The Stoic Handbook by Jon Brooks

Jon Brooks

<p>Modern practical breakdowns of the best ideas in ancient Stoicism. </p>

  • 11 minutes 38 seconds
    When the World Feels Unjust (A Stoic Response)

    Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/Vzg67EtqNK8

    Most people hear "focus on what you can control" and think Stoicism means stop caring about everything else. That's not what it means — and it might be one of the most misunderstood ideas in the entire philosophy.
    It starts with a Marcus Aurelius line that most people skip: "You can commit injustice by doing nothing." This isn't an invitation to detach. It's a call to show up.

    Three Stoic approaches for responding to injustice without losing yourself: premeditatio malorum (pre-rehearsal of what's coming), redirecting anger into one concrete act of kindness, and a daily question — "what is within my power right now?"

    Practical Stoicism for anyone who cares about the world and refuses to look away.

    This video was inspired by a question from a member of our Stoic Vault community.

    30 March 2026, 2:00 pm
  • 13 minutes 55 seconds
    Discipline Is a Skill, Not a Trait (5 Stoic Moves)

    Start here: If you want to build a consistent Stoic practice — not just listen to one — I made a free 7-day challenge. One short audio lesson per day, one practice to try. No fluff. stoicchallenge.co

    ---

    I used to think discipline was a character trait — like height or eye colour. Some people had it. I didn't. That story is comfortable. And it's complete rubbish.

    The Stoics didn't treat discipline as willpower. They treated it as a set of five trainable skills that get stronger with reps and weaker with neglect. In this episode I walk through each one, using some of the best lines Marcus Aurelius, Epictetus, Seneca, and Musonius Rufus ever wrote on the subject.

    The five moves: decide before the moment arrives, do before you discuss, guard what you let in, train in small frictions, and pause before you react. Each one is something you can practise starting tonight.

    24 March 2026, 7:00 am
  • 18 minutes 17 seconds
    91% of Goals Fail — A Stoic Philosopher Explained Why 2,000 Years Ago

    Start here: If you want to build a consistent Stoic practice — not just listen to one — I made a free 7-day challenge. One short audio lesson per day, one practice to try. No fluff. stoicchallenge.co

    ---

    Most resolutions fail because they're built wrong — not because you lack willpower. Epictetus figured out why 2,000 years ago.

    In this video I break down three tests from Stoic philosophy that expose whether your goal is real or just fantasy dressed up with good intentions: Control, Cost, and Consistency. Then I take six of the most common resolutions — get fit, save money, get promoted, be happier, quit social media, read more — and show you exactly how each one fails and what the Stoic fix looks like.

    At the end there's a simple scoring system you can use right now to test whether your goals will actually stick.

    16 March 2026, 4:00 pm
  • 3 minutes 51 seconds
    Stoic Morning Energy Boost: 5 Minutes To Wake Up Ready

    Some mornings you don't need calm — you need to wake up. This 5-minute Stoic practice is built for the mornings when your body is out of bed but your mind hasn't followed.

    You'll move through five rounds of power breathing to flood your system with energy, then a short visualisation of yourself moving through the day ahead with purpose and presence. No easing in. No extended relaxation. Just a sharp, deliberate start.

    The anchor is a line from Seneca: we don't lack time — we waste it. This practice makes sure you don't waste the first five minutes.

    Stand if you can. Press play before your phone gets a chance to set the tone.

    For best results, use this on sluggish mornings for 30 days. It works fastest when it becomes the thing you reach for before caffeine.

    14 March 2026, 7:00 pm
  • 8 minutes 40 seconds
    Your Opinions Aren't Observations — They're Demands

    Start here: If you want to build a consistent Stoic practice — not just listen to one — I made a free 7-day challenge. One short audio lesson per day, one practice to try. No fluff. stoicchallenge.co

    ---

    You form hundreds of opinions a day. About the news, about your colleagues, about the person in front of you in the queue. They feel automatic — like seeing. But they're not observations. They're tiny laws you're writing inside your own skull. And then you have to enforce them.

    Marcus Aurelius buried one of his best lines in Book Six of the Meditations: "It is in your power to have no opinion about a thing — and not to be disturbed in your soul." In this episode I unpack what that actually means in practice — not suppressing your reactions, but noticing the gap between an impression and a judgment, and choosing not to legislate.

    You'll walk away with one question to ask yourself this week when an opinion forms: Does this need legislating?

    10 March 2026, 7:00 pm
  • 10 minutes 18 seconds
    "Remove Desire Entirely" — What Epictetus Actually Meant

    Go deeper in the Stoic Vault: stoicvault.com

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    You read that line in the Discourses and your brain goes straight to cravings. Appetites. The stuff you're ashamed of. But that's not what Epictetus meant — and the real meaning is more useful than any advice about willpower.

    In this episode I break down the Greek word orexis, explain why it has nothing to do with food or your phone, and walk through the three levels most people get stuck on: the demand, the indifference, and the preference with reservation. Only one of them is Stoicism.

    I also share a personal story about driving to pick up my son on a difficult morning — and how I caught myself staking my entire peace on outcomes I couldn't control.

