TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live?
-
0:15 - 0:21(Singing) I see the moon. The moon sees me.
-
0:21 - 0:27The moon sees somebody that I don't see.
-
0:27 - 0:33God bless the moon, and god bless me,
-
0:33 - 0:40and God bless that somebody that I don't see.
-
0:40 - 0:46If I get to heaven, before you do,
-
0:46 - 0:53I'll make a hole and pull you through.
-
0:53 - 0:58And I'll write your name, on every star,
-
0:58 - 1:02and that way the world,
-
1:02 - 1:06won't seem so far.
-
1:06 - 1:10The astronaut will not be at work today.
-
1:10 - 1:11He has called in sick.
-
1:11 - 1:17He has turned off his cell phone, his laptop, his pager, his alarm clock.
-
1:17 - 1:20There is a fat yellow cat asleep on his couch,
-
1:20 - 1:22rain drops against the window,
-
1:22 - 1:25and not even the hint of coffee in the kitchen air.
-
1:25 - 1:27Everybody is in a tizzy.
-
1:27 - 1:31The engineers on the 15th floor have stopped working on their particle machine.
-
1:31 - 1:33The anti gravity room is leaking
-
1:33 - 1:34and even the freckled kid with glasses,
-
1:34 - 1:37whose only job is to take out the trash, is nervous,
-
1:37 - 1:40fumbles the bag, spils a banana peel and a paper cup.
-
1:40 - 1:41Nobody notices.
-
1:41 - 1:44They are too busy recalculating what this all mean for lost time.
-
1:44 - 1:47How many galaxies are we losing per second.
-
1:47 - 1:49How long before next rocket can be launched, somewhere.
-
1:49 - 1:52An electron flies off its energy cloud.
-
1:52 - 1:53A black hole has erupted.
-
1:53 - 1:56A mother finishes setting the table for dinner.
-
1:56 - 1:58A Law & Order marathon is starting.
-
1:58 - 2:00The astronaut is asleep.
-
2:00 - 2:02He has forgotten to turn off his watch,
-
2:02 - 2:05which ticks, like a metal pulse against his wrist.
-
2:05 - 2:07He does not hear it.
-
2:07 - 2:10He dreams of coral reefs and plankton.
-
2:10 - 2:13His fingers find the pillowcase's sailing masts.
-
2:13 - 2:15He turns on his side. Opens his eyes at once.
-
2:15 - 2:21He thinks that scuba divers must have
the most wonderful job in the world. -
2:21 - 2:24So much water to glide through!
-
2:26 - 2:31(Applause)
-
2:31 - 2:33Thank you.
-
2:33 - 2:37When I was little, I could not understand the concept
-
2:37 - 2:40that you could only live one life.
-
2:40 - 2:42I don't mean this metaphorically.
-
2:42 - 2:45I mean, I literally thought that I was going to get to do
-
2:45 - 2:48everything that there was to do
-
2:48 - 2:50and be everything there was to be.
-
2:50 - 2:52It was only a matter of time.
-
2:52 - 2:55Ad there was no limitation based on age, or gender,
-
2:55 - 2:58or race or even appropriate time period.
-
2:58 - 3:01I was sure that I was going to actually experience
-
3:01 - 3:06what it felt like to be a leader of the civil right movement,
-
3:06 - 3:08or a ten-year old boy living on a farm during the dust bowl,
-
3:08 - 3:12or an emperor of the Tang dynasty in China.
-
3:12 - 3:15My mom says that when people asked me what
-
3:15 - 3:20I wanted to be when I grew up, my typical response was princess-ballerina-astronaut.
-
3:20 - 3:25And what she doesn't understand is that I wasn't trying to invent some combined super profession.
-
3:25 - 3:29I was listing things I thought I was gonna get to be:
-
3:29 - 3:32a princess, and a ballerina, and an astronaut.
-
3:32 - 3:34and I'm pretty sure the list probably went on from there.
-
3:34 - 3:37I usually just got cut off.
-
3:37 - 3:42It was never a question of if I was going to do something, so much of a question of when.
-
3:42 - 3:45And I was sure that if I was going to do everything,
-
3:45 - 3:47that it probably meant I had to move pretty quickly,
-
3:47 - 3:49because there was a lot of stuff I needed to do.
-
3:49 - 3:51So my life was constantly in a state of rushing.
