The Stoic Daily Review

What is the Stoic daily review and how do you practice it?

The Stoic daily review is a structured morning-and-evening self-examination practice — rooted in Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, and Epictetus — that trains attention on what is within your control, builds honest self-knowledge, and interrupts reactive patterns before they compound. Evidence is largely mechanistic and clinical; no randomized trials exist, but the underlying cognitive mechanisms align with modern research on self-monitoring and reflection.

The ancient Stoics were systematic about self-examination. Marcus Aurelius kept a journal we still read. Seneca ended each day with a personal audit. Epictetus taught students to test every impression before accepting it. The shared logic: you cannot improve what you cannot see. Below are the core practices that make up a Stoic daily review, each grounded in the mechanism that makes it more than journaling for its own sake.

Practices

The morning preparation (praemeditatio)

Anticipate the day’s difficulties before they arrive so you meet them as chosen, not imposed.

The evening reckoning (examen)

Audit the day’s actions against your stated intentions — without self-punishment, just honest seeing.

The dichotomy-of-control check

Before reacting to any event, sort it: "Is this in my control, or not?"

Memento mori — the mortality reflection

Briefly hold the awareness that today is finite to sharpen what actually matters.

Negative visualization (premeditatio malorum)

Imagine losing what you value — not to catastrophize, but to restore appreciation.

The virtue audit

Ask which of the four Stoic virtues you exercised — and which you neglected — today.

Write to yourself, not for an audience

Keep a private record of philosophical self-argument, not a performance or a diary.

Practice this with IX Coach

Reading about a practice changes nothing on its own. IX Coach turns these into a guided, adaptive routine — discerning where you are in real time and walking the practice with you, session after session.

Practice this with IX Coach

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