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To raise brave girls, encourage adventure

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    When I was a kid, I was obsessed
    with the Guinness Book of World Records,
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    and I really wanted
    to set a world record myself.
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    But there was just one small problem:
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    I had absolutely no talent.
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    So I decided to set
    a world record in something
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    that demanded absolutely no skill at all.
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    I decided to set a world record
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    in crawling.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, the record at the time
    was 12 and a half miles,
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    and for some reason,
    this seemed totally manageable.
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    (Laughter)
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    I recruited my friend Anne,
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    and together we decided,
    we didn't even need to train.
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    (Laughter)
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    And on the day of our record attempt,
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    we put furniture pads
    on the outside of our good luck jeans
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    and we set off,
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    and right away, we were in trouble,
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    because the denim was against our skin
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    and it began to chafe,
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    and soon our knees were being chewed up.
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    Hours in,
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    it began to rain.
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    Then, Anne dropped out.
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    Then, it got dark.
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    Now, by now, my knees
    were bleeding through my jeans
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    and I was hallucinating from the cold
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    and the pain and the monotony,
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    and to give you an idea
    of the sufferfest that I was undergoing,
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    the first lap around
    the high school track took 10 minutes.
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    The last lap took almost 30.
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    After 12 hours of crawling,
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    I stopped,
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    and I had gone eight and a half miles.
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    So I was short of
    the 12-and-a-half-mile record.
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    Now, for many years, I thought
    this was a story of abject failure,
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    but today I see it differently,
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    because when I was
    attempting the world record,
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    I was doing three things.
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    I was getting outside my comfort zone,
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    I was calling upon my resilience,
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    and I was finding confidence in myself
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    and my own decisions.
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    I didn't know it then,
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    but those are not
    the attributes of failure.
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    Those are the attributes of bravery.
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    Now, in 1989, at the age of 26,
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    I became a San Francisco firefighter,
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    and I was the 15th woman
    in a department of 1,500 men.
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    (Applause)
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    And as you can imagine, when I arrived
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    there were many doubts
    about whether we could do the job.
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    So even though I was a 5'10",
    150-pound collegiate rower,
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    and someone who could endure
    12 hours of searing knee pain --
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    (Laughter)
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    I knew I still had to prove
    my strength and fitness.
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    So one day a call came in for a fire,
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    and sure enough,
    when my engine group pulled up,
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    there was black smoke billowing
    from a building off an alleyway.
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    And I was with a big guy named Skip,
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    and he was on the nozzle,
    and I was right behind,
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    and it was a typical sort of fire.
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    It was smoky, it was hot,
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    and all of a sudden,
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    there was an explosion,
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    and Skip and I were blown backwards,
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    my mask was knocked sideways,
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    and there was this moment of confusion.
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    And then I picked myself up,
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    I groped for the nozzle,
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    and I did what a firefighter
    was supposed to do:
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    I lunged forward,
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    opened up the water
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    and I tackled the fire myself.
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    The explosion had been caused
    by a water heater,
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    so nobody was hurt,
    and ultimately it was not a big deal,
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    but later Skip came up to me and said,
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    "Nice job, Caroline,"
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    in this surprised sort of voice.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I was confused, because
    the fire hadn't been difficult physically,
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    so why was he looking at me
    with something like astonishment?
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    And then it became clear:
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    Skip, who was by the way a really nice guy
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    and an excellent firefighter,
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    not only thought
    that women could not be strong,
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    he thought that they
    could not be brave either.
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    And he wasn't the only one.
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    Friends, acquaintances and strangers,
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    men and women throughout my career
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    ask me over and over,
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    "Caroline, all that fire, all that danger,
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    aren't you scared?"
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    Honestly, I never heard
    a male firefighter asked this.
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    And I became curious.
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    Why wasn't bravery expected of women?
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    Now, the answer began to come
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    when a friend of mine lamented to me
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    that her young daughter
    was a big scaredy-cat,
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    and so I began to notice,
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    and yes, the daughter was anxious,
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    but more than that,
    the parents were anxious.
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    Most of what they said to her
    when she was outside began with,
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    "Be careful," "Watch out," or "No."
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    Now, my friends were not bad parents.
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    They were just doing what most parents do,
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    which is cautioning their daughters
    much more than they caution their sons.
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    There was a study involving
    a playground fire pole, ironically,
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    in which researchers saw that little girls
    were very likely to be warned
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    by both their moms and dads
    about the fire pole's risk,
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    and if the little girls
    still wanted to play on the fire pole,
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    a parent was very likely to assist her.
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    But the little boys?
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    They were encouraged
    to play on the fire pole
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    despite any trepidations
    that they might have,
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    and often the parents offered
    guidance on how to use it on their own.
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    So what message does this send
    to both boys and girls?
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    Well, that girls are fragile
    and more in need of help,
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    and that boys can and should
    master difficult tasks by themselves.
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    It says that girls should be fearful
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    and boys should be gutsy.
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    Now, the irony is that at this young age,
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    girls and boys are actually
    very alike physically.
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    In fact, girls are often
    stronger until puberty,
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    and more mature.
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    And yet we adults act
