Diogenes, an ancient philosopher with the spirit of a wild beast and the wit of a poet,
saw through the illusion of civilization. Where others pursued wealth and honor, he saw vanity.
So, he rejected it all, choosing a life most would call madness but which he knew was true
freedom. He didn’t just talk about philosophy—he lived it, stripped down to its rawest form.
He owned nothing but a cloak, a staff, and a ceramic jar he called home. While others
debated virtue in grand halls, he lived it under the open sky. He mocked the powerful, exposed the
foolishness of the so-called wise, and reduced life to its barest essence: harmony with nature,
free from the absurd expectations of society. Then came the moment that made him immortal.
One day, Alexander the Great, the most powerful man alive, stood before him and declared, “Ask for
anything, and I shall grant it.” Now, most would have begged for riches or status. Diogenes barely
looked up and said, “Move aside, you’re blocking my sunlight.” Think about that for a moment: The
conqueror of nations stood powerless before a man who wanted nothing. So who, then, was truly free?
Most of us aren’t. From birth, we’re shaped by the world—told what to value, what to chase,
what to fear. We measure ourselves by status, companion, and approval.
And in an age of endless screens and constant judgment, this enslavement has only deepened.
How do we break free? Diogenes didn’t ask us to live like him—he wanted us to see like him.
To strip life down to what truly matters, to stop chasing what others say is important,
and to reclaim the freedom to be ourselves, without apology or permission. So what’s next?
Turn inward. Let go of borrowed desires. Stand firm in your own life. The world will always
whisper its demands—but whether we listen is entirely up to us. In this video, we’ll explore
how to focus on yourself through the wisdom of the world’s greatest philosophers. Starting with
Albert Camus - Accept the absurdity Now here’s something most people don’t
want to hear—life has no built-in meaning. No cosmic purpose,
no grand answer waiting at the end of the road. That might sound bleak to you,
but it’s actually the most freeing realization you’ll ever have. Albert Camus’ Absurdism teaches
that people waste their lives searching for meaning, chasing success or status, believing,
“Once I figure it all out, I’ll finally be happy.” But Camus would say: stop searching.
Life doesn’t owe you meaning—that’s exactly why you’re free to create your own.
Take someone who spends decades obsessing over their “true calling.” They jump from one thing
to another, always feeling lost. Absurdism tells them: stop treating life like a puzzle to solve
and instead, treat it like an experience. Try things just because they interest you.
So, if life has no fixed meaning, why waste time worrying about what others think? Many
people filter their dreams and choices based on what society expects. But if
meaning isn’t built into the universe, then external validation is meaningless too. The
pressure to fit in disappears when you realize those roles are just stories we tell ourselves.
Camus called this the “Revolt”—not against society, but against the idea that life has to
be anything other than what it is. Instead of being weighed down by the search for meaning,
just live. A simple way to practice this is to try and immerse yourself in small
moments. Feel the sun on your skin, laugh at a joke, enjoy a song. You don’t need to justify
these moments. They don’t have to “mean” anything. They just are. And that’s enough.
Nietzsche – Be the Superhuman Most people walk through life on
paths they never chose, following rules written by hands they’ve never seen. They obey, conform,
seek approval—never once stopping to ask, Is this really my path? Friedrich Nietzsche on
the other hand had no patience for this. He looked around and saw people trapped—trapped by customs,
by expectations, by the fear of standing alone and he called this herd morality—a
way of living where people simply obey, never questioning, never carving out their own destiny.
And to Nietzsche, that was a wasted life. Instead, he urged us—become who you truly
are. Not the person your parents want you to be. Not the person society rewards for fitting in. No,
no. You must become something greater. Fortunately, he had a name for such a person:
the Übermensch—the superhuman. Not a brute, not a tyrant, but a creator. One who rises above the
suffocating weight of conformity. While most chase wealth, status, and validation because
they’ve been told that’s what success looks like, the Übermensch writes his own rules. He does not
live by values imposed on him—he creates his own. But how does one become this superhuman?
First, question everything. From the moment you were born, the world handed you beliefs. What is
good, what is bad, what is worth pursuing, what is shameful. But have you ever stopped to ask
if these ideas actually ring true for you? Do you fear failure because it is truly something
to fear, or because someone told you to? Do you seek approval because it fulfills you,
or because you were trained to crave it? Try this—write down the core beliefs that guide your
life. Now ask yourself: Did I choose this belief, or was it given to me? If it was given to you,
then perhaps it is time to let it go. Second, abandon the need for approval.