-
3:51 - 3:53I was always scared that I was falling behind.
-
3:53 - 3:57And since I grew up in New York City, as far as I could tell,
-
3:57 - 4:00rushing was pretty normal.
-
4:00 - 4:04But, as I grew up, I had this sinking realization,
-
4:04 - 4:08that I wasn't gonna get to live any more than one life
-
4:08 - 4:11I only knew what it felt like to be a teenage girl
-
4:11 - 4:12in New York City,
-
4:12 - 4:15not a teenage boy in New Zealand,
-
4:15 - 4:18not a prom queen in Kansas.
-
4:18 - 4:21I only got to see through my lens and it was around this time
-
4:21 - 4:23that I became obsessed with stories,
-
4:23 - 4:25because it was through stories that I was able to see
-
4:25 - 4:30through someone else's lens, however briefly or imperfectly.
-
4:30 - 4:34And I started craving hearing other people's experiences
-
4:34 - 4:37because I was so jealous that there were entire lives
-
4:37 - 4:39that I was never gonna get to live, and I wanted to hear
-
4:39 - 4:41about everything that I was missing.
-
4:41 - 4:43And by transitive property, I realized
-
4:43 - 4:46that some people were never going to get to experience what it felt like
-
4:46 - 4:49to be a teenage girl in New York city.
-
4:49 - 4:51Which meant that they weren’t going to know
-
4:51 - 4:54what the subway ride after your first kiss feels like,
-
4:54 - 4:57or how quiet it gets when its snows,
-
4:57 - 4:59and I wanted them to know, I wanted to tell them
-
4:59 - 5:02and this became the focus of my obsession.
-
5:02 - 5:05I busied myself telling stories and sharing stories and collecting them.
-
5:05 - 5:08And it's not until recently
that I realized -
5:08 - 5:12that I can't always rush poetry.
-
5:12 - 5:16In April for National Poetry Month there's this challenge that,
-
5:16 - 5:19many poets in the poetry community participate in,
-
5:19 - 5:21and its called the 30/30 Challenge.
-
5:21 - 5:27The idea is you write a new poem every single day for the entire month of April.
-
5:27 - 5:30And last year I tried it for the first time, and I was thrilled
-
5:30 - 5:34by the efficiency at which I was able to produce poetry.
-
5:34 - 5:38But at the end of the month I looked back at these 30 poems I had written,
-
5:38 - 5:42and discovered that they were all trying to tell the same story,
-
5:42 - 5:47it had just taken me 30 tries to figure out the way that it wanted to be told.
-
5:47 - 5:51And I realized that this is probably true of other stories on an even larger scale.
-
5:51 - 5:53I have stories that I have tried to tell for years,
-
5:53 - 5:57rewriting and rewriting and constantly searching for the right words.
-
5:57 - 6:01There's a French poet, an essayist by the name of Paul Valery
-
6:01 - 6:05who said a poem is never finished, it is only abandoned.
-
6:05 - 6:07And this terrifies me because it implies that
-
6:07 - 6:11I could keep reediting and rewriting forever and its up to me to decide
-
6:11 - 6:16when a poem is finished and when I can walk away from it.
-
6:16 - 6:18And this goes directly against my very obsessive nature to try
-
6:18 - 6:22to find the right answer, and the perfect words, and the right form.
-
6:22 - 6:27And I use poetry in my life, as a way to help me navigate an work through things.
-
6:27 - 6:30But just because I end the poem, doesn't mean that I've solved
-
6:30 - 6:33whatever I was puzzling through.
-
6:33 - 6:35I like to revisit old poetry,
-
6:35 - 6:39because it shows me exactly where I was at that moment.
-
6:39 - 6:41And what it was I was trying to navigate and the words
-
6:41 - 6:43that I chose to help me.
-
6:43 - 6:47Now, I have a story that I've been stumbling over for years and years
-
6:47 - 6:50and I'm not sure if I've found the prefect form,
-
6:50 - 6:52or whether this is just one attempt
-
6:52 - 6:54and I will try to rewrite it later
-
6:54 - 6:56in search of a better way to tell it.
-
6:56 - 6:59But I do know that later, when I look back
-
6:59 - 7:02I will be able to know that this is where I was
-
7:02 - 7:05at this moment, and this is what I was trying to navigate,
-
7:05 - 7:10with these words, here, in this room, with you.
-
7:11 - 7:13So -- Smile.
