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Self-Help: Why Cicero’s 6 Mistakes Of Man Is All You Need — 18 Comments

  1. When I was at a low point following a divorce, I was reading lots of “recovery” books, and after nearly a dozen, I came away with one a single piece of advice that I have used to get through many situations regarding how I proceed in a situation. It is what I have since passed onto all of my 5 children: “What you think of me is none of my business”. That advice, along with “This too shall pass”, and ” Bad situations (if too drastic) often make for good stories to be told later on” has helped me for over 50+ years. Not being a religious person, I formed my own moral compass by telling myself, “Don’t hurt anyone, either physically, or mentally”. It is what I consider before saying or doing anything.

    • Hi Bill,

      thanks for leaving a comment & I’m sorry to hear about your divorce.

      Everything you have said here is really great advice for anyone. I just bought my daughter a book called ‘The Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz’ which I think you would relate to very well and is along the same line of thinking. The 4 agreements are:

      1. Be Impeccable With Your Word
      2. Don’t Take Things Personally
      3. Don’t Make Assumptions
      4. Always Try Your Best

      The 1st and 2nd I think relate directly to what you have already said and I have to say I really really struggle with #2 (effectively ‘what you think of me is none of my business’). If it is someone I care about, then I find it really hard not to care about and be extremely sensitive to what they think about me (particularly if I think point 3 is involved on their part).

      So I reckon these 4 agreements are pretty awesome. Somebody recommended the book to me and my daughter asked me if I could recommend a book which was easy to read and kind of philosophical and psychological so I got her this and it’s been a hit.

      I’m already a huge fan of Cicero’s 6 mistakes as I think these cover a lot of what many books have written a lot more about since in 6 simple sentences. I think Ruiz’s 4 agreements are similar, maybe even better.

      Anyway, thanks again for the comment – all that to say I couldn’t agree with you more!!

      All of the above as well as living in the present – (i.e. letting go of the past) but maybe that is also captured in Ruiz’s 3rd agreement.

  2. They are not the Six Mistakes of Man by Cicero, they are the first six of “The Seven Mistakes of Life” by Bernard Meador, in Secrets of Personal Power and Business Power, published 1914.

    • Lol, very interesting.

      Though given Cicero was around some years BC and you are saying that your guy published his work in 1914, I’m still feeling pretty comfortable citing Cicero as the original source.

      Also very interesting that you have the handle CiceroLover, surely that should be MeadorLover or BernardLover though I have to say neither of these seem to have quite the same ring to them…

      thanks for the comment.

      • I did some searching on Google books, and I believe CiceroLover is quite correct. I performed a search of Google’s scanned copy of the Complete works of Cicero. Searching for “six mistakes”, I got a single result:

        “six legions! He is extra-ordinarily vigilant, extraordinarily bold: I see no limit to the mischief. … ‘Come,’ you will say, ‘don’t cry over spilt milk: even the leader himself, whom we are following, has made many mistakes”

        Then I searched for Bernard Meador’s Seven Mistakes of Life, and found the full text for that as well. Meador enumerates seven rules (the first six of which correspond exactly to these “six mistakes”, exactly as CiceroLover said), and he does so without attribution, claiming them to be his own, with no attribution to Cicero.

        Given that an attribution to the great Roman orator Cicero would have added significant weight to his claims, I believe the attribution to be false.

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