Nietzsche had nothing but contempt for those who lived for the opinions of others. How many times
have you softened your desires, played small, held your tongue—just to avoid judgment? But
here’s the truth: no matter what you do, people will talk. So why let them dictate your life?
Start small. Make decisions only for yourself. Wear the clothes you truly love, even if they’re
unfashionable. Speak your mind, even if your voice shakes. Stop apologizing for who you are.
And ask yourself—if no one was watching, would I still make this choice? If the answer is no,
then you are not truly living for yourself. Third, embrace every part of yourself. Society
teaches suppression—be polite when you want to set boundaries, be humble when you want to be great,
be agreeable when you want to rebel. But what happens when you cage a wild beast? It does
not become tame—it becomes sick. So instead of fighting who you are, own it. Feel anger?
Let it fuel your ambition. Have desires? Pursue them without shame. Dream big? Then do it! Chase
those dreams, no matter who laughs at you. Fourth, define success for yourself. So many
people chase money, titles, and validation without ever asking if these things will truly make them
happy. They run a race without questioning who set the finish line. Look at the people you admire. Do
you respect them because they followed the rules, or because they rewrote them? The moment you stop
measuring yourself by other people’s standards, you reclaim your life. Success is not wealth.
It is not fame. It is not admiration. What it is, is living on your own terms.
Finally, embrace struggle. “What does not kill me makes
me stronger,” Nietzsche wrote. But this was no shallow motivational quote. He meant that
suffering, hardship, and failure are the forge in which greatness is made. These are not obstacles:
Every setback, every rejection, every painful lesson? All of them are the path.
So the next time life throws you down, do not whimper. Rise. See the challenge for
what it is—an invitation to grow, to evolve, to become something greater than you were yesterday.
And so, we arrive at the great truth of Nietzsche’s philosophy. You do not find
yourself. You create yourself. Every decision, every act of courage, every belief you challenge,
every boundary you break—this is how you become. So tell me… Who are you becoming?
Sartre - Take responsibility for yourself Most people go through life believing they
are passengers, not drivers. They blame circumstances, their past, or
bad luck—acting as if life happens to them rather than something they actively shape. But Jean-Paul
Sartre’s philosophy—existentialism—teaches the opposite: you are responsible for
everything you do, and no one else can decide what your life means except you.
At the core of Sartre’s ideas is the belief that existence precedes essence. Like Camus,
Sartre too believed that you weren’t born with a predefined identity, purpose, or path. Unlike
a tool created for a specific function, you enter the world as a blank slate. You don’t find
yourself—you create yourself through your choices. But most people avoid this responsibility. They
look outward, chasing approval, following the crowd, letting others define who they should be.
True self-focus means realizing that you are alone responsible for your identity, your actions,
and your future. The problem is, responsibility is uncomfortable. People tell themselves all the
time “I have to do this. I have no choice. This is just who I am.” Sartre called this bad faith—lying
to yourself to escape the burden of freedom. Imagine someone who hates their job but stays
for years, saying, I need stability. Or someone who dreams of traveling but convinces themselves,
That’s not the kind of life I can have. These aren’t truths—they’re excuses disguised as
reality. The truth is they could quit. They could buy a ticket tomorrow. But that would
mean taking full responsibility, and that responsibility is terrifying.
Bad faith happens when people act as though they are their roles. A waiter doesn’t just
serve food—he believes he is a waiter in some fixed, unchangeable way. The moment he convinces
himself he has no choice, he loses the ability to redefine himself. Sartre’s point is clear:
you are never just one thing. You are not a prisoner of your past, your circumstances,
or your own habits. Every day, you are making choices—even when you pretend you aren’t.
So what's the first step? Own your decisions. Most people don’t realize how much power they
actually have. Start by changing how you speak to yourself. Stop saying,
I have to and start saying, I choose to. Instead of I have to work late, say,
I choose to work late because I value financial stability. Instead of I can’t change my life,
say, I am choosing not to change right now. Now this may sound small,
but it forces you to acknowledge that you are in control. The moment you take responsibility
for every decision—no matter how small—is the moment you start reclaiming your life.
