win situation. We know that living far below your ideals causes psychological distress. It is equally true that having undefined or needlessly increasing expectations traps us on a hamster wheel. It is therefore well worth our time to sit down and figure out exactly what we need to feel fulfilled. Even if we fall short in this pursuit, we will be better off than if we had not attempted. 

Embrace the tension

Try the above-mentioned exercise to break down and analyze the conditions that will promote what you define as happiness. Make sure that these conditions are measurable and then draft a plan to guide you. Stay away from social media or at least be honest with yourself that it can lead to inevitable and unhealthy comparisons to others. 

 

The preeminent point I will make to conclude this post is that you need to enjoy the process. Mindfulness is the most effective way of working toward a future condition while enjoying the present moment. Coupled with a lighthearted enjoyment of the process, we should take stock of everything for which we are grateful at least once a day. Manifesting gratitude is the best way to realize how far we’ve come. If we always have our heads buried in the sand working towards ‘more’, we fail to realize our past and current success. This is crucial because not only do you gain a great sense of contentment and satisfaction from the current state of our lives, but also you receive important feedback to let you know if you’re on the right path.

 

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