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Be passionate. Be courageous. Be your best.

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    Pat Mitchell: That day,
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    January 8, 2011, began like all others.
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    You were both doing the work that you love.
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    You were meeting with constituents,
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    which is something that you loved doing
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    as a congresswoman,
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    and Mark, you were happily preparing
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    for your next space shuttle.
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    And suddenly, everything
    that you had planned
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    or expected in your lives
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    was irrevocably changed forever.
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    Mark Kelly: Yeah, it's amazing,
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    it's amazing how
    everything can change
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    for any of us in an instant.
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    People don't realize that.
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    I certainly didn't.
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    Gabby Giffords: Yes.
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    MK: And on that Saturday morning,
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    I got this horrible phone call
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    from Gabby's chief of staff.
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    She didn't have much other information.
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    She just said, "Gabby was shot."
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    A few minutes later, I called her back
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    and I actually thought for a second,
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    well, maybe I just imagined
    getting this phone call.
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    I called her back, and
    that's when she told me
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    that Gabby had been shot in the head.
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    And from that point on,
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    I knew that our lives were
    going to be a lot different.
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    PM: And when you arrived at the hospital,
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    what was the prognosis that they gave you
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    about Gabby's condition
    and what recovery, if any,
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    you could expect?
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    MK: Well, for a gunshot wound to the head
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    and a traumatic brain injury,
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    they typically can't tell you much.
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    Every injury is different. It's not predictable
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    like often a stroke might be predictable,
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    which is another TBI kind of injury.
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    So they didn't know how long
    Gabby would be in a coma,
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    didn't know when that would change
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    and what the prognosis would be.
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    PM: Gabby, has your recovery
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    been an effort to create
    a new Gabby Giffords
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    or reclaim the old Gabby Giffords?
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    GG: The new one -- better, stronger, tougher.
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    (Applause)
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    MK: That to say,
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    when you look at the picture behind us,
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    to come back from that kind of injury
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    and come back strong
    and stronger than ever
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    is a really tough thing to do.
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    I don't know anybody
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    that's as tough as my
    wonderful wife right here.
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    (Applause)
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    PM: And what were the first signs
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    that recovery was not
    only going to be possible
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    but you were going to have some semblance
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    of the life that you and Gabby had planned?
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    MK: Well, the first thing, for me, was
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    Gabby was still kind of almost unconscious,
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    but she did something when she
    was in the ICU hospital bed
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    that she used to do when we might
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    be out to dinner at a restaurant,
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    in that she pulled my ring off
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    and she flipped it from one finger to the next,
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    and at that point I knew
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    that she was still in there.
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    PM: And there were certain words, too.
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    Didn't she surprise you with
    words in the beginning?
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    MK: Well, it was tough in the beginning.
    GG: What? What? Chicken. Chicken. Chicken.
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    MK: Yeah, that was it.
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    For the first month, that was the extent
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    of Gabby's vocabulary.
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    For some reason, she has aphasia,
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    which is difficulty with communication.
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    She latched on to the word "chicken,"
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    which isn't the best but
    certainly is not the worst.
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    (Laughter)
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    And we were actually worried
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    it could have been a lot worse than that.
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    PM: Gabby, what's been
    the toughest challenge
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    for you during this recovery?
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    GG: Talking. Really hard. Really.
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    MK: Yeah, with aphasia, Gabby
    knows what she wants to say,
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    she just can't get it out.
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    She understands everything,
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    but the communication is just very difficult
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    because when you look at the picture,
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    the part of your brain where
    those communication centers are
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    are on the left side of your head,
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    which is where the bullet passed through.
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    PM: So you have to do
    a very dangerous thing:
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    speak for your wife.
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    MK: I do.
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    It might be some of the most
    dangerous things I've ever done.
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    PM: Gabby, are you optimistic
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    about your continuing recovery --
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    walking, talking,
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    being able to move your arm and leg?
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    GG: I'm optimistic. It will be a long, hard haul,
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    but I'm optimistic.
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    PM: That seems to be the number one
    characteristic of Gabby Giffords,
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    wouldn't you say? (Applause)
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    MK: Gabby's always been really optimistic.
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    She works incredibly hard every day.
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    GG: On the treadmill,
    walked on my treadmill,
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    Spanish lessons, French horn.
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    MK: It's only my wife who could be --
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    and if you knew her before she was injured,
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    you would kind of understand this --
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    somebody who could be injured
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    and have such a hard time communicating
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    and meets with a speech therapist,
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    and then about a month ago, she says,
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    "I want to learn Spanish again."
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    PM: Well, let's take a little closer look
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    at the wife, and this was even before
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    you met Gabby Giffords.
