June 24, 2026
Lead me, Zeus, and you too, Destiny, wherever you have ordained for me. For I'll follow without shrinking; or if I do not, I shall follow none the less.
Cleanthes wrote this in Athens around the 3rd century BCE, during a period when the Stoic school was still young and politically precarious. He had taken over from Zeno as head of the Stoa and spent decades teaching a philosophy that few powerful people wanted to hear: that control is mostly an illusion, and fighting that fact is the source of most human suffering. What makes this line remarkable is its honesty. He does not pretend to be perfectly at peace. He admits he might resist, then says it will not matter — reality will carry him forward either way. That gap between our resistance and the outcome is exactly where acceptance lives, and it is as relevant now as it was then.
Reflection
Think about a specific situation in your life that you keep resisting despite having no power to change it. What would you actually do differently tomorrow if you accepted it fully?
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