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Ryan Holiday
The Painted Portrait My bookstore here in Bastrop, Texas has a porch on the back and it is painted. We actually just repainted it and then we were sort of trying to fix it up a little bit. It's been sort of an afterthought, but we're trying to make it a little bit nicer and we bought some new outdoor furniture. Some chairs, a rug, some string lights. You know, just some stuff that the employees and I myself can hang out on. You know, this is the best time of year in Texas. Cool and nice days are still long,
but not so long. Anyways.
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into the real world.
How does a boy of aristocratic but decidedly non royal bloodlines become not just the most powerful man in the world, not just the Emperor of Rome, but become such a great man of history? How does this absolute power given to him at a relatively young age not make him awful? How does he manage not just to be corrupted by his Privilege and his faith, fame and his influence, but managed to prove himself worthy of the responsibility. It was his adopted father that made Marcus Aurelius the person that he became. And we know this because at the end of his life, Marcus Aurelius sits down and writes what he learned from Antoninus. And it's an impressive, beautiful, inspiring list. And that's what's going to be the through line of today's video. As I said, Marcus really is not born to be the emperor, but he catches the notice of Hadrian, then the Emperor of Rome. But Hadrian, knowing that he doesn't have much time left and thinking that Marcus Aurelius is too young, understands that he has to come up with a guardian to help and teach Marcus Aurelius what he needs to learn. So Hadrian adopts an older Roman senator named Antoninus Pius on the condition that he in turn adopt Marcus Aurelius. And it is this influence that is the foremost guide to Marcus Aurelius great life. The first thing that Marcus Aurelius says he learned from Antoninus was compassion. And that's not a trait common with most Roman emperors, but it is in fact why Hadrian chose Antoninus in the first place. We're told that Hadrian is looking out over the Forum and he watches Antoninus help his elderly father in law up a flight of stairs. And Hadrian is struck by the compassion, the kindness, the gentleness. And it's part of what makes him think that Antoninus could be the person to do this unusual thing. And this would have been a particularly powerful image for the Romans because part of the founding Roman myth involves Aeneas fleeing Troy carrying his father. I just take it to mean that Antoninus had a good heart. He wasn't mean, he wasn't cruel, he wasn't aggressive, he wasn't domineering. There was still goodness and kindness in him. And we actually know of Antoninus directing this towards Marcus Aurelius, specifically Marcus Aurelius crying. He's just been told that his favorite teacher has died. And one of the Stoic philosophers says to Marcus, like, we don't do that. That's not how this works. Like, get a hold of yourself. And Antoninus, overhearing this, intervenes. He says, let the boy be human for once. His empire doesn't take natural feeling. And so here is a moment of grace. He probably understood that Marcus Willis was ashamed, embarrassed. He probably understood this is a young man going through something difficult. And here we have Antoninus extending compassion and understanding and empathy. And what a powerful thing that was to give Marcus Rus in that specific example, but also to imbue in him as a future leader. Although Antoninus is not explicitly described as a philosopher, he is a lowercase p philosophical person. He sees the big picture. He's calm and measured. And Marcus Aurelius says that Antoninus honors those who were true philosophers. And yet he wasn't snooty and condescending
or dismissive of those who pretended to
be philosophers, nor was he easily misled or intimidated by them. I think it's important that we see the study of philosophy as critical to the good life, and it's a pursuit that we have to undergo all of our lives. Musonius Rufus, the teacher of Epictetus, would say that every king needs to be a philosopher, but every philosopher needs to be a kingly person. Ultimately, Antoninus was a kingly person and a philosophical person. And it was that example that was incredibly powerful for Marcus Aurelius to see in action, that he was both reflective and in the arena. We're told by Marcus aurelius biographer Frank McLean that Antoninus has a liberal attitude towards education, that he thought people should have a broad basis in the humanities, not just masters of their disciplines, but also well versed in politics, the problems of state. So Antoninus is not a bookworm, he's not a bookish nerd, he's not a pen and ink philosopher. He's active and attentive to the world around him. When Marc Cerules talks about throwing away his books and focusing on what's in front of him, focusing on being a good man, we can imagine that Antoninus is sort of looking at him and going, hey, buddy, come focus on this. This is the important thing. I want you to see this. We can imagine Antoninus being a pragmatic and realistic influence on Marcus Aurelius, showing him the world as it was, not as he wanted it to be, and yet at the same time, not being cynical and negative, but being planted right here in reality. Antoninus was reflective, philosophical, and yet he was also decisive. We're told from Marcus that Antoninus has this remarkable and unwavering adherence to his decisions. Once he reached a decision, once he made a choice, there was no hesitation. He took action. And this ability to. To decide, it's really important. Emerson says we cannot spend the day in deliberation, right? We have to make choices. A leader, a father, an executive, and yes, even a philosopher and a teacher has to be able to decide, has to be able to make hard decisions, not hem and haw, not be Paralyzed, not get in their own head, but make hard decisions, choices. Look, unfortunately most leaders aren't humble and the world would be better if they were a bit humbler. While Hadrian was on his deathbed, he summons Antoninus to come talk to him. Antoninus pushes back, right, he's not interested in superficial honors, we're told. He's not excited, he's not pumped for this. It wasn't something that he wanted. And we can imagine that Hadrian seeing this little bit of reluctance in Antoninus was the final confirmation that he made the right decision. Marx Aurelius calls out Antoninus's restrictions on acclamations that he didn't like or want people to flatter him. He didn't want parades, he didn't want honors. He just didn't see this as making him better or more important than anyone else. And Marc Rios also points out his casual and self effacing manner around his friends, that he didn't want people treating him differently because of who he was. And we can imagine what a powerful example this was for Marcus Aurelius to see once he himself took that power, that it doesn't say