Y11W42VC The Stoic practice that survives the data
The Stoics were Roman philosophers who developed specific practices for dealing with difficulty, disappointment, and the limits of control. For centuries their ideas were dormant. In the last few decades they've been rediscovered, repackaged, and extensively popularised — sometimes well, sometimes as inspirational wallpaper. This week's article examines what Stoic practice actually is, what the research supports, and which parts deserve to survive the popularisation.
Core Vocabulary
dichotomy
/daɪˈkɒt.ə.mi/|di·chot·o·my
noun
A division or contrast between two things that are entirely different.
Word Breakdown: Greek dicha (apart) + temnein (to cut) → literally "cutting into two"
Word family: dichotomous (adj), dichotomise (vb)
Synonyms: division, split, contrast, polarity
Collocations: a sharp dichotomy, false dichotomy, a clear dichotomy between
Example: The Stoic dichotomy of control — what you can and cannot change — is one of the tradition's most durable insights.
voluntary
/ˈvɒl.ən.tər.i/|vol·un·ta·ry
adjective
Done, given, or acting without being under pressure; freely chosen.
Word Breakdown: Latin voluntarius (of one's own will) → from voluntas (will)
Word family: volunteer (n/vb), voluntarily (adv), involuntary (adj)
Synonyms: deliberate, intentional, self-chosen, uncoerced
Collocations: voluntary discomfort, voluntary action, on a voluntary basis
Example: Voluntary discomfort — deliberately taking cold showers or fasting — was a Stoic technique for building tolerance.
cosmic
/ˈkɒz.mɪk/|cos·mic
adjective
Relating to the universe or cosmos; vast in scale or significance.
Word Breakdown: Greek kosmos (universe, order) + -ikos (adjective suffix)
Word family: cosmos (n), cosmically (adv), cosmological (adj)
Synonyms: universal, infinite, vast, celestial
Collocations: cosmic perspective, cosmic indifference, cosmic scale
Example: The Stoics placed human suffering against a cosmic backdrop, arguing that most worries are trivial on a universal scale.
determinism
/dɪˈtɜː.mɪ.nɪ.z(ə)m/|de·ter·min·ism
noun
The philosophical doctrine that all events are determined by previously existing causes, leaving no room for free will.
Word Breakdown: Latin determinare (to fix limits) + -ism (doctrine suffix)
Word family: deterministic (adj), determinist (n), determine (vb)
Synonyms: fatalism, predetermination, necessity
Collocations: strict determinism, hard determinism, causal determinism
Example: Stoicism is sometimes confused with determinism, but Stoics maintained that virtue and rational choice remain within our control.
suppression
/səˈpreʃ.ən/|sup·pres·sion
noun
The action of forcibly holding back or preventing something, especially an emotion or thought.
Word Breakdown: Latin supprimere (to press under) → sub (under) + premere (to press) + -ion
Word family: suppress (vb), suppressive (adj), suppressor (n)
Synonyms: repression, inhibition, restraint, containment
Collocations: emotional suppression, thought suppression, suppression of feeling
Example: Research shows that emotional suppression — pushing feelings down — tends to backfire, increasing the intensity of what is suppressed.
contemplation
/ˌkɒn.temˈpleɪ.ʃən/|con·tem·pla·tion
noun
Deep reflective thought, often sustained and purposeful.
Word Breakdown: Latin contemplari (to survey, observe) → from con + templum (a marked-out space for observation)
Word family: contemplate (vb), contemplative (adj), contemplatively (adv)
Synonyms: reflection, meditation, pondering, deliberation
Collocations: quiet contemplation, in contemplation of, contemplation of mortality
Example: The Stoic practice of contemplation — pausing to consider what is truly within one's power — is central to the tradition.
equanimity
/ˌek.wəˈnɪm.ɪ.ti/|e·qua·nim·i·ty
noun
Calm composure, especially in difficult situations; mental calmness.
Word Breakdown: Latin aequus (equal) + animus (mind) + -ity → "evenness of mind"
Word family: equanimous (adj)
Synonyms: composure, serenity, calmness, steadiness
Collocations: face with equanimity, maintain equanimity, remarkable equanimity
Example: The Stoics aimed not at suppressing emotion but at cultivating equanimity — a stable composure that is not disturbed by circumstance.
marketed
/ˈmɑː.kɪ.tɪd/|mar·ket·ed
verb (past participle)
Promoted or presented to an audience, often for commercial or popular purposes.