But focusing on yourself isn’t just about mindset—it’s about action. Sartre believed
that you are not what you think or feel—you are what you do. You’re not an artist because you want
to create—you’re an artist because you do create. You’re not confident because you wish to be—you’re
confident because you act with confidence. If you want to change something about yourself,
don’t wait until you “feel” ready. Act as if you are already the person you want to become. Every
decision, big or small, shapes your identity. For Sartre, this is what true self-focus looks
like: Owning your choices and taking action without waiting for permission. The world isn’t
deciding for you. Other people aren’t defining you. You are responsible for who you are. And
the moment you accept that? You take back your power—and finally start living for yourself.
Marcus Aurelius – Control What You Can, Ignore the Rest
How much of your time is spent worrying about things beyond your control? What
someone thinks of you, something on the news, or even the weather ruining
your plans? Now ask yourself: does any of it actually change your life?
This is where the Stoics got it right. Stoicism isn’t abstract theory—it’s a way of life,
a mindset that keeps you steady when the world tries to shake you. At its core, it’s simple:
focus on what you can control and ignore what you can’t. If you truly lived by this,
half your worries would vanish overnight. Marcus Aurelius ruled Rome through war, betrayal,
and plague, yet his Meditations show a man focused only on what was within his power. Seneca,
surrounded by political treachery, trained himself to stay calm. Epictetus, born a slave, taught that
real freedom isn’t about your circumstances—it’s about how you choose to respond. These men
didn’t have easy lives, but they mastered their minds instead of letting the world break them.
Now, what’s fascinating is that modern psychology backs this up. The Locus of Control theory shows
that people who focus on what they can change are happier and more successful. Cognitive Behavioral
Therapy or CBT, currently considered one of the most effective treatments for anxiety in
use today, is built on Stoic principles. It teaches that your emotions aren’t caused by
events but how you interpret them. And your interpretation is always within your control.
Try this: The next time you catch yourself thinking “I’ll never succeed” after a mistake,
stop. Ask yourself: Is this thought based on facts, or just emotion? Instead of spiraling
into doubt, reframe it: think “Everyone makes mistakes. This is a lesson, not a failure.”
Do this often enough, and your mind becomes your ally rather than your enemy. Marcus Aurelius
had a habit—he wrote. Every night, he put his frustrations on paper and examined them logically.
So the next time something upsets you, ask yourself:Does this really matter? Is this within
my control? If the answer is no, let it go. Do this enough, and you stop wasting energy
on things that don’t deserve it. The world will always be chaotic, but you don’t have to be. The
moment you stop giving your energy to things beyond your power, you take that power back.
Lao Tzu – Flow Like Water Do you ever feel like life is just one long
struggle? You push, you stress, you fight to make things happen—only to end up exhausted. But what
if the answer wasn’t to fight harder, but to stop fighting at all? That’s the essence of Taoism,
an ancient Chinese philosophy that teaches us to flow with life instead of resisting it.
At the heart of Taoism is the Tao—The Way. Not a set of rules, not a rigid path—just the natural
rhythm of existence. Taoism teaches that most suffering comes from resisting this flow, forcing
life to bend to our will instead of adapting and letting things unfold naturally. Imagine a river.
It doesn’t fight the rocks in its way; it moves around them. It doesn’t struggle, yet over time,
it carves through mountains. That’s the kind of effortless power Taoism teaches: to be like water.
One of its most powerful ideas is Wu Wei, meaning effortless action or going with the
flow. Of course this doesn’t mean doing nothing—it means moving with life instead of against it.
Think of an athlete in the zone, a musician lost in their music,
or a surfer riding a wave instead of fighting it. That’s Wu Wei—when effort becomes effortless.
Most of our stress comes from trying to control things that are beyond us but Taoism flips that
thinking: If something isn’t working, maybe the answer isn’t to push harder but to step back and
let things unfold. When obstacles arise, don’t fight them with frustration—adapt,
adjust, find another way forward. Flexibility isn’t weakness—it’s strength.
The more you focus on the present, the less you get lost in unnecessary worries. Taoism reminds
us that life isn’t happening in the past or the future—it’s happening right now. A river
never stops to compare itself to the ocean—it just flows at its own pace. And the same should be true
for you. The more you focus on your own journey, the less you’ll care about external validation.
Society, social media, other people’s opinions—none of it should define you. Taoism
teaches that true peace comes from within, not from outside approval. People will always have
opinions. But opinions aren’t facts; they’re just reflections of their own experiences. Like water
moving past rocks, let judgment roll off you. You don’t need to follow someone else’s definition
of success. You don’t need to meet the expectations the world has set for you.
The Way isn’t a single road—it’s about moving through life in a way that feels natural to you.