anything about you as a person, that ego is the enemy, that you are still a human being, that you shouldn't be stained purple as Marx Aurelius says, by the power and position and wealth that you have. One of the things that Marcus Aurelius takes from Antoninus that he could not have possibly taken from Hadrian was his open mind, right? His willingness to be criticized or to change his mind. Marcus Aurelius ladies liked the way that Antoninus would listen to anyone who could contribute to the public good. He would listen to people he disagreed with. He would listen to people who didn't like him. He would listen to anyone who had a good idea. Now Hadrian, on the other hand, was famous for bullying people into agreeing with him, to not criticizing him, to even falling prey to his reality distortion field. There's a famous exchange between Hadrian and one of his advisors where the advisor admits that Hadrian is right even though he's not. And when a friend says, why'd you do that? The man says, I think you forget the person who controls 50 legions is always correct. This is not how Antoninus thinks about being emperor. And it's a lesson he passes on to Marcus Aurelius. To be humble, yes, and then to keep an open mind and to learn from anyone who can teach him. There were some Roman emperors that were lazy, that were entitled, that basically didn't do the job Tiberius retreats to this pleasure palace on an island. Nero preferred reciting poetry and only the fun, glamorous parts of the job. But Antoninus, we're told that he manages his food and fluid intake so he'd have to spend less time exercising, less time on bathroom breaks. He wanted to be focused. He wanted to be in tip top shape. He wanted to be in service of the Empire. He wanted to be able to physically and mentally do the job. And when Marcus Aurelius talks about rising early, working hard, doing what his nature demands, that work ethic is something he saw reflected in Antoninus for two decades. And this is so easy for hard working people to do. Antoninus doesn't neglect his health, he doesn't abuse himself. So basically by eating healthy and taking good care of himself, he was setting himself up for success. He was taking good care of himself so people wouldn't have to take care of him. It's a terribly inefficient shortcut that we take. We neglect sleep, we neglect taking care of ourselves, we neglect going to the doctor or the dentist because we don't have the time. And what this does is create problems that ultimately take a lot of time from us.
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Probably more than Marcus Aurelius. Antoninus was a people person. And we can imagine that's not an easy thing to do when you have the power of life and death over other people. But Antoninus took this seriously. He didn't want things to change between him and his friends. He didn't want people to be intimidated by him. He didn't want his power and success to come at the expense of relationships. And these relationships are work. And it's work that philosophers didn't do often enough. And I think we can see in Marcus Aurelius learning from Antoninus the importance of being social, of being kind. But actually, the very first thing that Marcus Aurelius says that he learns from Antoninus, when he mentions it in Meditations, that Antoninus never exhibited rudeness, lost control of himself or turned violent. That he never expected his friends to keep him entertained at dinner or to travel with him. And that anyone who had to stay behind to take care of something always found him the same when he returned. Despite all of Antoninus's success and influence, he didn't just remain humble. It didn't corrupt him. It didn't go to his head. And I mean this in both senses. One, there's an exchange we have about Antoninus and his wife. His wife is sort of marveling at how powerful and important they become. And Antoninus says, actually, it's the opposite. We've now lost all of our success and wealth. He was saying, like this belongs to the Roman people now he was saying we have to be beyond reproach. We can't indulge ourselves, we can't be reckless. Not only was Antoninus not into big, you know, sort of aggrandizing, flattering, sycophancy, but he tried to be a good steward of the budget. Like he tried to understand that there were more important things than his ego. Marx Aurelius says that he admired the way that Antoninus kept public actions within reasonable bounds, games, building projects, distributions of money and so on. And that he looked to what needed doing and not the credit to be gained from doing it. He wasn't slapping his name on buildings, he wasn't asking people to make art dedicated to him. It wasn't about him because he knew he wasn't special and he knew that, that having statues and parades, it didn't reflect on you who you were, what you did is what reflected on you. When Marx Wheeler says self reliance always he was thinking of Antoninus's simple and straightforward and no nonsense attitude and approach. I think Marx Realis describes this quite well when he says that you could have said of him, as they say of Socrates, that Antoninus knew how to enjoy and abstain from the things that most people find it hard to abstain from and all too easy to enjoy. He had strength, perseverance and self control in both areas. The mark of a soul in readiness, indomitable. And that Marcus says when he had nice things and it was appropriate, he enjoyed them. And when he didn't have them, he didn't miss them. And this kind of humility and straightforwardness is something that Marcus Aurelius tries to model all his life. When a plague hits Rome and Rome is devastated and overwhelmed, when Rome had financial problems or military problems, who did Marcus Aurelius turn to? He turned to the experts, turned to his advisors. And he learns this from Antoninus. As Marcus Aelius says, he had a single mindedness. He was never content with first impressions and he never broke off the discussion prematurely. He knew that he had to balance this expert advice against competing experts. He had to ask probing questions. It was his job to find out what really mattered, what was really the best course of action. And again, this is very different than the emperors who thought they were anointed by or ordained by God, that every thought they had in their head was genius or brilliant or obviously right and who intimidated other people into telling them what they wanted to hear. What Antoninus did that far too few leaders do is he took responsibility. He said, hey, the buck stops with me. He stepp up. He saw that leadership was a responsibility, it was a burden, right? That's what Marx really says. He learns from Antoninus a willingness to take responsibility and blame for the empire's needs for the treasury. He didn't think that this was the future's problem or that this was to be blamed on the past. He said, hey, I'm in charge right now. This is my job. I'm going to do my best. And that really inspires Marcus. And it's always good to see see people in positions of responsibility