June 17, 2026
We should accustom ourselves to simple and inexpensive food, taken for the sake of nourishment and not for pleasure.
Musonius Rufus was a Roman Stoic philosopher who taught in the first century, during the reign of Nero, a time when elite Roman culture celebrated excess as a sign of status. He was exiled more than once for speaking plainly about how people actually lived versus how they claimed to live. He directed this at students who were educated and comfortable, which made it a harder truth to hear. The point was not asceticism for its own sake but clarity about what food, and by extension most things, are actually for.
Reflection
Think about one daily habit you maintain more for appearance or comfort than for any real purpose. What would you lose if you cut it back to only what it actually does for you?
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