“Ancient wisdom endures because human nature does.”

—Attributed to Cormac McCarthy, late American fiction author

Image from Unsplash by Josh Hild

Ancient wisdom endures not because it is old, but because we are not as new as we think.

Across centuries and cultures, people have wrestled with the same fears, hopes, ambitions, and contradictions that shape our lives today.

The tools change, the pace accelerates, but human nature remains remarkably consistent.

Teachings about patience, humility, courage, and balance continue to resonate because they speak directly to these unchanging patterns.

When we revisit ancient insights, we are not looking backwards; we are recognizing ourselves.

In a world obsessed with novelty, there is quite power in remembering that some of the best guidance has already been written, lived, and tested by generations before us, if we are willing to truly listen.

EXERCISE:

To venture down the path of ancient wisdom consider the following sources:

The Tao TE Ching — small daily readings
Meditations — very practical
Letters from a Stoic — relevant to modern life
The Bible
The Dhammapada — easy for beginners

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