Letter LXV · On the First Cause
Seneca
Seneca advises cultivating a familiarity with poverty as a form of preparedness. In a time when wealth was seen as the ultimate buffer against life's uncertainties, he challenges that assumption by arguing that understanding and accepting poverty can make wealth more enjoyable and less necessary. In this, he pushes against the prevailing Roman belief that fortune and status were life's primary goals, suggesting instead that true comfort comes from independence of mind.