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    as if girls are more fragile
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    and more in need of help,
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    and they can't handle as much.
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    This is the message that we absorb as kids
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    and this is the message
    that fully permeates as we grow up.
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    We women believe it, men believe it,
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    and guess what?
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    As we become parents,
    we pass it on to our children,
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    and so it goes.
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    Well, so now I had my answer.
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    This is why women, even firewomen,
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    were expected to be scared.
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    This is why women often are scared.
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    Now, I know some of you
    won't believe me when I tell you this,
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    but I am not against fear.
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    I know it's an important emotion,
    and it's there to keep us safe.
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    But the problem is
    when fear is the primary reaction
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    that we teach and encourage in girls
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    whenever they face something
    outside their comfort zone.
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    So I was a paraglider pilot
    for many years --
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    (Applause)
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    and a paraglider is a parachute-like wing,
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    and it does fly very well,
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    but to many people I realize
    it looks just like a bedsheet
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    with strings attached.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I spent a lot of time on mountain tops
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    inflating this bedsheet,
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    running off and flying.
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    And I know what you're thinking.
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    You're like, Caroline,
    a little fear would make sense here.
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    And you're right, it does.
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    I assure you, I did feel fear.
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    But on that mountain top,
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    waiting for the wind
    to come in just right,
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    I felt so many other things too:
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    exhilaration, confidence.
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    I knew I was a good pilot.
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    I knew the conditions were good,
    or I wouldn't be there.
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    I knew how great it was going to be
    a thousand feet in the air.
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    So yes, fear was there,
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    but I would take a good hard look at it,
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    assess just how relevant it was
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    and then put it where it belonged,
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    which was more often than not
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    behind my exhilaration, my anticipation
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    and my confidence.
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    So I'm not against fear.
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    I'm just pro-bravery.
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    Now, I'm not saying
    your girls must be firefighters,
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    or that they should be paragliders,
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    but I am saying that we are raising
    our girls to be timid, even helpless,
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    and it begins when we caution them
    against physical risk.
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    The fear we learn
    and the experiences we don't
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    stay with us as we become women
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    and morphs into all those things
    that we face and try to shed:
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    our hesitation in speaking out,
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    our deference so that we can be liked
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    and our lack of confidence
    in our own decisions.
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    So how do we become brave?
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    Well, here's the good news.
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    Bravery is learned,
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    and like anything learned,
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    it just needs to be practiced.
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    So first,
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    we have to take a deep breath
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    and encourage our girls
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    to skateboard, climb trees
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    and clamber around
    on that playground fire pole.
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    This is what my own mother did.
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    She didn't know it then,
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    but researchers have a name for this.
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    They call it risky play,
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    and studies show that risky play
    is really important for kids, all kids,
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    because it teaches hazard assessment,
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    it teaches delayed gratification,
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    it teaches resilience,
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    it teaches confidence.
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    In other words,
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    when kids get outside
    and practice bravery,
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    they learn valuable life lessons.
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    Second, we have to stop
    cautioning our girls willy-nilly.
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    So notice next time you say,
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    "Watch out, you're going to get hurt,"
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    or "Don't do that, it's dangerous."
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    And remember that often
    what you're really telling her
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    is that she shouldn't be pushing herself,
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    that she's really not good enough,
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    that she should be afraid.
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    Third,
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    we women have to start
    practicing bravery too.
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    We cannot teach our girls
    until we teach ourselves.
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    So here's another thing:
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    fear and exhilaration
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    feel very similar:
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    the shaky hands,
    the heightened heart rate,
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    the nervous tension,
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    and I'm betting that for many of you
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    the last time you thought
    you were scared out of your wits,
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    you may have been feeling
    mostly exhilaration,
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    and now you've missed an opportunity.
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    So practice.
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    And while girls should be getting
    outside to learn to be gutsy,
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    I get that adults don't want
    to get on hoverboards or climb trees,
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    so we all should be practicing
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    at home, in the office
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    and even right here getting up the guts
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    to talk to someone that you really admire.
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    Finally, when your girl is, let's say,
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    on her bike on the top of the steep hill
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    that she insists
    she's too scared to go down,
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    guide her to access her bravery.
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    Ultimately, maybe that hill
    really is too steep,
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    but she'll come to that conclusion
    through courage, not fear.
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    Because this is not
    about the steep hill in front of her.
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    This is about the life ahead of her
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    and that she has the tools
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    to handle and assess
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    all the dangers
    that we cannot protect her from,
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    all the challenges that we won't
    be there to guide her through,
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    everything that our girls here
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    and around the world
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    face in their future.
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    So by the way,
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    the world record for crawling today --
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    (Laughter)
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    is 35.18 miles,
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    and I would really love
    to see a girl go break that.
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    (Applause)
Title:
To raise brave girls, encourage adventure
Speaker:
Caroline Paul
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:41

English subtitles

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