In the end, you have two choices: spend your life fighting against the current, exhausting
yourself trying to control the uncontrollable, or surrender to life’s flow and focus on your own
path.Taoism teaches that letting go doesn’t mean losing power—it means gaining freedom.
It means no longer allowing other people’s opinions to dictate your
happiness and instead simply existing—fully, freely, and at peace with the world as it is.
Buddha – Understand the True Nature of Self Who are you, really? If you strip away your job,
your name, your relationships—everything the world has told you about yourself—what’s
left? Most people never ask this question. They spend their lives fitting into roles,
holding onto identities that were handed to them. But Buddhism offers a different
perspective: the self isn’t what you think it is. That might sound strange. Of course, we exist—we
think, we feel, we experience. But Buddhism teaches that what we call "the self" isn’t some
solid, unchanging thing. It’s just a collection of shifting thoughts, emotions, and memories.
This is Anicca, a buddhist truth which means impermanence. Nothing in life stays the same,
and that includes you. Your body, mind, and personality are in constant motion. Think about
it—are you the same person you were five years ago? Even five minutes ago? The way you think,
the way you feel, even the cells in your body—everything is always changing.
But we resist this truth. We cling to a fixed idea of ourselves, believing that who we are is
set in stone. That resistance, that fear of change, is what leads to suffering.
Now, Anatta—non-self—goes even deeper. Anicca, yet another buddhist truth tells us that we change,
but Anatta tells us that there is no core “you” beneath those changes. No single, unchanging
essence that remains the same throughout time. We like to think of ourselves as fixed beings,
like a book with a clear beginning, middle, and end. But Buddhism says we’re more like
a story that is being rewritten in real-time. The idea of a permanent,
stable identity? That’s just an illusion. Think of a flame. If you light a candle and
watch it burn, the flame appears to be the same from moment to moment. But in reality,
it’s always shifting—new oxygen, new heat, new movement. Yet we still look at it and say, that’s
the same flame. That’s how we see ourselves. But the truth is, we are constantly changing,
just like that flame. The problem is, we don’t want to accept this. We hold onto labels—our past,
our stories, our identity—because they make us feel secure. But real freedom comes when
you stop gripping so tightly—when you stop trying to be something and simply allow yourself to be.
So instead of constantly looking outward—chasing validation, worrying about opinions, comparing
yourself to others—Buddhism teaches you to turn inward. Pay attention to your mind. Notice your
thoughts. Meditation is one of the simplest ways to do this. When you sit in silence and observe
your thoughts instead of reacting to them, you start to realize: You are not your thoughts. You
are the observer. And the more you practice this, the less power the outside world has over you.
And if you want another way to reclaim yourself, let go of the need for external approval. We chase
success, looks, and status, thinking they define our worth. But Buddhism reminds us that everything
external is temporary. So if your self-worth depends on something outside of you, you’re
giving the world control over your peace. But when you let go, you realize—you were enough all along.
This doesn’t mean shutting yourself off from the world. It means moving through
it without letting it control you. You can love without clinging, work without obsession,
and exist without constantly needing validation. Instead of looking outward for approval,
you start looking inward for peace. A simple way to practice this? Question your
identity. Ask yourself: Am I holding onto a version of myself that no longer exists?
Notice when your emotions take over. Instead of reacting, step back and ask: Is this really me,
or is it just passing through? Let go of labels. If you’ve always told yourself, “ No,
I’m just the kind of person who…” challenge it. You are not fixed. You can change. At the end
of the day, the world will always have opinions, expectations and distractions. But none of that
defines you. The moment you stop chasing external validation and focus on your own inner state,
you become untouchable. The world stops shaping you—and for the first time, you become yourself.
In this video, we’ve explored different ways to shift your focus inward and stop
being consumed by what others think. So, what will you choose?
Will you build the unshakable mindset of a Stoic? Push yourself beyond limits like Nietzsche? Let go
of fixed identities like the Buddha? Move with life’s flow like the Taoists? Live on your own
terms like Camus? Or fully own your choices like Sartre? Or maybe your path is something entirely
your own—a mix of all these ideas, shaped by your own experiences, your struggles,
and your journey. But which philosophy resonates with you the most? Let me know in the comments.
And if you enjoyed this video, please make sure to check out our full philosophies
for life playlist and for more videos to help you find success and happiness using
ancient philosophical wisdom, don’t forget to subscribe. Thanks so much for watching.
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