After everything that's happened in the last few years, including the world-changing pandemic that started six years ago this month (six years), we're tired. After everything that's happened in your life, after everything that's gone wrong the last couple weeks, you think to yourself, "I can't handle one more thing going wrong."
Certainly, Marcus Aurelius would have related to the sentiment. Floods. Plagues. Wars. A troubled son. Personal health issues.
But the thing is, life doesn't care. It has no time for your questions. It pays no mind to your limits.
"I don't think I'm up for this," the novelist John Gregory Dunne said to his wife as they left the hospital after rushing to check on their daughter, who had just been admitted. He was down about his career. He wasn't feeling great about his own health. He was sick about his only child. He was worried it would be a long and hard road out for all of them. Joan Didion, his steely, stoic wife, responded with something we can imagine Marcus Aurelius reminding himself of in Meditations (premium leather edition here): "You don't get a choice."
Fortune behaves as she pleases, the Stoics said. Life disposes. It decides. The only thing we get a choice in is how we respond.
The BBC caught scam call center workers on hidden cameras as they laughed at the people they were tricking.
One worker bragged about making $250k from victims. The disturbing truth? Scammers don't pick phone numbers at random. They buy your data from brokers.
Once your data is out there, it's not just calls. It's phishing, impersonation, and identity theft. That's why you need Incogni: They delete your info from the web, monitor and follow up automatically, and continue to erase data as new risks appear.
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