    Includes a practical exercise you can try today: one question to ask yourself the next time a plan falls through.

    3 March 2026, 7:00 pm
  • 8 minutes 54 seconds
    Marcus Aurelius Morning Meditation: Face The Day With Stoic Calm

    Start here: If you want to build a consistent Stoic practice — not just listen to one — I made a free 7-day challenge. One short audio lesson per day, one practice to try. No fluff. stoicchallenge.co

    ────

    You know the feeling — the alarm goes off and the day is already rushing at you. The emails, the conversations you're not ready for, the low-grade dread of what might go wrong.

    Marcus Aurelius knew it too. Every morning, before the weight of an empire landed on him, he sat quietly and rehearsed what was coming — the difficult people, the setbacks, the tests of character. Not with anxiety. With calm preparation. And something shifted.

    This guided morning meditation follows his method. You'll walk through the day ahead with honest curiosity, rehearse your response to the hard moments before they arrive, and choose a single word — one quality — to carry as your anchor when things go sideways.

    No forced positivity. No wishful thinking. Just the same preparation a Roman Emperor used to face each day with steady clarity.

    27 February 2026, 1:00 pm
  • 9 minutes 36 seconds
    Stoic Indifferents Explained: How to Want Without Suffering

    Start here: If you want to build a consistent Stoic practice — not just listen to one — I made a free 7-day challenge. One short audio lesson per day, one practice to try. No fluff. stoicchallenge.co

    ---

    If only virtue is good, why does anything else matter? 

    Why go to the gym, build a career, or plan for the future?

    This is the question that confused me for about a year of reading Stoic texts — and the answer is one of the most useful distinctions in the entire philosophy.

    In this episode I walk through two ancient Greek concepts — axia eklektikē (selective value) and apaxia (disvalue) — that explain how Stoics can prefer things without being wrecked by them. You'll learn why "indifferent" doesn't mean "don't care," how to tell the difference between rational preference and emotional attachment, and a simple question you can ask yourself today when anxiety creeps in.

    If you've ever wondered how Stoicism avoids becoming cold or directionless, this is the episode.

    24 February 2026, 7:00 pm
  • 13 minutes 34 seconds
    Own What's Yours: The Dichotomy of Control (From The Vault)

    This episode is a full lesson from one of the premium courses inside The Stoic Vault — my membership community for people who practise Stoicism, not just read about it.

    The lesson comes from the course Stoic Morning Routine: Start Calm and Strong. It covers the dichotomy of control — the single most useful idea in Stoic philosophy, and the one that changes everything when it actually lands.

    You'll take one real concern from your day and sort it into two columns: what's mine and what isn't. Outcomes, other people's reactions, delays — not mine. Preparation, breath, tone, when I choose to begin — mine. Then you'll pick one controllable action that matters today and state it clearly.

    This isn't theory. You'll feel the difference in the body when you stop carrying what was never yours.

    If this resonates, the full course and 9 others are inside The Stoic Vault, alongside guided meditations, weekly practices, live coaching, and a quiet community of 100+ members doing the work.

    Join at stoicvault.com

    16 February 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 10 minutes 20 seconds
    The Stoic Vault: What I Built and Why

    Start here: If you want to build a consistent Stoic practice — not just listen to one — I made a free 7-day challenge. One short audio lesson per day, one practice to try. No fluff. stoicchallenge.co

    ---

    About two years ago, I hit a wall.

    I'd been teaching Stoicism for years. Writing about it. Making podcasts about it. And I was still losing my temper. Still spiraling over emails. Still lying awake replaying conversations.

    I knew the philosophy cold. And I couldn't apply it when it mattered.

    That's when I started asking: what would actually help me? Not more books. Not more content. Something with structure. Accountability. Personal guidance. A quiet place to train.

    I couldn't find it. So I built it.

    In this episode, I'm introducing The Stoic Vault—a training ground for people who've read the books but struggle to apply them. I'll walk you through what's inside, who it's for, and how to join as a founding member.

    Learn more: stoicvault.com


    2 February 2026, 5:00 pm
  • 12 minutes 7 seconds
    What the Stoics Actually Meant by Practice

    Start here: If you want to build a consistent Stoic practice — not just listen to one — I made a free 7-day challenge. One short audio lesson per day, one practice to try. No fluff. stoicchallenge.co

    ---

    Epictetus didn't write books. He ran a school where students lived for years, practicing responses to insults, hardship, and loss. Marcus Aurelius wrote the Meditations as a daily training regimen—the same ideas, over and over, drilling them into his reflexes. Seneca reviewed his day every single night for decades.

    The Stoics weren't building a library. They were building a gymnasium for the soul.

    Somewhere along the way, we forgot this. We turned philosophy into content to consume. We read about the exercises instead of doing them.

    In this episode, I explore what Stoic training actually looked like, why our modern approach would baffle the ancients, and what practice looks like in daily life—not in theory, but in the specific exercises you can start today.

    Plus: I've been working on something to make this kind of structured practice easier. I'll share more soon.

    29 January 2026, 2:00 pm
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