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How teachers can help students navigate trauma

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    Everyone has a story,
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    and that story is filled with chapters
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    that have made us who we are today.
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    Those early chapters of that story
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    sometimes are the ones
    that define us the most.
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    The Center for Disease Control
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    has estimated that over half
    of our nation's children
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    have experienced at least
    one or two types of childhood trauma.
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    That adversity can have lasting effects.
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    When I began to have
    opportunities to speak
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    and advocate for students
    and for teachers,
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    I found myself uniquely positioned
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    to be able to speak
    about childhood trauma.
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    But I had to make a decision first.
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    I had to decide,
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    did I want to just share
    the bright and shiny parts of my life,
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    you know, those ones
    that we put out on social media
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    that make us all look perfect,
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    or did I want to make myself vulnerable
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    and become an open book?
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    The choice became very clear.
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    In order to make a difference
    in the life of a child,
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    I had to become transparent.
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    So I made the commitment
    to tell my personal story.
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    And this story is filled
    with people that have loved me
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    and taken care of me and grown me.
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    And have helped me overcome and heal.
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    And now it's time for me
    to help others do the same.
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    When I first started school,
    I was the picture of normalcy.
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    I was from a good family,
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    I was always dressed nicely,
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    had a smile on my face,
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    I was prepared for school.
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    But my life was anything but normal.
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    By this time, I had already become
    a victim of sexual abuse.
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    And it was still happening.
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    My parents didn't know,
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    and I had not told anyone else.
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    When I started school, I felt like
    this was going to be my safe place.
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    So I was excited.
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    Imagine my dismay when I met my teacher,
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    Mr. Randolph.
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    Now Mr. Randolph was not my abuser.
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    But Mr. Randolph was the epitome
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    of everything that scared me
    the most in my life.
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    I had already started
    these self-preservation techniques
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    to where I took myself out of positions
    where I was going to be alone with a man.
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    And here I was, as a student,
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    I was going to be in a classroom
    with a man every day,
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    for a year of school.
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    I was scared; I didn't trust him.
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    But you know what,
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    Mr. Randolph would turn out
    to be my greatest advocate.
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    But in the beginning,
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    oh, I made sure he knew
    I did not like him.
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    I was noncompliant;
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    I was that kid that was disengaged.
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    And I also made it really hard
    on my parents, too.
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    I didn't want to go to school,
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    so I fought them every morning,
    getting on the bus.
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    At night, I couldn't sleep,
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    because my anxiety was so high.
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    So I was going into class exhausted.
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    Which, exhausted children
    are cranky children,
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    and they're not easy to teach,
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    you know that.
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    Mr. Randolph could have
    approached me with frustration,
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    like so many teachers do
    with students like me.
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    But not him.
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    He approached me with empathy
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    and with flexibility.
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    I was so grateful for that.
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    He saw this six-year-old
    was tired and weary.
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    And so instead of making me
    go outside for recess,
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    he would let me stay in and take naps,
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    because he knew I needed rest.
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    Instead of sitting
    at the teacher table at lunch,
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    he would come and sit with the students
    at the student table.
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    He would engage me
    and all my classmates in conversation.
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    And I now look back and I know
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    he had a purpose for that,
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    he was listening, he was asking questions.
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    He needed to find out what was going on.
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    He built a relationship with me.
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    He earned my trust.
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    And slowly but surely,
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    those walls that I had built around myself
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    he started chipping away at,
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    and I eventually realized
    he was one of the good guys.
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    I know that he felt like he wasn't enough.
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    Because he made the move
    to talk to my mom.
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    And got my mom's permission
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    to let me start seeing
    a school guidance counselor,
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    Ms. McFadyen.
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    I started seeing Ms. McFadyen
    once or twice a week
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    for the next two years.
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    It was a process.
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    During that time period,
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    I never disclosed to her the abuse,
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    because it was a secret;
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    I wasn't supposed to tell.
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    But she connected the dots,
    I know she did,
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    because everything that she did with me
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    was to empower me
    and help me find my voice.
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    She taught me how to use mental images
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    to push through my fears.
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    She taught me breathing techniques
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    to help me get through
    those anxiety attacks
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    that I would have so often.
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    And she role-played with me.
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    And she made sure
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    that I could stand up
    for myself in situations.
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    And the day came
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    where I was in the room with my abuser
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    and one other adult.
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    And I told my truth.
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    I told about the abuse.
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    Immediately, my abuser began to deny,
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    and the person I disclosed to,
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    they just weren't equipped
    to handle the bombshell
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    that I had just dropped on them.
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    It was easier to believe the abuser
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    rather than a child.
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    So I was told never to speak of it again.
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    I was made to feel like I had done
    something wrong, again.
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    It was devastating.
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    But you know what,
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    something good came out of that day.
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    My abuser knew that I was no longer
    going to be silent.
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    The power shifted.
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    And the abuse stopped.
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    (Applause)
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    But the shame
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    and fear of it happening again
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    remained.
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    And it would remain with me
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    for many, many years to come.
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    Mr. Randolph and Ms. McFadyen,
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    they helped me find my voice.
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    They helped me find the light out.
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    But you know what,
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    there are so many kids
    that aren't as fortunate as me.