Word Breakdown: market (n/vb) + -ed (past tense/participle suffix)
Word family: market (n/vb), marketing (n), marketer (n)
Synonyms: promoted, packaged, sold, publicised
Collocations: heavily marketed, marketed as, marketed to
Example: Stoicism has been heavily marketed in the self-help industry, often stripped of its philosophical complexity.
Technical Terms
dichotomy of control
/daɪˈkɒtəmi əv kənˈtrəʊl/|di·chot·o·my of con·trol
noun phrase
Stoic distinction between what is and isn't in our power
Synonyms: Stoic control distinction, what-is-up-to-us principle, locus of control discipline
Collocations: apply the dichotomy of control, dichotomy of control teaches, misapply the dichotomy of control
Example: The dichotomy of control — distinguishing what is entirely up to us from what is not — is Epictetus's foundational Stoic principle: the path to tranquillity lies not in changing the world but in directing effort exclusively toward the domain the will actually governs.
negative visualisation
/ˈnɛɡətɪv ˌvɪʒuəlaɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n/|neg·a·tive vi·su·al·i·sa·tion
noun phrase
Stoic practice of imagining loss to increase appreciation
Synonyms: premeditatio malorum, adversity rehearsal, obstacle premeditation
Collocations: practise negative visualisation, negative visualisation counters hedonic adaptation, negative visualisation in Stoicism
Example: Negative visualisation — deliberately imagining the loss of what one values — is the Stoic antidote to hedonic adaptation, designed to restore appreciation for what has been taken for granted by temporarily inhabiting the imagined reality of its absence.
voluntary discomfort
/ˈvɒlənteri dɪsˈkʌmfət/|vol·un·tar·y dis·com·fort
noun phrase
deliberate exposure to hardship to build resilience
Synonyms: intentional hardship, chosen adversity, deliberate discomfort practice
Collocations: practise voluntary discomfort, voluntary discomfort builds resilience, voluntary discomfort in Stoicism
Example: Voluntary discomfort — deliberately choosing experiences of cold, hunger, or effort that are not necessary — trains resilience and reduces fear by demonstrating that what was dreaded is endurable, shrinking the psychological grip of anticipated hardship.
CBT
/ˌsiː biː ˈtiː/|CBT
noun phrase
cognitive-behavioural therapy, which draws significantly on Stoic techniques
Synonyms: cognitive behavioural therapy, cognitive-behavioural approach, structured talking therapy
Collocations: CBT techniques, CBT and Stoicism, apply CBT principles
Example: CBT shares structural features with Stoic philosophy — both treat emotional distress as arising not from events themselves but from beliefs about events, and both offer techniques for identifying and revising the cognitions that produce unnecessary suffering.
premeditatio malorum
/prɛˌmɛdɪˈtɑːtɪəʊ məˈlɔːrəm/|pre·me·di·ta·ti·o ma·lo·rum
noun phrase
premeditation of adversities, the Stoic rehearsal of possible difficulties
Synonyms: premeditation of evils, anticipatory rehearsal of adversity, negative visualisation (Latin)
Collocations: practise premeditatio malorum, premeditatio malorum in Stoic practice, the purpose of premeditatio malorum
Example: Premeditatio malorum — the premeditation of evils — is the Stoic practice of regularly imagining what could go wrong, not to generate anxiety but to remove the terror of surprise and cultivate the equanimity that comes from having already faced the worst in imagination.
Figurative Phrases
roll with the punches
To adapt flexibly to difficulties, setbacks, or unexpected changes without being overwhelmed; to remain functional despite repeated adversity. Drawn from boxing, the phrase captures the Stoic ideal of equanimity in the face of external pressure.
Etymology/Type: idiom from boxing
Synonyms: adapt to difficulties without being overwhelmed, recover from setbacks without losing composure, deal flexibly with whatever comes
Example: Rolling with the punches describes the Stoic ideal of equanimity in practice — not the absence of difficulty but the capacity to absorb adversity without allowing it to disturb the inner citadel that deliberate practice and the dichotomy of control are designed to protect.
take it in stride
To handle a difficulty or challenge calmly, absorbing it without excessive disruption to one's composure or routine. The phrase implies that composure is practised, not accidental — a behavioural expression of Stoic preparation.
Etymology/Type: idiom; not literal stride
Synonyms: handle calmly, manage without being disrupted, absorb without overreacting
Example: Taking adversity in stride is the behavioural expression of having practised the dichotomy of control — the person who has cultivated the Stoic distinction between what is up to them and what is not encounters obstacles with equanimity rather than frustration.
grin and bear it
To endure an unpleasant situation with composure and without complaint, accepting hardship stoically rather than seeking to escape it. The phrase captures a surface version of Stoic acceptance, though genuine equanimity involves more than suppression.
