
A Guide to the Good Life
A Guide to the Good Life argues that Stoicism can be rebuilt as a modern life strategy through negative visualization, the dichotomy of control, voluntary discomfort, and the cosmic view from above.

A Guide to the Good Life argues that Stoicism can be rebuilt as a modern life strategy through negative visualization, the dichotomy of control, voluntary discomfort, and the cosmic view from above.

Discourses and Enchiridion argues that our judgments, intentions, and desires are the only things truly in our power, and that freedom comes from training this distinction relentlessly.

Letters from a Stoic distills 124 letters into specific Stoic advice on time, friendship, anger, fear, and death, urging us to practice philosophy as a daily discipline.

Meditations is a Roman emperor’s private journal of Stoic practice that teaches you to focus on what is in your control, accept what is not, and act according to virtue in every moment.

The Daily Stoic presents 366 brief Stoic meditations, one per day, grouped around perception, action, and will to turn philosophy into a lived, daily practice.

The Obstacle Is the Way argues that three Stoic moves – perception, action, and will – can turn any impediment into the path of progress and growth.