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DeersCanTalk

DeersCanTalk

Member
May 25, 2026
10
I don't know if anyone remembers but a few years back (like 2-3) stoicism became a trend on social media, mostly because of Andrew Tate and all that. I really wonder how much damage this has done to some people. From my understanding what was being pushed onto people was that you should bottle up your feelings, do things you don't want to do (ice bath trend that followed was sooo cringe) and that you basically shouldn't express yourself, basically making yourself a person that just works or "grinds" and ignores what their instinct and soul is trying tell them.

We are lucky to be able to express ourselves, why hold it back?

Now i haven't read Meditations or any "stoic" literature myself but i feel like this tiktok variant is completely contradictory to how (most) romans and greeks really lived and that they really just took this and plastered it over they're bs "work work work" lifestyle to try to make it cool and "ancient". I like to see stoicism as doing whatever you want and accepting that you may not be accepted.

I'm completely convinced that this was another psyop to try to make people stray further away from who they really are and making them lose their personality, didn't Andrew Tate get exposed as a freemason anyway? lmao

What do you guys think about stoicism? Do you have an interpretation of stoicism? Do you practice it and has it helped you?
 
H

Hvergelmir

Elementalist
May 5, 2024
862
To me stoicism is about separating oneself from the environment - to focus on your own actions and your impact, rather than oppression and limitations.
I also think your interpretation aligns well with that: "I like to see stoicism as doing whatever you want and accepting that you may not be accepted."
I think it's a good counter balance to the trend of justifying feelings by finding sources of oppression.

I agree that Tate helped popularizing it, and that it's been dumbed down. Behind the veil of bullshit I think there's quite a bit of wisdom to be found, though.
Sadly characters like Tate are needed to get the attention of modern audiences. "Become a tough successful man in 5 easy steps", sells much beter that "a 3 hour, thorough comparative analysis of stoic philosophy".

Do you practice it and has it helped you?
Yes. I routinely use stoic or stoic-adjacent principles to push through discomfort in a pursuit of personal integrity and truth.
I don't think stoicism alone have all the answers though. I perceive it more as a tool to resist coercion and peer pressure, and maintain self confidence in the face of opposition.
I'm completely convinced that this was another psyop...
In stoic fashion I think one ought to take what one want from stoicism. The important thing is what You do with it. Tates intents, secret societies, and psyops, are irrelevant, if you stand up for yourself and do what you want.
(Also, from what I've seen of freemason philosophy, it aligns poorly with Tate's attitudes.)
 
SoLowHollow48

SoLowHollow48

崩れてゆく前に
Nov 24, 2025
262
I wrote a think piece around stoicism in college. Stoicism came from men who have been struck by fate too many times and yet, they moved forward anyway. Marcus Aurelius was an emperor who lost many of his children in battle at the time and Zeno of Cyprus had just lost his trading boat in the ocean. These men could just say "fuck it" and give up but they didn't.

I've found that some people interpret stoicism as giving up because it means to not give a fuck about your surroundings anymore and just be nonchalant but that shit's just plain wrong. To be stoic is to accept that you can't fix everything and so you fix what you can. You can lose your children, but you still have your wife, brothers, and friends who still have your back. You focus on what you can do at that moment. It's a very grounding perspective.
 

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