Episodes

  • EP009: Practical Stoic tools for modern life - Better Life by The Growth Code
    Apr 13 2026

    Practical Stoic Tools for Modern Life


    What if emotional stability wasn’t something you were born with… but something you could train?


    In this episode, we move beyond theory and into the practical mechanics of Stoicism — a mental operating system designed to keep you calm, focused, and in control, no matter what life throws at you.


    Stoicism isn’t about suppressing emotions.

    It’s about understanding them, reframing them, and ultimately mastering your response.


    You’ll learn:

    - The Dichotomy of Control — the single idea that eliminates unnecessary stress

    - How to transform fear, anger, and anxiety into clarity and action

    - The three Stoic disciplines: desire, action, and assent

    - Why most emotional suffering comes from misjudgment, not reality

    - Practical exercises like negative visualization and the reserve clause that build real resilience


    We also break down the deeper purpose behind Stoicism:

    Not just personal peace — but becoming someone who acts with wisdom, courage, justice, and discipline in a chaotic world.


    This is not abstract philosophy.

    This is a toolkit.


    A system you can apply:

    - When things go wrong

    - When emotions spike

    - When life doesn’t follow your plan


    If you want less reactivity, more control, and a clearer mind —

    this episode gives you the tools to start.


    You can’t control the world.

    But you can train how you respond to it.

    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • EP008: Why looking rich keeps you poor - Better Life by The Growth Code
    Apr 12 2026

    Why Looking Rich Keeps You Poor


    What if the biggest obstacle to building real wealth… is the desire to look wealthy?


    In this episode, we break down one of the most counterintuitive truths about money: the people who appear rich are often the ones falling further behind financially — while true millionaires quietly build wealth out of sight.


    Drawing from decades of research behind The Millionaire Next Door, we uncover the hidden patterns that separate high-income earners from real wealth builders. You’ll learn why luxury cars, designer brands, and status-driven spending often signal financial fragility — not success.


    We explore:

    - The critical difference between income vs. net worth

    - Why most millionaires live below their means

    - The concept of Prodigious Accumulators of Wealth (PAWs) vs. Under Accumulators (UAWs)

    - How “looking successful” can trap you in a lifestyle inflation loop

    - Why financial independence requires discipline, not display


    We also dive into one of the most overlooked traps: “Economic Outpatient Care” — and how financial handouts can quietly destroy long-term independence.


    This episode is not about saving pennies.

    It’s about rewiring how you define success.


    Because in the long run, wealth isn’t what people see —

    it’s what you keep.


    If you’re serious about building real financial freedom, this might be the mindset shift you’ve been avoiding.


    Stop performing wealth. Start building it.

    Show More Show Less
    55 mins
  • EP007: Debugging the Human Operating System - Better Life by The Growth Code
    Apr 11 2026

    You have already done philosophy today.

    When you decided whether a rule still applied in an unusual situation, you were doing ethics. When you wondered whether your memory of an event was accurate or just your interpretation of it, you were doing epistemology. When you asked whether you are still the same person you were ten years ago, you were asking the question Plato's contemporaries were arguing about in Athens before the concept of a university existed.

    Philosophy did not begin in a classroom. It began the moment someone refused to accept an inherited answer and asked instead: but how do we actually know that?

    In this episode, we take Philosophy 101 as our guide through twenty-five centuries of Western thought — from Socrates drinking hemlock rather than stop asking questions, to Descartes doubting everything until he found the one thing he couldn't, to Sartre arguing in a Paris café that the absence of God does not leave a vacuum but a responsibility. We move through the foundational figures — Socrates, Plato, Aristotle — through the Enlightenment's wager that reason alone could rebuild the world, through Kant's revolution that turned the question of knowledge inside out, to the existentialists who inherited the ruins of every system that came before and asked what remains.

    We use the thought experiments that philosophy developed to make its hardest questions concrete: the Ship of Theseus on identity and change, the Trolley Problem on the arithmetic of moral obligation, Plato's Cave on the gap between appearance and reality. These are not puzzles for their own sake — they are precision instruments for isolating exactly where our intuitions conflict and why.

