Review the crowd of history
Call to mind the powerful, famous, and worried people of the past — and note they are all gone.
Why it works
Marcus repeatedly surveys the great figures of earlier generations — kings, philosophers, emperors — to observe that they are gone and nearly forgotten regardless of their fame and power. This works through a specific kind of temporal distancing: comparing yourself not to future forgetting but to the already-accomplished-fact of others’ forgetting, which is more visceral and immediate than abstract projection. It deflates the vanity that inflates minor setbacks into crises.
How to do it
- Name three or four historically significant people — emperors, conquerors, famous rulers.
- Observe that they are gone, that nearly no one alive thinks of them daily, and that the world continued.
- Return to your own concern and re-rate its urgency against that company.
Evidence
This is a narrative form of temporal distancing: using the concrete historical record of others’ passing as a lever for perspective. The distancing effect is mechanistically consistent with studied self-distancing; the specific historical-survey form is Stoic practice. (mechanistic)
The mechanism is plausible; the historical-survey variant is not separately studied. For some people, contemplating universal mortality produces anxiety rather than proportion; adjust accordingly.
Common mistake
Letting it slide into "nothing matters because everyone dies" — a nihilist dead end. The Stoic point is that your stakes are appropriately modest, which frees energy for what genuinely matters.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach uses the historical-crowd prompt selectively when inflated urgency is blocking clear thinking, offering it as a calibration question before helping you identify what actually warrants your full attention.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).