Matthew Arnold, the essayist, remarked in 1863, that in Marcus we find a man who held the highest and most powerful station in the world-and the universal verdict of the people around him was that he proved himself worthy of it. It is worth remembering that Marcus is one of history’s most exemplary leaders and one worth emulating in our own lives. So, who was Marcus? A Roman emperor from 161 to 180 A.D., Marcus practiced Stoicism and wrote about his own Stoic practice in his journals. Read it, it is practical philosophy embodied. You cannot read this book and not come away with a phrase or a line that will be helpful to you the next time you are in trouble. It is imminently readable and perfectly accessible. Trained in Stoic philosophy, Marcus Aurelius stopped almost every night to practice a series of spiritual exercises-reminders designed to make him humble, patient, empathetic, generous, and strong in the face of whatever he was dealing with. It is the private thoughts of the world’s most powerful man giving advice to himself on how to make good on the responsibilities and obligations of his positions. Meditationsis perhaps the only document of its kind ever made.
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