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    And she's on a motor scooter there,
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    but it's my understanding that's a very tame image
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    of what Gabby Giffords was like growing up.
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    MK: Yeah, Gabby, she
    used to race motorcycles.
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    So that's a scooter, but she had --
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    well, she still has a BMW motorcycle.
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    PM: Does she ride it?
    MK: Well, that's a challenge
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    with not being able to move her right arm,
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    but I think with something
    I know about, Velcro,
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    we might be able to get her back on the bike,
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    Velcro her right hand up onto the handlebar.
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    PM: I have a feeling we might
    see that picture next,
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    Gabby.
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    But you meet, you're already decided
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    that you're going to dedicate
    your life to service.
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    You're going into the military
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    and eventually to become an astronaut.
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    So you meet.
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    What attracts you to Gabby?
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    MK: Well, when we met, oddly enough,
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    it was the last time we were in Vancouver,
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    about 10 years ago. We met in Vancouver,
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    at the airport, on a trip
    that we were both taking
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    to China,
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    that I would actually, from my background,
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    I would call it a boondoggle.
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    Gabby would —
    GG: Fact-finding mission.
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    MK: She would call it an
    important fact-finding mission.
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    She was a state senator at the time,
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    and we met here, at the airport,
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    before a trip to China.
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    PM: Would you describe it
    as a whirlwind romance?
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    GG: No, no, no.
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    (Laughter)
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    A good friend.
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    MK: Yeah, we were friends for a long time.
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    GG: Yes. (Laughter)
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    MK: And then she invited me
    on, about a year or so later,
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    she invited me on a date.
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    Where'd we go, Gabby?
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    GG: Death row.
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    MK: Yes. Our first date was to death row
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    at the Florence state prison in Arizona,
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    which was just outside
    Gabby's state senate district.
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    They were working on some legislation
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    that had to do with crime and punishment
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    and capital punishment
    in the state of Arizona.
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    So she couldn't get anybody
    else to go with her,
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    and I'm like, "Of course I
    want to go to death row."
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    So that was our first date.
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    We've been together ever since.
    GG: Yes.
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    PM: Well, that might have contributed to the reason
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    that Gabby decided to marry you.
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    You were willing to go to death row, after all.
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    MK: I guess.
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    PM: Gabby, what did make you want to marry Mark?
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    GG: Um, good friends. Best friends. Best friends.
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    MK: I thought we always
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    had a very special relationship.
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    We've gone through some tough times
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    and it's only made it stronger.
    GG: Stronger.
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    PM: After you got married, however,
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    you continued very independent lives.
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    Actually, you didn't even live together.
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    MK: We had one of those commuter marriages.
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    In our case, it was Washington, D.C., Houston,
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    Tucson.
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    Sometimes we'd go clockwise,
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    sometimes counterclockwise,
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    to all those different places,
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    and we didn't really live together
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    until that Saturday morning.
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    Within an hour of Gabby being shot,
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    I was on an airplane to Tucson,
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    and that was the moment
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    where that had changed things.
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    PM: And also, Gabby, you had run for Congress
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    after being a state senator
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    and served in Congress for six years.
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    What did you like best
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    about being in Congress?
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    GG: Fast pace. Fast pace.
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    PM: Well it was the way you did it.
    GG: Yes, yes. Fast pace.
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    PM: I'm not sure people would
    describe it entirely that way.
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    (Laughter)
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    MK: Yeah, you know, legislation is often
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    at a colossally slow pace,
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    but my wife, and I have to admit,
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    a lot of other members of Congress that I know,
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    work incredibly hard.
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    I mean, Gabby would run
    around like a crazy person,
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    never take a day off,
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    maybe a half a day off a month,
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    and whenever she was awake she was working,
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    and she really, really thrived on that,
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    and still does today.
    GG: Yes. Yes.
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    PM: Installing solar panels on the top of her house,
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    I have to say.
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    So after the tragic incident, Mark,
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    you decided to resign
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    your position as an astronaut,
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    even though you were supposed to take
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    the next space mission.
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    Everybody, including Gabby,
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    talked you into going back,
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    and you did end up taking.
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    MK: Kind of. The day after Gabby was injured,
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    I called my boss, the chief astronaut,
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    Dr. Peggy Whitson, and I said,
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    "Peggy, I know I'm launching in space
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    in three months from now.
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    Gabby's in a coma. I'm in Tucson.
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    You've got to find a replacement for me."
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    So I didn't actually resign from being an astronaut,
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    but I gave up my job and they found a replacement.
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    Months later, maybe about two months later,
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    I started about getting my job back,
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    which is something,
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    when you become this primary caregiver person,
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    which some people in the audience here
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    have certainly been in that position,
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    it's a challenging role but at some point
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    you've got to figure out when
    you're going to get your life back,
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    and at the time, I couldn't ask Gabby
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    if she wanted me to go fly in the space shuttle again.
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    But I knew she was—
    GG: Yes. Yes. Yes.
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    MK: She was the biggest
    supporter of my career,
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    and I knew it was the right thing to do.
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    PM: And yet I'm trying to imagine, Mark,
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    what that was like, going off onto a mission,
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    one presumes safely,
    but it's never a guarantee,
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    and knowing that Gabby is —
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    MK: Well not only was
    she still in the hospital,
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    on the third day of that flight,
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    literally while I was
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    rendezvousing with the space station,
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    and you've got two vehicles
    moving at 17,500 miles an hour,
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    I'm actually flying it, looking out the window,
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    a bunch of computers,
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    Gabby was in brain surgery,
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    literally at that time having the final surgery
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    to replace the piece of skull
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    that they took out on the day she was injured
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    with a prosthetic, yeah, which
    is the whole side of her head.
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    Now if any of you guys would ever come
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    to our house in Tucson for the first time,
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    Gabby would usually go up to the freezer
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    and pull out the piece of Tupperware
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    that has the real skull. (Laughter)
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    GG: The real skull.
    MK: Which freaks people out, sometimes.
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    PM: Is that for appetizer or dessert, Mark?
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    MK: Well, it just gets the conversation going.
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    PM: But there was a lot
    of conversation about
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    something you did, Gabby, after Mark's flight.
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    You had to make another
    step of courage too,
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    because here was
    Congress deadlocked again,
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    and you got out of the rehabilitation center,
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    got yourself to Washington
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    so that you could walk
    on the floor of the House --
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    I can barely talk about this
    without getting emotional —
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    and cast a vote which could have been
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    the deciding vote.
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    GG: The debt ceiling. The debt ceiling.
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    MK: Yeah, we had that vote,
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    I guess about five months after Gabby was injured,
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    and she made this bold decision to go back.
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    A very controversial vote,
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    but she wanted to be there
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    to have her voice heard one more time.
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    PM: And after that, resigned
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    and began what has been a very slow
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    and challenging recovery.
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    What's life like, day to day?
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    MK: Well, that's Gabby's service dog Nelson.
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    GG: Nelson.
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    MK: New member of our family.
    GG: Yes, yes.
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    MK: And we got him from a—
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    GG: Prison. Murder.
    MK: We have a lot of connections
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    with prisons, apparently. (Laughter)
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    Nelson came from a prison,
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    raised by a murderer in Massachusetts.
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    But she did a great job with this dog.
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    He's a fabulous service dog.
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    PM: So Gabby, what have you learned
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    from your experiences the past few years?
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    MK: Yeah, what have you learned?
    GG: Deeper. Deeper.
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    PM: Your relationship is deeper.
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    It has to be. You're together all the time now.
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    MK: I imagine being grateful, too, right?
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    GG: Grateful.
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    PM: This is a picture of
    family and friends gathering,
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    but I love these pictures because they show
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    the Gabby and Mark relationship now.
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    And you describe it, Gabby, over and over,
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    as deeper on so many levels. Yes?
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    MK: I think when something tragic happens
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    in a family, it can pull people together.
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    Here's us watching the space shuttle
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    fly over Tucson,
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    the Space Shuttle Endeavour,
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    the one that I was the
    commander on its last flight,
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    on its final flight on top of an airplane
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    on a 747 on its way to L.A.,
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    NASA was kind enough
    to have it fly over Tucson.
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    PM: And of course, the two of you
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    go through these challenges
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    of a slow and difficult recovery,
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    and yet, Gabby, how do you maintain
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    your optimism and positive outlook?
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    GG: I want to make the world a better place.
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    (Applause)
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    PM: And you're doing that
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    even though your recovery has to remain
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    front and center for both of you.
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    You are people who have done service
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    to your country and you
    are continuing to do that
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    with a new initiative, a new purpose.
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    And Gabby, what's on the agenda now?
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    GG: Americans for Responsible Solutions.
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    MK: That's our political action committee,
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    where we are trying to
    get members of Congress
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    to take a more serious look at
    gun violence in this country,
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    and to try to
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    pass some reasonable legislation.
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    GG: Yes. Yes. (Applause)
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    MK: You know, this affected
    us very personally,
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    but it wasn't what happened
    to Gabby that got us involved.
  • 15:12 - 15:16
    It was really the 20 murdered first graders
  • 15:16 - 15:19
    and kindergartners in Newtown, Connecticut,
  • 15:19 - 15:22
    and the response that we saw afterwards
  • 15:22 - 15:25
    where -- well, look what's happened so far.
  • 15:25 - 15:27
    So far the national response has been
  • 15:27 - 15:29
    pretty much to do nothing.