-
7:20 - 7:23It didn't always work this way.
-
7:23 - 7:25There is a time you have to get your hands dirty.
-
7:25 - 7:29When you were in the dark, for most of it, fumbling was a given,
-
7:29 - 7:32and you needed more contrast, more saturation,
-
7:32 - 7:35darker darks, and brighter brights.
-
7:35 - 7:38They called it extended development. It meant you spent
-
7:38 - 7:41longer inhaling chemicals, longer up to your wrist.
-
7:41 - 7:42It wasn't always easy.
-
7:42 - 7:45Grandpa Stewart was a navy photographer.
-
7:45 - 7:48Young, red-faced with the sleeves rolled up,
-
7:48 - 7:51fists of fingers like fat rolls of coins,
-
7:51 - 7:55he looked like Popeye the sailor man, come to life.
-
7:55 - 7:56Crooked smile, tuft of chest hair,
-
7:56 - 8:00he showed up at World War II, with a smirk and a hobby.
-
8:00 - 8:02When they asked him if he knew much about photography,
-
8:02 - 8:06he lied, learned to read Europe like a map,
-
8:06 - 8:09upside down, from the height of a fighter plane,
-
8:09 - 8:12camera snapping, eyelids flapping, the darkest darks
-
8:12 - 8:14and brightest brights.
-
8:14 - 8:17He learned war like he could read his way home.
-
8:17 - 8:19When other men returned, they would put their weapons out to rest,
-
8:19 - 8:23but he, brought the lenses and the cameras home with him.
-
8:23 - 8:26Opened a shop, turned it into a family affair.
-
8:26 - 8:29My father was born into this world of black and white.
-
8:29 - 8:33His basketball hands learned the tiny clicks and slides
-
8:33 - 8:35of lens into frame, film into camera,
-
8:35 - 8:37chemical into plastic bin.
-
8:37 - 8:40His father knew the equipment but not the art.
-
8:40 - 8:42He knew the darks but not the brights.
-
8:42 - 8:46My father learned the magic, spent his time following light.
-
8:46 - 8:49Once he traveled across the country to follow a forest fire,
-
8:49 - 8:52hunted it with his camera for a week.
-
8:52 - 8:54"Follow the light," he said.
-
8:54 - 8:56"Follow the light."
-
8:56 - 8:58There are parts of me I only recognize from photographs.
-
8:58 - 9:02The loft on Wooster street with the creaky hallways,
-
9:02 - 9:05the twelve-foot ceilings, the white walls and cold floors.
-
9:05 - 9:07This was my mothers home, before she was mother.
-
9:07 - 9:10Before she was wife, she was artist.
-
9:10 - 9:12And the only two rooms in the house,
-
9:12 - 9:14with walls that reached all the way up to the ceiling,
-
9:14 - 9:16and doors that opened and closed,
-
9:16 - 9:19were the bathroom and the dark room.
-
9:19 - 9:21The dark room she built herself, with custom made
-
9:21 - 9:25stainless steel sinks, an 8 by 10 bed enlarger
-
9:25 - 9:27that moved up and down by a giant hand crank,
-
9:27 - 9:29a bank of color balanced lights,
-
9:29 - 9:31a white glass wall for viewing prints,
-
9:31 - 9:34a drying rack that moved in and out from the wall.
-
9:34 - 9:36My mother built herself a dark room.
-
9:36 - 9:37Made it her home.
-
9:37 - 9:40Fell in love with a man with basketball hands,
-
9:40 - 9:42with the way he looked at light.
-
9:42 - 9:44They got married. Had a baby.
-
9:44 - 9:46Moved to a house near a park.
-
9:46 - 9:49But they kept the loft at Wooster street
-
9:49 - 9:51for birthday parties and treasure hunts.
-
9:51 - 9:54The baby tipped the gray scale.
-
9:54 - 9:56Filled her parents' photo albums with red balloons
-
9:56 - 9:57and yellow icing.
-
9:57 - 10:00The baby grew into a girl without freckles,
-
10:00 - 10:01with a crooked smile,
-
10:01 - 10:06who didn’t understand why her friends did not have dark rooms in their houses,
-
10:06 - 10:07who never saw her parents kiss,
-
10:07 - 10:09who never saw them hold hands.
-
10:09 - 10:11But one day, another baby showed up.
