You're interested in Stoicism, but today let's approach its core challenge from an unexpected angle. The Stoics prized 'amor fati' — loving what happens — but Nietzsche, who coined that phrase, pushed it further than the Stoics dared: not merely tolerating fate, not even accepting it, but actively willing it to repeat forever. His thought experiment, the 'eternal recurrence' from 'The Gay Science,' isn't a metaphysical claim — it's a practical filter. Before a decision or a complaint, ask: would I choose this moment so completely that I'd live it on loop forever? Most of our low-grade misery dissolves under that lens, not because circumstances improve, but because we stop holding them at arm's length. It's a Monday — a notoriously resisted day. Try meeting it the way Nietzsche meant: not with gritted teeth, but with full signature.
Is there a recurring situation in your life you've been tolerating rather than genuinely choosing — and what would it look like to close that gap?
Drawing from German Philosophy (Nietzsche) — Friedrich Nietzsche (The Gay Science, §341)
This nugget was crafted for someone else's interests.
Imagine one written just for you, waiting in your inbox every morning.
Get your own daily nudge — freeNo account needed. One email a day. Unsubscribe anytime.
Crafted by Nudgeminder