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July 12, 2026
Set aside now and then a number of days during which you shall be content with the scantiest and cheapest fare, with coarse and rough dress, saying to yourself the while, 'Is this the condition that I feared?'
Seneca wrote this to his friend Lucilius during the Roman festival of Saturnalia, when the city was given over to feasting and indulgence. He tells Lucilius to set aside deliberate stretches of plain food and rough clothing, then ask himself if that hardship is truly what he had always dreaded. The passage argues that comfort dulls us, while short bouts of scarcity train the body and mind to meet real loss without panic. Stoics call this voluntary discomfort - choosing minor hardships like cold water or simple meals - not for suffering's sake but to rehearse resilience before life demands it. By practicing lack on purpose, you strip fear from poverty and prove that a good day never depended on soft living.
Reflection
Seneca asked himself whether the hardship he feared was really so bad. What small comfort will I give up today to prove I can do without it?
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