being responsible, right? Because if they don't take responsibility, they don't take ownership. They are being by definition irresponsible. Marcus Aurelius has a temper, but he knows he has a temper and he's working on controlling it. And we know he learns this from Antoninus because he definitely didn't learn it from Hadrian. There's a story about Hadrian getting so mad at one of his secretaries, he stabs the man in the eye. Antoninus, we have no stories of him doing anything like that. We have no cruelty, we have no sadism, we have none of the things that unfortunately characterize so many, the actions and anecdotes about the Roman emperors. Instead in Antoninus and in Marx Ruius, you have people struggling to maintain their self control, their self command, because the stakes are really high. Seeing Antoninus be so self control, not flying into these rages, it gives him a sense that that actually is the most impressive thing. Marx Aurelius says when you lose your temper, realize that there's nothing manly about this. Marx Aurelius mentions offhandedly like some exchange with a customs agent in some part of the Roman Empire. We don't know exactly what happened, but probably the guy was a jerk or the guy didn't treat the emperor with enough respect. This could have been a death sentence for a person like that. But not under Antoninus. Marcus Aurelius says that the way he accepted the customs agent apology, that's all we know about it, right? So not only did he not get angry, but he was forgiving and he was patient and he understood that people are human and people make mistakes. One of the things that Marcus learns from Antoninus is a respect for the old ways. What the Romans would call the most maiorum, right, Traditional values. You know, he respects tradition, he respects virtue. He wasn't radically progressive or radically disruptive. He wasn't radical in any way. And yet what Marx Aurelius admires about Antoninus, that for all this Lowercase C, conservatism. He was still compassionate, he was still kind, he was still open and flexible. And he wasn't obnoxious and retrograde. Antoninus respected traditional without needing to constantly congratulate himself for safeguarding our traditional values.
Right?
He wasn't some Fox News dad. He wasn't some oh, the kids these days. He respected tradition and traditional values and yet he wasn't judgmental, he hadn't hardened his heart. And he was open minded and flexible, which is a really important trait. We know that Marcus Aurelius hated lying, he hated hypocrisy, he hated people who said one thing and lived differently. And what he loved about Antoninus is that what you saw with Antoninus was what you got. He had so few secrets that the only secrets he had were state secrets and even then not many of them. That he was transparent, that he was open. That if, if people could have seen what was going on in the palace, they wouldn't have been horrified, they wouldn't have been angry. It wouldn't have undermined his legacy. Not virtue signaling, but being virtuous and Antoninus in being both a powerful and important leader and a good person. That this wasn't a contradiction in terms was really meaningful for Marcus Aurelius. And it's one of the most powerful lessons that parents can show their kids. That they aren't just paying lip service to these ideas, that they really believe them, they really matter and they really are putting them into practice and that the kids can too. Although Antoninus had a lot of power and ruled over a large empire, what struck Marcus Riolius most was how much Antoninus was under his own power, how he governed himself first and foremost. No one ever saw him sweat. Everything was to be approached logically and with due consideration, in a calm and orderly fashion, decisively and with no loose ends. When Seneca says that no one is fit to rule who is not first master of themselves, that's what Marcus learns from Antoninus. So Marx Aurelius is given the gift of Antoninus not just for a short period as Hadrian had probably expected it to go. Life expectancy then not being super long. But Marcus Aurelius is able to learn and serve underneath for over 20 years. So he gets to see this in action. He gets to learn a lot from. They have a long relationship, much longer than Marx Aurelius actual relationship with his father who died when Marx was quite young. He mentions Antoninus in the beginning of Meditations and then it is in book 6:30 where Marx Aurelius is talking about escaping the corruption of power, being dyed purple, being imperialized, and how the purpose of this existence is to have an unstained character and to be an unselfish person. And he says that Antoninus is his model in doing this. And I thought I'd wrap up on this Father's Day video with what he said he learned from Antoninus because it's worth just putting down for the record one more time. He says, take Antoninus as your model. Always. His energy in doing what was rational, his steadiness in any situation, his sense of reverence, his calm expression, his gentleness, his modesty, his eagerness to grasp things. Now he never let things go before he was sure he had examined them thoroughly, understood them perfectly. The way he put up with unfair criticisms without returning it. How he couldn't be hurried, how he wouldn't let listen to informers. How reliable he was as a judge of character and of actions not prone to backbiting or cowardice or jealousy or empty rhetoric. Content with the basics in living quarters and bedding and clothes and food and servants. How hard he worked, how much he put up with his ability to work straight through till dusk. His constancy and reliability as a friend, his tolerance of people who openly questioned his views, and his delight at seeing his ideas improved upon his piety. Antoninus Pius without a trace of superstition. And he says that if you can live like that, when your time comes, your conscience will be as clear as his. What a great gift Antoninus was to Marcus Aurelius. And a great gift both of their examples are to us, that we can pass on to our own children. When my first son was born, I was looking for a place where dads could talk, where we could share the wins and the losses, talk about what's to come and also commiserate about the hard days. And I couldn't find it for the same reasons that you probably haven't been able to find it, because it doesn't exist. So I spent the last couple years building it, and now we're making something new called Daily Dad Society. And it's not a lecture hall. The idea is that it's more like a campfire circle where every month we dive into recommendations, tips. You get stuff that we like that we've tested here at Daily Dad Stories, Studies, screw ups. We would love to have you join us. You can do that if you sign up right now@dailydad.com society. I know that I needed this, and I'm really excited to share it with you. If you want to be part of a circle of dads that show up for their kids and each other, I hope you join us today. I'd love to see it. Dailydad.com Society.
