Consider the Cost
Principle 29 from the Enchiridion
Epictetus teaches that before pursuing any goal we should carefully consider the discipline and sacrifices it requires.
Original Passage
In every affair consider what precedes and follows, and then undertake it. Otherwise you will begin with spirit; but not having thought of the consequences, when some of them appear you will shamefully desist. "I would conquer at the Olympic games." But consider what precedes and follows, and then, if it is for your advantage, engage in the affair. You must conform to rules, submit to a diet, refrain from dainties; exercise your body, whether you choose it or not, at a stated hour, in heat and cold; you must drink no cold water, nor sometimes even wine. In a word, you must give yourself up to your master, as to a physician. Then, in the combat, you may be thrown into a ditch, dislocate your arm, turn your ankle, swallow dust, be whipped, and, after all, lose the victory. When you have evaluated all this, if your inclination still holds, then go to war. Otherwise, take notice, you will behave like children who sometimes play like wrestlers, sometimes gladiators, sometimes blow a trumpet, and sometimes act a tragedy when they have seen and admired these shows. Thus you too will be at one time a wrestler, at another a gladiator, now a philosopher, then an orator; but with your whole soul, nothing at all. Like an ape, you mimic all you see, and one thing after another is sure to please you, but is out of favor as soon as it becomes familiar. For you have never entered upon anything considerately, nor after having viewed the whole matter on all sides, or made any scrutiny into it, but rashly, and with a cold inclination. Thus some, when they have seen a philosopher and heard a man speaking like Euphrates (though, indeed, who can speak like him?), have a mind to be philosophers too. Consider first, man, what the matter is, and what your own nature is able to bear. If you would be a wrestler, consider your shoulders, your back, your thighs; for different persons are made for different things. Do you think that you can act as you do, and be a philosopher? That you can eat and drink, and be angry and discontented as you are now? You must watch, you must labor, you must get the better of certain appetites, must quit your acquaintance, be despised by your servant, be laughed at by those you meet; come off worse than others in everything, in magistracies, in honors, in courts of judicature. When you have considered all these things round, approach, if you please; if, by parting with them, you have a mind to purchase equanimity, freedom, and tranquillity. If not, don't come here; don't, like children, be one while a philosopher, then a publican, then an orator, and then one of Caesar's officers. These things are not consistent. You must be one man, either good or bad. You must cultivate either your own ruling faculty or externals, and apply yourself either to things within or without you; that is, be either a philosopher, or one of the vulgar.
Modern Interpretation
Epictetus warns against impulsive ambition. Many people love goals in imagination but quit as soon as the real costs appear. Stoicism asks for honest commitment: before starting anything, examine what it requires, what it demands you give up, and whether you truly accept those terms.
This protects you from scattered living. Without reflection, you copy trends, chase identities, and switch paths whenever discomfort arrives. With reflection, you choose deliberately and endure consistently.
The principle also emphasizes integrity. You cannot fully pursue incompatible aims at once. If you say you want inner freedom but structure your life around external applause, conflict is guaranteed.
Count the cost first, then commit. It is better to pursue a smaller path steadily than to abandon a grand path again and again.
In Practice Today
You decide to "change your life" and adopt multiple habits at once: intense training, strict diet, side business, and constant self-study. After two weeks, exhaustion leads to collapse.
A Stoic approach starts with full-cost awareness. What schedule is realistic? What comforts must be reduced? What sacrifices are you truly willing to make long term?
You choose fewer commitments, practice them consistently, and build momentum. Clarity replaces enthusiasm spikes.
Reflection Question
What goal in your life are you pursuing right now without fully accepting the real cost it demands?