    We also ask the question the survey format tends to avoid: does any of this change anything? Does knowing that Hume demolished the logical basis for cause-and-effect change how you reason? Does reading Aristotle on the good life change how you spend a Tuesday? Or is philosophy's promise to transform its practitioners one of the discipline's most persistent and least examined claims?

    Twenty-five centuries. One question underneath all the others: what does it actually mean to know something, to do the right thing, and to live well?

    This episode is where that question begins.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 5 mins
  • EP006: Stoic tools for an unshakeable mind - Better Life by The Growth Code
    Apr 9 2026

    Epictetus was born a slave.

    He had no property, no freedom of movement, and no legal standing as a person.He also developed one of the most psychologically robust frameworks for human resilience ever recorded.

    That is not a coincidence.

    In this episode, we examine what Stoicism actually is beneath the internet memes and the "memento mori" merchandise — a rigorous philosophical system built on a single, demanding distinction: the line between what is within your control and everything that is not. Epictetus drew that line with more precision than almost anyone before or since. And two thousand years later, the therapists building Cognitive Behavioral Therapy drew the same line, in different language, for the same reasons.

    We trace the argument from its origin. Why a man who could not control his own body developed a philosophy centred on the one thing no one could take from him — his response to what happened. How his student Arrian preserved those teachings in the Enchiridion and the Discourses, and why the resulting texts read less like ancient philosophy and more like a clinical intervention manual. And how Jonas Salzgeber and the modern Stoicism movement have attempted to translate these principles into daily practice — where that translation succeeds, and where something gets lost.

    We also hold the tension the self-help versions tend to smooth over. Stoic indifference to external outcomes is not positive thinking. It is not gratitude journaling. It is a genuinely demanding reorientation of what you consider worth wanting — and it has costs as well as benefits. The same framework that produces resilience can, in certain readings, produce detachment, suppression, and a philosophical excuse for not fighting circumstances that should be fought.

    The CBT connection is real and significant: Ellis's rational emotive therapy, Beck's cognitive restructuring, and the core insight of mindfulness-based intervention all trace their intellectual lineage to the Stoic claim that human suffering originates not in events but in the judgments we make about events. That is not a metaphor. It is a direct philosophical inheritance — and understanding it changes how you think about both the ancient texts and the modern therapy.

    Stoic Tools for an Unshakeable Mind is about what it actually takes to be psychologically stable in a world you cannot control — and why a Greek slave figured it out before the rest of us caught up.

    Show More Show Less
    49 mins
  • EP005: Human Engineering for the Digital Age - Better Life by The Growth Code
    Apr 9 2026

    Dale Carnegie wrote How to Win Friends and Influence People in 1936.The world has changed beyond recognition since then.The people in it — not so much.

    In this episode, we revisit one of the best-selling books in human history and ask the question its original readers never had to: does a framework built for the handshake era survive the algorithmic one? When your first impression happens on a screen, when influence is measured in engagement metrics, and when "sincere appreciation" can be automated by an AI — what does Carnegie's advice actually mean in 2025?

    We go deep on the principles that made this book endure: why criticism almost never changes behaviour and almost always damages relationships; why appealing to someone's genuine desires is not manipulation but the foundation of every durable working relationship; and why Carnegie's central argument — that technical skill is worth less than the ability to move people — has only become more true as hard skills have become easier to acquire and harder to differentiate.

    We trace the psychology beneath the anecdotes. The Lincoln stories and the Roosevelt charm are not decoration — they are case studies in emotional regulation, perspective-taking, and what modern research calls social intelligence. We connect Carnegie's intuitions to what behavioural science has since confirmed: about ego, status, the need to feel understood, and the gap between how we think we come across and how we actually land.

    And we hold the tension that Carnegie himself never quite resolved. Is a selfless approach to relationships genuinely selfless — or is it the most sophisticated form of self-interest? When you learn to make people feel important because Carnegie told you it works, is the feeling you create real? Does the technique hollow out the thing it's trying to produce?

    Abraham Lincoln knew how to handle people. So did every effective con artist in history. The skill is identical. The difference is everything.

    Human Engineering for the Digital Age is about what it actually takes to connect, persuade, and lead in an era that has more tools for human interaction than any in history — and arguably less of the thing those tools were supposed to produce.

    Show More Show Less
    57 mins