At some point, if we're lucky or maybe if we're honest, we. We stop seeing our parents just as parents. I was saying this to my 9 year old yesterday. We'd had a bit of a rough day and I was saying something that I wish I'd heard my parents say, which is like, hey, I'm not great at this. This is my first go around. I was like, I don't even know that many 9 year olds. I was like, I mean, obviously I was nine once, but that was a long time ago and I just don't have that much experience with this. I was like, I'm not even that much older than you, right. Like, I just wanted him to understand, as I think we should understand about everyone, that we're all people. We're complicated people. We're flawed people. We're people with fears, secrets and contradictions and stories we only partly understand now,
some more so than others.
This isn't like a blanket excuse, and I certainly wouldn't use it as one. Ultimately, we're accountable for the things that we do, for the things that we say, for the impact of our choices and actions on other people.
But this is that kind of gray
area that one of my favorite writers has spent his whole career exploring. This is Tom Junode. As a journalist, he's written profiles. You've almost certainly read this famous one about Mr. Rogers turned into a Tom Hanks movie. He's one about the jumper on 9 11. He's won a National Magazine Award, a James Beard Award. He's won an Emmy. You've seen him at GQ and Esquire and espn. You know, he's written about public figures and people with hidden lives, things right beneath the surface. But he has this new book, which when I read it earlier this year, it hit me really hard because it's about a very complicated, twisted, dark, screwed up, in some cases, evil person. And it just happens that that person is Tom's father. His dad was charismatic and complicated and also cruel, dishonest, sadistic even. A user of people, a user of women, a liar, a cheat, maybe worse.
Right?
He loomed very large in Tom's life. He shaped him. He frightened him. He scarred him. Scarred many of the people that he was around. And so Tom came out after I read the book and I wanted to talk to him about his dad, about Parenting about human beings.
This is a really good conversation.
I was so happy to have him on the podcast. I'm gonna bring you some other chunks of it as well, but you can buy his book. In the days of my youth, I was told what it means to be a man. We've got signed copies. You can follow him on Instagram omjunode. You can go see the film A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, which was based on his Esquire pie. You can read his articles and let's get into it. The thing I thought was interesting about your dad in the book is like, even in your view, you know, he's this glamorous guy and he's cool, he's a movie star. And then I'm reading it all these years later, so far from that world. I'm like, this dude sells purses.
Tom Junod
Sells purses.
Ryan Holiday
And so it's funny how like the. Not even the fictions, but kind of like our own narrative, our main character energy can be like, one, it can be so profound, we live in it and then two, we bring everyone
along
with it and then it becomes this, like, just mutually. It's like a suspension of disbelief. Like, if you told me your dad was a senator or, you know, a billionaire or what, like this super, you'd be like, oh, okay, this kind of makes sense. Yeah, but he's just like pretty much a regular guy.
Tom Junod
Sort of a regular guy. I mean, we lived in a middle class, Long island town. Yeah, I mean, I think you're onto something here because, you know, as I write in the book and establish in the book, I was terrified of my dad. And I think that one of the ways that I found to sort of to deal with that terror was to build up my dad in my head to build this narrative. And then what that led to eventually was this desire to find out his secrets. And I think that the fact that I sort of built him into this colossus sort of gave me finally permission to like, find out what his. What he was hiding.
Ryan Holiday
It's funny, I was just thinking about this morning as I'm doing this Vietnam writing and like, it mentioned that Errol Flynn's son was a magazine journalist in Vietnam who went missing. And it's like, if you told me that this was the novel of Errol Flynn's son or the memoir, I'd be like, oh, okay, yeah, his dad was the biggest movie star in the world and a craz and all this. Or if this was the memoir of like John Glenn's son or Neil Armstrong's son, you'd be like, I get it. This is this larger than life, like. Like high wattage person.
Tom Junod
Sure.
Ryan Holiday
And I guess it's a testament to the force of his personality that he could will this into existence. But, you know, it's. It's.
Tom Junod
I don't. I think it is a testament to the force of his personality because I'm not the only one.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah.
Tom Junod
I mean, a lot of people thought of my dad in that way when he. When he had you in the room or the dinner table. I mean, you never just said to yourself, well, you're just a salesman, dude. It was never that. You didn't. You could. You could think a variety of different things to sort of get through the moment, but that was not one of them.
Ryan Holiday
And he was kind of six degrees of separation. Always relatively close, you know, like to. To stuff that's happening. Big moments in history, you know, people with money. So it was believable, I guess.
Tom Junod
Yeah. When my father, you know, one of the biggest things that's ever happened, you know, Post World War II, was the creation of American suburbia. And the way that my dad told that story was that the guy, the inventor, the Thomas Edison of American suburbia is Bill Levitt. My father goes out to, you know, on a drive from Brooklyn, goes to a house in Levittown. Who's there? It's Bill Levitt himself. What does Bill Levitt do? He allows my dad to get the house for much less than he would normally have charged. And why? Because he liked my face.
Ryan Holiday
And it's like, I've met people like that. And when you hear that story, like, wow, that's a great story. And then you're like, oh, like, you're stepping back. You're like, okay, a guy who sells houses, met you, and sold you a track house that he sold to millions of other people at a slight discount. This actually isn't cool at all.
