Pulled Like a Puppet by Every Impulse
- Deric Hollings
- Jun 14
- 5 min read
As Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT) is informed by Stoic philosophy, this blog entry is part of an ongoing series regarding a book entitled The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living by Ryan Holiday and Stephen Hanselman.
Authors of The Daily Stoic address the matter of being pulled like a puppet by every impulse. Does life ever seem as though you have no actual control or influence in this regard? If so, perhaps the words of ancient Stoic philosopher Marcus Aurelius may benefit you (page 48):
Frame your thoughts like this—you are an old person, you won’t let yourself be enslaved by this any longer, no longer pulled like a puppet by every impulse, and you’ll stop complaining about your present fortune or dreading the future.
Often, I listen to people bitching, whining, moaning, whinging, and complaining about how it’s as though they have no power to change their lives. As though they’re merely victims of circumstance, these individuals ostensibly believe they’re pulled like a puppet by every impulse.
Some go as far as to legitimately believe that they’re somehow trapped in The Matrix (an artificial reality in which individuals are merely characters in a simulation). Regarding this perspective, authors of The Daily Stoic state (page 48):
We resent the person who comes in and tries to boss us around. Don’t tell me how to dress, how to think, how to do my job, how to live. This is because we are independent, self-sufficient people. Or at least that’s what we tell ourselves.
Although I suppose it’s possible that humans are simply confined to a synthetic version of reality while having no self-determined or autonomous ability to exercise personal agency, I see no evidence of such a supposition. Therefore, I live as though I actually have free will.
At least, that’s what I tell myself. Concerning this perspective, authors of The Daily Stoic add (page 48):
Yet if someone says something we disagree with, something inside us tells us we have to argue with them. If there’s a plate of cookies in front of us, we have to eat them. If someone does something we dislike, we have to get mad about it.
When something bad happens, we have to be sad, depressed, or worried. But if something good happens a few minutes later, all of a sudden we’re happy, excited, and want more.
Perhaps The Matrix, if there truly is such a thing, is within you. Rather than being pulled like a puppet by stimuli outside of yourself, you’re pulled like a puppet by every impulse within yourself. Regarding this outlook, authors of The Daily Stoic state (page 48):
We would never let another person jerk us around the way we let our impulses do. It’s time we start seeing it that way—that we’re not puppets that can be made to dance this way or that way just because we feel like it. We should be the ones in control, not our emotions, because we are independent, self-sufficient people.
Being pulled like a puppet by every impulse is a choice. Yet, if you opt to exercise your independence, you can stop the emotional dance of unbridled instinct. If you’d like to know more about this and other Stoic methods of rational living, I look forward to hearing from you.
If you’re looking for a provider who tries to work to help understand how thinking impacts physical, mental, emotional, and behavioral elements of your life—helping you to sharpen your critical thinking skills, I invite you to reach out today by using the contact widget on my website.
As a psychotherapist, I’m pleased to try to help people with an assortment of issues ranging from anger (hostility, rage, and aggression) to relational issues, adjustment matters, trauma experience, justice involvement, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, anxiety and depression, and other mood or personality-related matters.
At Hollings Therapy, LLC, serving all of Texas, I aim to treat clients with dignity and respect while offering a multi-lensed approach to the practice of psychotherapy and life coaching. My mission includes: Prioritizing the cognitive and emotive needs of clients, an overall reduction in client suffering, and supporting sustainable growth for the clients I serve. Rather than simply trying to help you to feel better, I want to try to help you get better!
Deric Hollings, LPC, LCSW

References:
Daily Stoic. (n.d.). Translating the Stoics: An interview with “The Daily Stoic” co-author Stephen Hanselman. Retrieved from https://dailystoic.com/stephen-hanselman-interview/
Holiday, R. and Hanselman, S. (2016). The daily stoic: 366 meditations on wisdom, perseverance, and the art of living. Penguin Random House LLC. Retrieved from https://www.pdfdrive.com/the-daily-stoic-366-meditations-on-wisdom-perseverance-and-the-art-of-living-d61378067.html
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