Friday’s Quote

“Do you then ponder how the supreme of human evils, the surest mark of the base and cowardly, is not death, but the fear of death?” ~ Epictetus

Leave it to the Ancient Greek Stoic Philosophers to use death to inspire. Epictetus continued that thought by begging his students to “discipline yourself against such fear, direct all your thinking, exercises, and reading this way — and you will know the only path to human freedom.” 

This type of thinking by the Stoics was called “Memento Mori” or “Remember you must die.” It was never meant to be morbid—actually just the opposite. It was meant to galvanize life, and to create priority and meaning. They treated each day as a precious gift, and reminded themselves constantly to not waste any time on the trivial and vain.

Unless you know something I don’t know, we only get one shot at this thing called life. What do you want to accomplish? What must get done? With whom? When? How? Where? Why? “Memento Mori,” to me, means do not waste another minute! Be brave. Take the first step…or maybe the first 10 steps. Winner takes all—and you’re the winner. Let’s GO! We got this! And thank you, Epictetus, we needed that kick in the pants!

With Gratitude,
Beth

You May Also Like…

Motivational Monday!

Motivational Monday!

It's a new year and I am sure you have made a lot of resolutions and goals to make 2025 your best year ever—and you...

Motivational Monday!

Motivational Monday!

For as long as I can remember, I have been afraid of heights. I stood on the high dive at Princeton Pool for what...

Motivational Monday!

Motivational Monday!

Saturday night, Doug and I decided to try a local restaurant, the Fork Hill Kitchen, in Union City, New Jersey, and we...

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *