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Today I want to talk about
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the meaning of words,
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how we define them and how they,
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almost as revenge,
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define us.
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The English language
is a magnificent sponge.
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I love the English language.
I'm glad that I speak it,
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but for all that, it has a lot of holes.
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In Greek, there's a word,
"???"
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which is the hunger for disaster.
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You know, when you see
a thunderstorm on the horizon
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and you just find yourself
rooting for the storm.
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In Mandarin, they have a word
"???" --
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I'm not pronouncing that correctly --
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which means the longing
to feel intensely again
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the way you did when you were a kid.
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In Polish, they have a word "??"
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which is the hypothetical conversation
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that you compulsively
play out in your head.
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And finally, in German,
of course in German,
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they have a word called "??"
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which is the dread
of getting what you want.
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(Laughter)
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Finally fulfilling a lifelong dream.
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I'm German myself, so I know
exactly what that feels like.
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Now, I'm not sure if I would use
any of these words
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as I go about my day,
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but I'm really glad they exist.
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But the only reason they exist
is because I made them up.
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I am the author of "The Dictionary
of Obscure Sorrows,"
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which I've been writing
for the last seven years,
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and the whole mission of the project
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is to find holes
in the language of emotion
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and try to fill them so that
we have a way of talking about
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all those human peccadilloes
and quirks of the human condition
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that we all feel but may not think
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to talk about because we don't
have the words to do it.
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And about halfway through this project,
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I defined "sonder,"
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the idea that we all think of ourselves
as the main character
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and everyone else is just extras.
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But in reality, we're all
the main character,
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and you yourself are an extra
in someone else's story.
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And so as soon as I published that,
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I got a lot of response from people
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saying "thank you for giving voice
to something I had felt all my life
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but there was no word for that."
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So it made them feel less alone.
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That's the power of words,
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to make us feel less alone.
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And it was not long after that
that I started to notice sonder
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being used earnestly
in conversations online,
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and not long after that that I actually
noticed it, I caught it next to me
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in an actual conversation in person.
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There is no stranger feeling
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than making up a word and then seeing it
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take on a mind of its own.
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I don't have a word for that yet,
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but I will.
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(Laughter)
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I'm working on it.
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I started to think
about what makes words real,
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because a lot of people ask me,
the most common thing I got from people
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is, "Well, are these words made up?
I don't really understand."
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And I didn't really know what to tell them
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because once sonder started to take off,
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who am I to say what words are real
and what aren't.
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And so I sort of felt like Steve Jobs,
who described his epiphany
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as when he realized that most of us,
as we go through the day,
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we just try to avoid bouncing
against the walls too much
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and just sort of get on with things.
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But once you realize that people,
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that this world was built by people
no smarter than you,
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then you can reach out
and touch those walls
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and even put your hand through them
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and realize that you have
the power to change it.
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And when people ask me,
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"Are these words real?"
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I had a variety of answers
that I tried out.
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Some of them made sense.
Some of them didn't,
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but one of them I tried out was,
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"Well, a word is real
if you want it to be real."
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The way that this path is real
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because people wanted it to be there.
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(Laughter)
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It happens on college
campuses all the time.
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It's called a "desire path."
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(Laughter)
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But then I decided, what people
are really asking when they're asking
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if a word is real, they're really asking,
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"Well, how many brains
will this give me access to?"
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Because I think that's a lot of
how we look at language.
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A word is essentially a key
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that gets us into certain people's heads,
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and if it gets us into one brain,
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it's not really worth it,
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not really worth knowing.
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Two brains, eh, it depends on who it is.
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A million brains, okay, now we're talking.
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And so a real word is one that gets you
access to as many brains as you can.
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That's what makes it worth knowing.
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Incidentally, the realest word of all
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by this measure is this.
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[O.K.]
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That's it.
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The realest word we have.
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That is the closest thing we have
to a master key.
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That's the most commonly
understood word in the world,
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no matter where you are in the world.
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The problem with that is,
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no one seems to know
what those two letters stand for.
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(Laughter)
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Which is kind of weird, right?
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I mean, it could be a misspelling
of "all correct," I guess,
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or "old kinderhook."
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No one seems to know,
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but the fact that it doesn't matter
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says something about
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how we add meaning to words.
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The meaning is not
in the words themselves.
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We're the ones
that pour ourselves into it.
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And I think, when we're all searching
for meaning in our lives,
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and searching for the meaning of life,
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and I think words have
something to do with that.
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And I think if you're looking
for the meaning of something,
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the dictionary is a decent place to start.
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It brings a sense of order
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to a very chaotic universe.
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Our view of things is so limited
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that we have to come up with patterns
and shorthand and try to figure out
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a way to interpret it
and be able to get on with our day.
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We need words to contain us,
to define ourselves.
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I think a lot of us feel boxed in
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by how we use these words.
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We forget that words are made up.
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It's not just my words.
All words are made up,
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but not all of them mean something.
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We're all just sort of trapped
in our own lexicons
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that don't necessarily correlate
with people who aren't already like us,
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and so I think I feel us drifting
apart a little more every year,
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the more seriously we take words.
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Because remember, words are not real.
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They don't have meaning. We do.
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And I'd like to leave you with a reading
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from one of my favorite philosophers,
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Bill Watterson, who created
"Calvin and Hobbes."
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He said, "Creating a life that reflects
your values and satisfies your soul
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is a rare achievement.
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To invent your own life's meaning
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is not easy,
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but it is still allowed,
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and I think you'll be
happier for the trouble."
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Thank you.
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(Applause)