Etymology/Type: idiom; 'grin' figurative
Synonyms: endure something unpleasant without complaint, accept hardship stoically, suffer without expressing distress
Example: Grinning and bearing it in the Stoic tradition is not mere suppression but philosophical acceptance — the recognition that the external event is neither good nor bad, only the judgement one attaches to it, which means the appropriate response is equanimity rather than complaint.
above the fray
Removed from conflict, chaos, or emotional turbulence; maintaining calm detachment from heated disputes or distracting noise. The phrase describes the Stoic ideal of engaging with the world without being destabilised by it.
Etymology/Type: idiom; no literal position
Synonyms: removed from conflict and disturbance, maintaining calm detachment from turmoil, unaffected by surrounding disorder
Example: The Stoic practice of remaining above the fray — engaging with the world fully while maintaining an inner detachment from its outcomes — is what CBT calls cognitive distancing: the capacity to observe one's own reactions without being entirely defined by them.
weather the storm
To endure a difficult period, crisis, or prolonged adversity without abandoning one's course or values, emerging intact on the other side. The phrase implies a combination of patience, resilience, and the expectation that difficulty is temporary.
Etymology/Type: idiom; no literal weather
Synonyms: endure a difficult period, survive hardship without giving up, persist through adversity
Example: Weathering the storm is made possible in the Stoic tradition by premeditatio malorum — the prior rehearsal of difficulty that removes its capacity to surprise and overwhelm, because what has been anticipated can be met with a prepared rather than a reactive mind.
keep a stiff upper lip
To remain composed, stoic, and outwardly unemotional in the face of difficulty, suppressing visible displays of distress. The phrase describes a cultural ideal of emotional restraint that aligns superficially with Stoicism but differs in depth.
Etymology/Type: idiom; no literal lip
Synonyms: show no emotion in the face of difficulty, maintain composure under pressure, not show pain or distress openly
Example: The instruction to keep a stiff upper lip captures the outward dimension of Stoic emotional control — but the philosophical tradition is more interested in the inner transformation that makes emotional equanimity genuine rather than the performed suppression that the phrase sometimes implies.
Confusing Words
dichotomy vs dichotomous
These forms of the same concept serve different grammatical functions — one a noun naming the division, the other an adjective describing something divided.
- dichotomy (noun) — a division into two contrasting and mutually exclusive categories. The dichotomy of control divides all things into those within our power and those outside it. The noun names the structure of the division.
- dichotomous (adjective) — divided into two mutually exclusive categories; of or relating to a dichotomy. A dichotomous variable takes only two values. A dichotomous framework divides its subject into two exclusive options. The adjective modifies nouns.
If you need a noun to name the division itself, use dichotomy. If you need an adjective to describe something as being divided into two exclusive categories, use dichotomous.
voluntary vs volunteer
Both words relate to freely chosen action, but they serve different grammatical functions and describe different things.
- voluntary — done, given, or acting of one's own free will; not compelled. Voluntary discomfort in Stoicism is chosen rather than imposed. Voluntary action is contrasted with compelled action. The word is an adjective describing the nature of an act or action.
- volunteer (noun/verb) — a person who freely offers their services; or the act of freely offering. A volunteer gives their time without payment; to volunteer is to offer oneself for a task. As a noun it describes a person; as a verb it describes the act of offering.
If describing an action as freely chosen rather than compelled, use the adjective voluntary. If referring to a person who freely offers services or the act of making such an offer, use volunteer as noun or verb.
contemplation vs meditation
Both words describe practices of sustained mental focus, but they differ in the tradition they come from and the activity they describe.
- contemplation — sustained, serious thought about a subject; also, in spiritual traditions, a form of non-discursive awareness. Stoic contemplation of what is not within one's control — premeditatio malorum — is a cognitive and imaginative practice. Contemplation implies sustained engagement with a specific content or object.
- meditation — a formal practice of mental training, often involving focus on the breath or a mantra to develop non-reactive awareness. Meditation in the mindfulness tradition cultivates meta-cognitive awareness — the capacity to observe thoughts without being identified with them. The word carries specific technical associations with practice traditions distinct from Stoicism.
If describing sustained cognitive or imaginative engagement with a specific subject or problem, use contemplation. If referring to the formal practice of attention training — breath focus, body scan, mantra — use meditation.
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