Tom Junod
A $25 discount?
Ryan Holiday
Yeah, like, this isn't cool at all. But like.
And in fact, when I see how.
How hard you're selling the story, actually, I kind of feel sad, like, that this is an accomplishment to you. But in the moment, that charisma is so infectious, and it's clear that they believe it, you know?
Tom Junod
Well, we find our mythology at hand, whatever's closest at hand, especially if you're of the storytelling bent, whatever's at hand, you sort of turn into your mythology. And that was definitely the case with my dad.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah.
I knew this guy, and he would sort of. He would talk about the things he was going to do so vividly that he would. And then tell it so often that it would start to feel to him as if it had already happened. And then, you know, it would come and go. Some of it he would do, some of it he would not do, or it wouldn't go exactly as he planned. But he told the story so many times that it had, in fact, happened to him. And it's almost trumpy in the ability to, like, project a reality so vividly to yourself that it is more real to you than actual reality.
Tom Junod
Yeah, but I think that my dad was definitely, like, not like the Big Fish kind of guy. Like, there's that. There's that whole. That book and that movie, you know, Big Fish.
Ryan Holiday
There's an element of truth to it.
Tom Junod
There's an element of truth in a lot of it, and especially about his sexual escapades.
Ryan Holiday
Yes.
Tom Junod
There. I think that that that's where he was not bullshitting.
Ryan Holiday
Probably worse than.
Tom Junod
No, I mean. I mean, much worse. I mean, and it's a much bigger burden on a son to have, like, that be the thing. Like, the secret. Like, the secret thing is the place where you can vouch for your father's magnificence or whatever. I mean, that's just like, that'll mess you up. But I think that. That he didn't lie about, like, that.
Ryan Holiday
Yes.
Tom Junod
And so, like, the Gabor sisters thing, it's. I mean, it sounds like vintage sort of Big Fish style stuff, but I don't think so.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah. And at the same time, it seems glamorous. And then when you see it all laid out in the pages of your book, you're like, oh, this is a compulsion. This is a thing that can't, like, any one of the instances or a handful of the instances. Fine. That's a part of a normal, adventuresome life. And then you go, oh, you're actually. You were not free to not do this.
Tom Junod
That's right. Yes.
Ryan Holiday
Like, I'm just reading. I just reread a bunch of James Salter's novels. Did you ever read him?
Tom Junod
I did. I read Light Years and Sport in the Past.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah.
Tom Junod
And Burning the Day.
Ryan Holiday
Burning the. And so Burning the Days was. Was the one I read most recently. And you're like, oh, you're a sex addict. Like, you know, like, this is a memoir. And I think in. In that the 20th century period of men, maybe it didn't have this name, but you wrote a memoir about how often you cheated on your wife, and never once did you express any shame or Guilt or remorse or even acknowledge
Tom Junod
or even explore himself in that way.
Ryan Holiday
Well, it's like your wife's not even mentioned. Like she doesn't exist as a person to you. That's like, not. That's like your legal life, and then your. Your fantasy life is this world on the page. It was a. It was a. It's a incredible memoir. If you're just caught up in the prose and the story of it, you feel one thing, and then if you step back and you go, if this was my dad, how would I feel? And again, you're like, wait, you had children? They're barely in this book.
Tom Junod
Right.
Ryan Holiday
You realize that it's a lot of what it's not saying is what it's actually saying.
Tom Junod
And James Salter had sort of a literary version of what my dad had. I mean, he had charisma as a prose writer. I mean, he had a beautiful, beautiful, rare, pro style that he could basically sell any story. Including that story.
Ryan Holiday
Yes. Yeah. And I thought about this when I was reading it. Profoundly shaped by his wartime experience, for which there was no treatment or help or decompressing. Your father and then him, obviously, it's like. I think for Salter, like, being this badass fighter pilot seemed cool at the time. And then there's all, war is a moral injury, and if it is not explained as such, it doesn't change the fact that there is the injury.
Tom Junod
Okay, so this is really interesting because.
Ryan Holiday
Wow.
Tom Junod
I wrote that. I wrote that in there.
Ryan Holiday
Why
Tom Junod
in your bookstore? Because I wanted to talk about moral injury. Because I think that living with my dad and worshiping at the altar of my dad constituted a sort of moral injury. And I think that my book. I mean, there's a lot of things that are never mentioned in my book, a lot of words that are never said. Trauma being one of them, sex addiction being another. Even abuse comes as a surprise to me. It's not part of the palette of words that I'm using, and moral injury is another. And yet I think that the book is very much about moral injury.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah. I mean, for that generation, we sent them out to do this thing, feed them into this machine. Some of them came home, some of them didn't. There was, unlike other wars, there was at least some moral clarity about why they were there. But that doesn't change what you're seeing around you, you know? And then you came home to this country that wasn't like the one you left. It was now an industrial behemoth and imperial power and also experiencing wealth and Prosperity unprecedented in human history. Are you going to sit down and process your moral injury or are you going to go party?
Tom Junod
And not when Bill Levitt likes your face. Not when Elizabeth Taylor can't keep her eyes off, you know, according to my dad.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah.
Tom Junod
So, yeah, that was all there for them.
