Growing Better Requires Risking Looking Foolish

Copy link
3 min read

If you want to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid. — Epictetus

What lingers after this line?

Epictetus on the Price of Progress

Epictetus’ line captures a blunt Stoic bargain: improvement costs comfort, and one of the first comforts to go is the need to look competent. If you insist on appearing polished at all times, you will avoid the beginner’s stage where real learning happens. In that sense, being “content” to seem foolish is not self-humiliation; it is a deliberate choice to prioritize growth over reputation. This premise fits Epictetus’ broader message in the Discourses (c. 108–135 CE), where he repeatedly separates what is truly ours—our judgments and choices—from what is not, including other people’s opinions. Once you treat reputation as an external, you can spend your energy on the only status that matters to Stoicism: becoming wiser and more virtuous.

Beginnerhood and the Learning Curve

From there, the quote points to an unavoidable reality: competence is built in public view, and early attempts often look awkward. Whether it’s learning a language, lifting weights, or presenting in meetings, the first drafts of skill are messy. The person who never seems foolish is often the person who never tries anything new. A familiar anecdote illustrates this: in many studios, novice musicians are tempted to play softly to hide mistakes, but good teachers insist they play clearly so errors can be corrected. Likewise, Epictetus is urging a kind of intellectual volume—show your imperfect effort—because improvement depends on feedback, repetition, and the willingness to endure temporary inelegance.

Reputation as an “Indifferent”

Next, Stoicism supplies the psychological mechanism for this courage: reclassify being thought stupid as morally irrelevant. In Stoic terms, what others think is an “indifferent”—it may be preferred, but it cannot make you good or bad. Marcus Aurelius later echoes this in Meditations (c. 170–180 CE), reminding himself that praise and blame are merely sounds unless they alter one’s character. Once reputation is demoted, the fear of looking foolish loses much of its power. You can then take the actions that actually improve you—asking basic questions, admitting confusion, revising your beliefs—without treating each momentary embarrassment as a verdict on your worth.

Humility as a Practical Discipline

However, Epictetus isn’t romanticizing ignorance; he is prescribing humility as training. Being content to seem foolish means accepting the gap between what you know and what you need to learn, then stepping into that gap willingly. It is the opposite of defensive cleverness, where people argue to win rather than to understand. This is why the quote feels so modern: in classrooms, workplaces, and online spaces, social incentives often reward quick takes over careful learning. Epictetus advises you to choose a slower, sturdier path—one where you can say “I don’t know” and treat it as the start of progress rather than a social failure.

From Momentary Shame to Lasting Character

Finally, the payoff is not merely improved skill but improved character. The person who can withstand being misjudged develops resilience, patience, and honesty—virtues Stoicism prizes above external success. Over time, repeated exposure to small humiliations builds a calm independence: you learn to act from principle, not from the audience’s reaction. In practice, this might look like volunteering for tasks you’re not yet good at, seeking critique instead of reassurance, or changing your mind publicly when evidence demands it. Epictetus’ promise is quiet but radical: if you can tolerate looking foolish today, you become less enslaved tomorrow—and that freedom is the foundation of genuine improvement.

Recommended Reading

One-minute reflection

What's one small action this suggests?

Related Quotes

6 selected

We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak. — Epictetus

Epictetus

Epictetus condenses a Stoic ethic into anatomy: the ratio of ears to mouth suggests a life calibrated toward receptivity. To listen twice as much as we speak is not a call to silence, but to proportion.

Read full interpretation →

Begin with the humility to learn and the bravery to risk being clumsy. — Jane Austen

Jane Austen

Austen’s line urges us to start where most of us hesitate: at the awkward, uncertain beginning of any skill or relationship. Instead of waiting to feel competent, we are invited to begin while we are still unsteady.

Read full interpretation →

To reach the heights of greatness, one must begin at the depths of humility. — Anonymous

Unknown

This quote emphasizes that achieving greatness is a process that starts with understanding and acknowledging one’s limitations and the value of humility.

Read full interpretation →

Receive without conceit, release without struggle. — Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius compresses an entire discipline into two movements: take what arrives without ego, and let what departs go without resistance. The first clause challenges the impulse to treat gifts—praise, luck, status—a...

Read full interpretation →

The most common ego is the one that believes it is more spiritual or more 'awake' than others. — Eckhart Tolle

Eckhart Tolle

Eckhart Tolle’s line points to an irony: the ego can survive even in the act of trying to transcend it. Instead of boasting about wealth or status, it boasts about insight, calmness, or consciousness—quietly turning spir...

Read full interpretation →

Even the monkey falls from the tree. — Japanese Proverb

Japanese Proverb

“Even the monkey falls from the tree” begins with a vivid picture: a creature built for climbing still loses its grip. By choosing an expert climber rather than a novice, the proverb makes its point gently but firmly—ski...

Read full interpretation →

More From Author

More from Epictetus →

The key is to keep company only with people who uplift you, whose presence calls forth your best. — Epictetus

Epictetus frames companionship not as a casual preference but as a moral and psychological environment. In his Stoic teaching, character is the central project of life, so the people you keep become part of the training...

Read full interpretation →

If you are tempted to look outside yourself for approval, you have compromised your integrity. — Epictetus

Epictetus compresses a whole Stoic ethic into a blunt caution: the moment you feel pulled to secure someone else’s approval, you risk trading your inner standards for external rewards. In his view, integrity isn’t a repu...

Read full interpretation →

Keep your attention focused entirely on what is truly your own concern, and be clear that what belongs to others is their business and none of yours. — Epictetus

Epictetus draws a clean boundary between what is “your own concern” and what is not. In Stoic terms, this maps onto the core distinction between what depends on us—our judgments, choices, and intentions—and what does not...

Read full interpretation →

Stop waiting for the right mood. You can do anything when you are in the mood. The problem is what you do when you are not. — Epictetus

Epictetus opens with a blunt challenge: if you keep waiting to “feel like it,” you hand control of your life to a passing emotion. In that pleasant surge of energy—when the mood is right—almost anyone can show courage, f...

Read full interpretation →

Explore Related Topics