It seems you are asking for a long post (likely for a blog, social media, or a study group) about the work Pisma Prijatelju (Letters to a Friend) by (Lucius Annaeus Seneca the Younger). However, the exact title Pisma Prijatelju is not one of Seneca’s major authentic collections. Seneca’s most famous work in letter form is Epistulae Morales ad Lucilium (Moral Letters to Lucilius). It is possible that Pisma Prijatelju is a regional (e.g., Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian) translation or a compilation of Seneca’s letters under a slightly different title, or a lesser-known medieval pseudepigraphon.
Unlike a formal treatise, each letter tackles a specific problem: fear of poverty, anger, grief, the use of time, the fear of death, and the nature of true joy. The style is conversational — as if Seneca is sitting across from you, sipping wine, and asking: “What are you rushing for?”
In this long post, we’ll explore why Pisma Prijatelju is not just an old book but a survival manual for the human soul.