Ryan Holiday
Like, I think about my grandfather. He also at Normandy. And then I remember him, he bought this condo in Hawaii. And I go, like. I imagine explaining a condo in Hawaii decades later to a person who's on the beach in Normandy. Like, those would have been like, did I die? What is. Like, how could you comprehend? And so. So the America that he comes back to and the temptations and the prosperity and the. The busyness of it, I mean, I imagine it would have been like heroin or something.
Tom Junod
Well, but especially for my dad, because, I mean, my dad was seriously wounded, you know, in the hedgerows of Normandy. He suffered first. He was hit by the force of a grenade, if not the shrapnel. And then when he was in the field hospital, the field hospital got hit by artillery. And so he almost died. I mean, the rumor that I've heard, not from him, but from my cousins and my aunts, was that he was given last ride. And so then after that, he's about to go back to the front, and what happens? There's a lieutenant who hears him sing and takes away his gun and transforms him from an infantryman to a band singer.
Ryan Holiday
Gatsby esque.
Tom Junod
It is. It's Gatsby esque. It's Don Draper esque. And the name of the act, the show is called For Men Only. And so that my father goes back to the United States, he goes back to Brooklyn and tries to sing and can't and doesn't. He chokes, as he told me when he went to do a tryout for Arthur Godfrey. So he chokes. And so what does he do? He becomes, I think I call him at the end of the book, a bedroom gangster. But he's also a bedroom celebrity. And that's his legitimate, legitimate celebrity is betting and wooing probably hundreds, hundreds of women.
Ryan Holiday
You know, that's the one place where he feels like who he almost could have been had.
Tom Junod
Has been realized. Yes, has been realized. And then you have a son, me, who is watching this and believes in his father's celebrity, but follows that celebrity to the place where it really exists, which is in regard to sex. And that is forbidden, that is secret, that is never to be spoken of. And so hence, that's why I wanted to talk to you about moral injury.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah. And in a way, we have the kind of language and understanding to deal with more obvious and straightforward forms of abuse.
Tom Junod
Yes.
Ryan Holiday
But in a way, like, yeah, dad gets angry and hits me is disorienting.
But.
But at least it's straightforward.
Tom Junod
Sure.
Ryan Holiday
Like, what you went through would have been profoundly disorienting and destabilizing.
Tom Junod
Sure.
Ryan Holiday
Because not only would you not fully understood what was happening because it's cloak and dagger, but, like, it's not clear that there's anything wrong with that necessarily. As, like that that your father's probably thinking, oh, I'm just living my life. This has nothing to do with you.
Tom Junod
Sure.
Ryan Holiday
And he doesn't like, the understanding isn't there of what's happening and you don't understand what's happening, and that is the moral injury of what you're subject to.
Tom Junod
And the. I mean, the only measure of my father's wrongdoing was my mom's tears.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah. Yeah. And she doesn't fully understand what's happening or articulate it either. So you.
Tom Junod
She can see it and she knows it, but she doesn't articulate it.
Ryan Holiday
But I mean, if your mother had left when you were five and said, he's a piece of shit, that would have given you some clarity. So you're, you're, you're looking around and going, I don't think this is right. This is wrong. Is my dad a monster? And then you're like, but mom's more or less okay with it day to day. That's another element of destabilizing, too.
Tom Junod
Well, you know. Well, once again, I mean, my mom, you know, she would go into her bedroom, you know, in the afternoon and just. I think that she was taking pills. I know that she was taking. She used to have, you know, migraines. And I don't know whether to put, you know, quote marks around those migraines or not, but she would take the pills and then just go out, you know, go into the bedroom and pass out for three hours.
Ryan Holiday
Right.
Tom Junod
What am I to make of that?
Ryan Holiday
Sure.
I mean, even. Yeah.
That whole era, like, even our understanding of what an alcoholic is or isn't is not, you know, is still kind of being formed and. Yeah, it would have been. I mean, how a kid, how a teenager makes heads or tails of this would have been possible.
Tom Junod
Yeah. Especially when I know as a teenager that the room where my mom repairs to, you know, just to get away from it is where my father, like, keeps his stuff. It's in that it's in that room. I mean, and to anybody who doesn't know the book, you know, there's a point in the book where I open my father's briefcase and find like, hard evidence of his secret life. And that's what he. That briefcase is sitting at the bottom of the closet in the same room where my mom has passed out on the bed.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah, you would. And the pressure of that, like, it's this combustible situation because you know all the ingredients and you know that they could be combined at any moment and you don't know how that's gonna go.
Tom Junod
That's right. And you don't know what you're supposed to do either. Do you tell her, yeah, she's suffering. And she's suffering because of this unseen thing.
Ryan Holiday
Right.
Tom Junod
Do you make her see it?
Ryan Holiday
Right. What's the right thing to do?
Tom Junod
What's the right thing to do there? Yeah, I mean, I've thought of that a lot. And especially as in writing this book, because, I mean, when you write a book like this, you ask yourself whether you're doing the right thing.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah. Basically. Since the early days of launching Daily stoic, which was 10 years ago this year, we have been using today's sponsor, Shopify. If you've bought anything from the Daily Stoic store, if you've bought anything online or in person at the Painted Port,
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Tom Junod
I, I try to see my dad as a human being. I, you know, I, I try not to do a tell all. I try in with a grudge. And I don't know how you look at it, but to me the book is about loving a guy who might be and probably is a bad man.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah.
I think just like as a person I can see how your professionalism prevents you from being as angry as a person you would be allowed to be. Do you know what I'm like? I think both probably from work you've done on yourself, but then also your sort of of journalism hat you are always thinking about what it's like to be him. What was he thinking? Whereas I could also see an argument as just a son being like, fuck this guy. And it's interesting to watch the tension between those things in the book.