-
10:11 - 10:15This one with perfect straight hair and bubble gum cheeks.
-
10:15 - 10:17They named him sweet potato.
-
10:17 - 10:18When he laughed, he laughed so loudly,
-
10:18 - 10:20he scared the pigeons on the fire escape
-
10:20 - 10:23And the four of them lived in that house near the park.
-
10:23 - 10:26The girl with no freckles, and the sweet potato boy,
-
10:26 - 10:28the basketball father, and the dark room mother
-
10:28 - 10:31and they lit their candles, and they said their prayers,
-
10:31 - 10:34and the corners of the photographs curled.
-
10:34 - 10:36One day some towers fell
-
10:36 - 10:40and the house near the park became a house under ash, so they escaped.
-
10:40 - 10:45In backpacks, on bicycles to darkrooms but the loft of Wooster street
-
10:45 - 10:49was built for an artist, not a family of pigeons
-
10:49 - 10:51and walls that do not reach the ceiling
-
10:51 - 10:52do not hold in the yelling
-
10:52 - 10:57and a man with basketball hands put his weapons out to rest.
-
10:57 - 11:00He could not fight this war and no maps pointed home.
-
11:00 - 11:02His hands no longer fit his camera,
-
11:02 - 11:03no longer fit his wife's,
-
11:03 - 11:06no longer fit his body.
-
11:06 - 11:09The sweet potato boy mashed his fists into his mouth
-
11:09 - 11:10until he had nothing more to say.
-
11:10 - 11:14So, the girl without freckles went treasure hunting on her own.
-
11:14 - 11:18And on Wooster street, in a building with a creaky hallways,
-
11:18 - 11:19and a loft of the 12-foot ceiling
-
11:19 - 11:21and a darkroom with too many sinks
-
11:21 - 11:24under the color balance light, she found a note,
-
11:24 - 11:29tacked to the wall thumb-tacked, left over from the times before towers,
-
11:29 - 11:31from the time before babies.
-
11:31 - 11:37And the note said: "A guy sure loves the girl who works in the darkroom."
-
11:37 - 11:41It was a year before my father picked up a camera again.
-
11:41 - 11:44His first time out, he followed the Christmas lights,
-
11:44 - 11:46dotting their way through New York City's trees.
-
11:46 - 11:51Tiny dots of light, blinking out of him from out of the darkest darks.
-
11:51 - 11:55A year later he traveled across the country to follow a forest fire,
-
11:55 - 11:58stayed for a week hunting it with his camera,
-
11:58 - 11:59it was ravaging the West Coast
-
11:59 - 12:01eating 18-wheeler trucks in its stride.
-
12:01 - 12:03On the other side of the country,
-
12:03 - 12:06I went to class and wrote a poem on the margins of my notebook.
-
12:06 - 12:09We have both learned the art of capture.
-
12:09 - 12:11Maybe we are learning the art of embracing.
-
12:11 - 12:16Maybe we are learning the art of letting go.
-
12:16 - 126:07Thank You. (Applause)
- Title:
- TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live?
- Description:
-
Sarah Kay, founder of Project V.O.I.C.E performs and discusses living through storytelling and learning how to stop rushing.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
- closed TED
- Project:
- TEDxTalks
- Duration:
- 12:24
Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live? | ||
Leonardo Silva edited English subtitles for TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live? | ||
Yasushi Aoki commented on English subtitles for TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live? | ||
Ivana Korom approved English subtitles for TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live? | ||
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live? | ||
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live? | ||
Diba Szamosi accepted English subtitles for TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live? | ||
Diba Szamosi edited English subtitles for TEDxEast - Sarah Kay - How many lives can you live? |
Yasushi Aoki
11
00:01:09,602 --> 00:01:11,497
He is cold and sick.
He has called in sick.
27
00:01:51,743 --> 00:01:53,024
A black whole has erupted.
A black hole has erupted.
29
00:01:56,216 --> 00:01:57,531
A law and order marathon is starting.
A Law & Order marathon is starting.
35
00:02:09,673 --> 00:02:12,675
His fingers find the pillowcase, his sailing mask.
His fingers find the pillowcase's sailing masts.
92
00:05:05,464 --> 00:05:08,487
And its not until recently that I realized
And it's not until recently that I realized
198
00:10:16,570 --> 00:10:18,023
When she laughed, he laughed so loudly,
When he laughed, he laughed so loudly,