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    And you have them in your classrooms.
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    That is why it's so important for me
    to talk to you today,
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    so you can be aware
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    and you can start asking the questions
    that need to be asked
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    and paying attention to these students,
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    so you too can help them find their way.
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    As a kindergarten teacher,
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    I start my year off
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    with my kids making box biographies.
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    These are two of my students.
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    And I encourage them
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    to fill those boxes with things
    that tell me about them
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    and about their life,
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    what's important to you, you know?
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    They decorate them,
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    I mean, they really take time,
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    they fill them with pictures
    of their families and of their pets,
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    and then I let them present them
    to me and to the class.
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    And during that time,
    I am an active listener.
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    Because the things they say,
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    the facial expressions that they give me,
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    the things they don't say
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    can become red flags for me
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    and can help me figure out
    what their needs are.
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    What is driving them
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    to maybe have the behaviors
    that they're showing me in class.
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    How can I be a better teacher
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    by listening to their voices?
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    I also make times to develop
    relationships with them,
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    much like Mr. Randolph did with me.
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    I sit with them at lunch,
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    I have conversations with them at recess,
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    I go to their games on the weekends,
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    I go to their dance recitals.
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    I become a part of their life.
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    Because in order to really know a student,
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    you've got to infuse yourself
    into their lives.
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    Now I know some of you
    are middle school teachers
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    and high school teachers,
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    and you might think that those kids
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    have already kind of
    developed, and you know,
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    they're on autopilot at that point.
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    But don't be deceived.
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    Especially the kids that you think
    have it all together,
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    because those are the ones
    that might need you the most.
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    If you were to look at my yearbook,
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    you would see me on about every page,
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    because I was involved in everything.
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    I even drove a school bus.
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    (Laughs)
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    So I was that kid
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    that teachers thought
    was the overachiever,
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    the popular person,
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    the one that had it together.
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    But guys, I was lost.
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    I was lost,
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    and I wanted someone to ask me,
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    "Lisa, why are you here all the time,
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    why are you throwing yourself
    into all these things?"
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    Did they ever wonder,
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    was I running away from someone,
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    was I running away from something?
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    Why did I not want to be in my community
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    or in my home?
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    Why did I want to be
    at school all the time?
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    No one ever asked.
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    Now don't get me wrong,
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    all overachievers in your schools
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    are not victims of abuse or trauma.
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    But I just want you
    to take the time to be curious.
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    Ask them why.
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    You may find out
    that there is a reason behind it.
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    You could be the reason
    that they move forward
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    with their story.
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    Be careful not to assume
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    that you already know
    the ending to their story.
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    Don't put a period
    where a semicolon should be.
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    Keep that story going
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    and help them know that even if
    something has happened traumatic to them,
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    that their life is still worth telling.
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    Their story is worth telling.
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    Now in order to do that,
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    I really feel like we have to embrace
    our own personal stories as educators.
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    Many of you might be sitting there
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    and thinking, "Yeah.
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    That happened to me.
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    But I'm not ready to share."
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    And that's OK.
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    The time will come
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    when you will feel it inside your soul
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    that it's time to turn your past pain
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    into purpose for the future.
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    These children are our future.
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    I just encourage you
    to take it day by day.
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    Talk to someone.
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    Be willing and just open.
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    My life story came full circle
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    in the spring of 2018,
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    where I was invited to speak
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    to a group of beginning
    teachers and mentors.
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    I shared my story,
    much like today with you,
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    and afterwards I had a lady approach me.
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    She had tears in her eyes
    and she quietly said, "Thank you.
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    Thank you for sharing.
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    I cannot wait to tell my dad
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    everything that I heard today."
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    She must have seen
    the perplexed look on my face,
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    because she followed up by saying,
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    "Mr. Randolph is my dad."
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    Audience: Aww.
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    Lisa Godwin: "And he often wonders:
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    Did he make a difference?
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    Today, I get to go home and tell him,
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    'You definitely made a difference.'"
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    What a gift.
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    What a gift.
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    And that prompted me
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    to reach out to Ms. McFadyen's
    daughter as well,
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    and to share with her
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    what an impact Ms. McFadyen had made.
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    And I wanted her to know
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    I have advocated for more funding
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    for guidance counselors,
    for school social workers,
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    for psychologists, for nurses,
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    because they are so vital
    to the mental and physical health
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    of our children.
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    I'm thankful for Ms. McFadyen.
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    (Applause)
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    I once heard someone say,
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    in order to find your way
    out of the darkness,
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    you have to find the light.
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    Today, I hope that you leave this place
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    and you seek opportunities
    to be the light.
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    For not only students
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    but for adults in your classrooms,
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    in your schools, in your communities.
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    You have the gift
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    to help someone navigate
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    through their trauma
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    and make their story worth telling.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How teachers can help students navigate trauma
Speaker:
Lisa Godwin
Description:

"To make a difference in the life of a child ... I made the commitment to tell my personal story," says educator Lisa Godwin. In this moving talk, she shares her experience of overcoming childhood trauma with the quiet, unwavering support of a teacher and school counselor -- and shows how educators can help students and families navigate hardships by sharing their own stories.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:20

English subtitles

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