Tom Junod
Well, so I was like, where the fuck this guy came in and never used exactly that kind of formulation. But where I did make a decision along the way was like, okay, I am going to tell this story. I've never told this story. I've forbidden myself from telling the story and now I'm going to tell this story and all the people that are in it. I'M going to tell their stories too. And I'm not going to ask for permission. I mean, that's the one thing I do not do in the book and did not do when I was writing the book was ask for permission. Yeah, I just wrote the book.
Ryan Holiday
Given the title and what's happening in the world, I do think it would be worth talking about, like the idea of masculinity, obviously your dad's version of it. In some ways, like we need more of it and in other ways we have to eradicate it from the face of the earth. And you can see how generations of those flawed ideas haunt people and create
Tom Junod
this cycle and are right now sort of making a comeback. Yeah.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah. So how do you think about that?
Tom Junod
There's that commercial that, there's that Miller Lite commercial where they have a, There's a kid, young man, he's at a bar and he's looking at his phone and there's a girl sort of flirting with him. And then Christopher Walken is at the bar and says, hey, go talk to, you know, go, go talk to her. She's, you know, don't look at your phone. Talk to her.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah.
Tom Junod
And so there's this lesson about manhood that's being promulgated right now on our TV screens. And I have to say that I, I sort of agree with it. I, I see my dad in that position. He's sort of the Christopher Walken in that position saying, confidence, hey, go out and, and experience life. You might take your lumps, but if you have confidence in yourself or at least exude confidence, you'll do okay. And so I sort of agree with that. But I think that at the same time, I mean, I see a lot of people sort of out there and they're using masculinity as essentially as a shield. I mean, and they're using it as an aspect, as a shield to accomplish one thing which is being able to lie your face off with no consequences. And I think that that is like the thing that I would love to address even just now, because I don't address it in the book. The book is, it's my story. I don't get political in the book at all. But I think that the idea that, that masculinity, manhood gives you a get out of jail for free card, I think is like, is intensely damaging.
Ryan Holiday
It's like they want the sort of old fashioned ideas of masculinity with like action and strength and whatever, but they don't want any of the other ideas that were inseparable from it, at least as an ideal in the past. You know, honor, dignity, those are the big words.
Tom Junod
I mean, you just said the biggest word, which is honor. And you don't see masculinity being championed as a means of honor. And I look at it, and I think that somehow my dad actually taught me, not by example, but at least in his words, that honor was a worthwhile goal.
Ryan Holiday
Problem is, we look back and we. We focus on examples where they either lived up to it or didn't live up to it. And what we really should be talking about is that these are all encompassing ideas, not things that you can compartmentalize. Like, I'll give you two examples I thought about from the book. So the one hand, there's a scene where you as a kid, because hurt people, hurt people. You're bullying this kid in the neighborhood, and your dad sort of finds out and he puts a stop to it. And he sort of. He's like, this is not what we do, basically. Right?
Tom Junod
Pick on someone your own size is
Ryan Holiday
what he says, yeah, there's some kind of honor. And. And there's a valuable lesson in there. Same time, there's no honor in repeatedly humiliating your wife, lying, cheating, stealing, all the things that. But I don't think your dad probably saw that as a contradiction in terms because he probably had some sense of, like, who you owe honor to and who you don't.
Tom Junod
Well, I think that that's a really. It's a really interesting question. So is manhood the thing that gets you to the point where you are allowed to have this other second life? Or should it be the thing that basically tells you to not to have that life to put on the brakes? And I think that's a really interesting and confusing question. I mean, did my dad's actions invalidate his words? Did his actions basically prove that the words were empty? Or how I look at it is like the words were good if only his actions had been better. So my book begins with the sentence everybody knew. And I think that what you're talking about right now, that there was an entire society set up to basically allow the founding fathers to do whatever they really felt like doing while, you know, producing the poetry and the, you know, the genius. The genius vision that, you know, gave birth to this, to this country. But my founding father was my dad,
Ryan Holiday
as it is for all of us.
Tom Junod
And he had a whole system in place of enablers, mostly men who. Who basically allowed him to do whatever he wanted. Men who also had really, really deep Relationships with my mom, or at least what I consider deep relationships with my mom. I mean, my Uncle Johnny, my godfather, Frankie Klein, who called every Saturday morning to see who my dad was betting and to see who I liked. All these guys, they were really good friends with my mom.
Ryan Holiday
Your grandmother was an enabler, as also a victim, but an enabler.
Tom Junod
Yeah, 100. 100%. So my dad had this whole sort of world that enabled him to do what he wanted to do and not only enables him. The thing is, we're thrilled by it.
Ryan Holiday
It was celebrated.
Tom Junod
They celebrated.
Ryan Holiday
It's different than enabling, which is kind of this secret tacit acceptance. It was like, this is part of who you are. This is great. This is impressive.
Tom Junod
They were doing it for him. Like, you know, like, my dad somehow convinced people that, like, the things that he was doing was an ex, was just, like, proof that life held sort of untold and unseen marvels.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah. Yeah. There's a. That's. That's the kind of darkness of it and the contradiction where they're not thinking about what this would be like for the children in the house, what it's like for your mom, what it's like for. Yeah, that the women were being sort of chewed up out of the system.