  • 15:29 - 15:30
    We're trying to change that.
  • 15:30 - 15:32
    PM: There have been 11 mass shootings
  • 15:32 - 15:33
    since Newtown,
  • 15:33 - 15:36
    a school a week in the first
    two months of last year.
  • 15:36 - 15:38
    What are you doing that's different
  • 15:38 - 15:40
    than other efforts to balance
  • 15:40 - 15:43
    rights for gun ownership and responsibilities?
  • 15:43 - 15:45
    MK: We're gun owners,
    we support gun rights.
  • 15:45 - 15:48
    At the same time, we've
    got to do everything we can
  • 15:48 - 15:50
    to keep guns out of the hands of criminals
  • 15:50 - 15:52
    and the dangerously mentally ill.
  • 15:52 - 15:54
    It's not too difficult to do that.
  • 15:54 - 15:56
    This issue, like many others,
  • 15:56 - 16:00
    has become very polarizing and political,
  • 16:00 - 16:02
    and we're trying to bring some balance
  • 16:02 - 16:04
    to the debate in Washington.
  • 16:04 - 16:06
    PM: Thank you both for that effort.
  • 16:06 - 16:09
    And not surprisingly for
    this woman of courage
  • 16:09 - 16:11
    and of a sense of adventure,
  • 16:11 - 16:13
    you just keep challenging yourself,
  • 16:13 - 16:15
    and the sky seems to be the limit.
  • 16:15 - 16:17
    I have to share this video
  • 16:17 - 16:19
    of your most recent adventure.
  • 16:19 - 16:22
    Take a look at Gabby.
  • 16:22 - 16:26
    MK: This is a couple months ago.
  • 16:30 - 16:32
    (Video) MK: You okay? You did great.
    GG: Yes, it's gorgeous. Thank you.
  • 16:32 - 16:39
    Good stuff. Gorgeous. Oh, thank you.
  • 16:39 - 16:43
    Mountains. Gorgeous mountains.
  • 16:47 - 16:49
    (Applause)
  • 16:49 - 16:52
    MK: Let me just say
  • 16:52 - 16:54
    one of the guys that Gabby jumped with
  • 16:54 - 16:56
    that day was a Navy SEAL
  • 16:56 - 16:58
    who she met in Afghanistan
  • 16:58 - 17:00
    who was injured in combat,
  • 17:00 - 17:01
    had a really rough time.
  • 17:01 - 17:03
    Gabby visited him
  • 17:03 - 17:05
    when he was at Bethesda
  • 17:05 - 17:07
    and went through a really tough period.
  • 17:07 - 17:08
    He started doing better.
  • 17:08 - 17:11
    Months later, Gabby was shot in the head,
  • 17:11 - 17:12
    and then he supported her
  • 17:12 - 17:14
    while she was in the hospital in Houston.
  • 17:14 - 17:16
    So they have a very, very nice connection.
  • 17:16 - 17:17
    GG: Yes.
  • 17:17 - 17:19
    PM: What a wonderful moment.
  • 17:19 - 17:21
    Because this is the TED stage,
  • 17:21 - 17:24
    Gabby, I know you worked very hard
  • 17:24 - 17:27
    to think of the ideas that you wanted to leave
  • 17:27 - 17:29
    with this audience.
  • 17:29 - 17:33
    GG: Thank you.
  • 17:35 - 17:37
    Hello, everyone.
  • 17:37 - 17:41
    Thank you for inviting us here today.
  • 17:41 - 17:43
    It's been a long, hard haul,
  • 17:43 - 17:47
    but I'm getting better.
  • 17:47 - 17:48
    I'm working hard,
  • 17:48 - 17:52
    lots of therapy -- speech therapy,
  • 17:52 - 17:55
    physical therapy, and yoga too.
  • 17:55 - 17:58
    But my spirit is strong as ever.
  • 17:58 - 18:02
    I'm still fighting to make
    the world a better place,
  • 18:02 - 18:05
    and you can too.
  • 18:05 - 18:08
    Get involved with your community.
  • 18:08 - 18:12
    Be a leader. Set an example.
  • 18:12 - 18:15
    Be passionate. Be courageous.
  • 18:15 - 18:19
    Be your best. Thank you very much.
  • 18:19 - 18:21
    (Applause)
  • 18:21 - 18:25
    MK: Thank you.
    GG: Thank you.
  • 18:25 - 18:28
    (Applause)
  • 18:28 - 18:32
    MK: Thank you everybody.
    GG: Bye bye. (Applause)
Title:
Be passionate. Be courageous. Be your best.
Speaker:
Gabby Giffords and Mark Kelly
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
18:48

English subtitles

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