Tom Junod
There's that moment in the book where, I mean, I am just about to turn 50. It's the day before I turn 50, and I go to see Frankie Klein, who was my father's wingman in Florida, and I bring him. He loved my father so much that I'm bringing him some of my father's ashes in a shot glass so that he can spread them in the lake behind his house. There's a transaction that's going on. I give him the shot glass, and he says, anything else? And I say, yeah. Who was this woman of my father's in Florida? And then everything changes. But what he says is, so you know. Because I wouldn't have told you if you didn't know.
Ryan Holiday
Right.
Tom Junod
And that's what enables me to get in and to find out, well, what her name was. And that's the route that I take throughout the rest of the book. Because what I am trying to find out something, not just write about my dad. The world that my father left behind is a world that I try to investigate and infiltrate and do.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah. It's like in recovery, they say you're only as sick as your secrets. And so, like, the secrets, people think they're helping by preserving the fiction or not challenging you on the fiction. And this is true in individual Relationships, individuals. But then I think it's also true as a society, like, there's the things we don't want to know. Like, we vaguely know what happens in a slaughterhouse or in a sweatshop, but we're like, I know that I probably have to buy more expensive shirts, you know, and so society, understanding that you don't really want to know.
Tom Junod
Yeah.
Ryan Holiday
Doesn't tell you. And so do you have. And all of us are guilty of it, and some of us are better at it than others, but I think we're all guilty of just like, I know, but I don't want to really know, because if I really know, it's like, yeah. How does the other half live? What do you do about it?
Tom Junod
Well, in this book, you know, finding out the secrets does require me to act. And the way that I do act is a. I try to find out the people that my father sort of left behind. And that to me, ultimately becomes for me, whenever I sort of ask myself about, did I do the right thing with this book, to me, the proof that I did the right thing, it exists. More to the point, she exists. I have a half sister that I find at the end of the book. And I. And I wrote to her this morning and she wrote to me. I mean, we have now a sibling relationship. And it's like a great gift of my life, in my life, and I never saw it coming.
Ryan Holiday
The Wright Thompson profile of Tiger Woods. He quotes someone. I think about this all the time. He says, mirror, mirror on the wall. We become like Daddy after all. How have you wrestled with that?
Tom Junod
I've, you know, just tried to, you know.
Ryan Holiday
Do you think that's true?
Tom Junod
I do. I do, you know, and I think, because I think that. I think that in. In my life, I made two vows, one to myself articulated and one to myself just in my, you know, in my bones and in my cells. And the. The one that I articulated to myself is, I am never going to be like him. And the one that I couldn't articulate to myself is like, I want nothing more than to be like him. And so I've had to balance those things.
Ryan Holiday
It's the north and south that war with each other.
Tom Junod
It's the north and South. And so. And this is where I think, where stoicism really comes in here. And I got to say that reading Marcus Aurelius over the last week has given me sort of like a new kind of self talk. It's given me. It's given me a language in which to address these things. I'm not bullshitting you on that.
Ryan Holiday
Well, in Marcus's life, he loses his father very young. But then he loses his father and then he comes under the sway of a monster, Hadrian, who's like, although a very capable emperor, a killer, like, not exactly a sadist, but a person who you would expect would be attracted to absolute power.
And so he kind of has this,
well, I don't want to be like him. And if you notice, he almost never appears in Meditations. He's not in the list of acknowledgments
Tom Junod
that start the book. Right.
Ryan Holiday
Yeah, but the dominant entity in the acknowledgments is not his mother, who he clearly loved. It's this stepfather, Antoninus, who you might have predicted they'd be at odds with each other because they're not related and they're jockeying for power and they're in this forced, arranged kind of marriage.
But he.
I mean, in the days of my youth, I was told what it means to be a man.
That could come from that passage of
Marcus Rios talking about Antonitus. And you just see like, oh, if you get lucky enough to come in the orbit of an incredible person and you decide to listen, it can really heal a lot of wounds and get your compass dialed in. It's a pretty remarkable relationship they have.
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Guest: Tom Junod
Host: Ryan Holiday
Date: June 20, 2026
This episode delves into the profound impact fathers (and father figures) have on our lives, shaping us for better or worse. Ryan Holiday begins by reflecting on Marcus Aurelius and his relationship with Antoninus Pius, his adoptive father, drawing out lessons of Stoic leadership and virtue. The conversation then shifts to an intimate interview with acclaimed journalist Tom Junod, whose recent book unpacks his complicated relationship with his own charismatic, destructive father. The episode explores identity, masculinity, moral injury, family secrets, and the struggle to become better than our influences.
[02:19–14:49]
Marcus Aurelius’s Upbringing:
Antoninus Pius’s Virtues:
Leadership without Ego:
Work Ethic and Self-Care:
Relationships and Social Nature:
Legacy of Responsibility and Self-Control:
[29:27–62:09]
Tom’s Father: Charisma and Darkness
Family Mythology vs. Reality:
Moral Injury and Unnamed Traumas:
Family Secrets, Impact on Children:
Writing the Truth:
[50:05–62:09]
Fatherhood and Manhood:
Honor, Dignity, Compartmentalization:
Enablers and the Structure of Secrets:
The Fear of Becoming Our Fathers:
Hope and Healing through Better Models:
This episode offers a powerful comparison between the public ideals of fatherhood and the messy reality of familial legacies—especially for sons. Ryan Holiday artfully weaves the lessons of Stoic philosophy with contemporary issues, while Tom Junod’s candid reflections add depth, pain, and complexity. Listeners are left with provocative questions about how to live honorably, whether we can overcome our inheritance, and how we can strive to be better—for ourselves and for those who come after us.