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Dignity, community, and a side of veggies | Libby Birky | TEDxMileHigh

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    Hi everybody.
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    I want to tell you a little bit
    about growing up in my house.
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    My dad used to take us out
    to dinner when we were little
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    - on the rare occasion
    that we got to go out to dinner -
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    he'd play this joke on us, at dinner.
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    At the end of the meal,
    he'd act like he forgot his wallet,
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    and he would tell us we had to go back
    in the kitchen and do the dishes,
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    and I think this is
    what laid the path for my life.
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    (Laughter)
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    This is Marlene.
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    Over the past couple of years,
    Marlene has learned that life isn't fair.
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    Marlene is an educated woman.
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    She his three credits away
    from a Master's degree,
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    and she's had to sleep in her car
    from time to time.
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    Marlene has so much to give to people,
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    and yet what she struggles with
    is that people make assumptions about her.
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    She never thought she'd struggle
    to find a safe place to eat,
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    or a safe space to sleep,
    or what she was going to eat.
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    She never thought she'd worry about
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    what to do with a squash
    that she got at a food bank,
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    and she'd cook it in her stove
    at home, if her stove worked.
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    She lives in an efficiency apartment
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    and hasn't been able to pay rent
    for the last three months,
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    so she can't really complain
    about the stove not working.
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    Marlene is an interesting woman,
    who is trying to get her life together.
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    She has struggled from time to time,
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    but what Marlene thinks is
    the most frustrating about her situation
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    is that people make
    so many assumptions about her.
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    They assume she's lazy, uneducated,
    or an addict of some sort or another.
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    What Marlene really needs is dignity.
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    This is Aaron.
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    Aaron eats at SAME Café almost every day.
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    He comes in full of life,
    sober, most days.
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    Some days he's drunk as a skunk
    or high as a kite,
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    depending on his drug of choice
    for the day.
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    Aaron is homeless.
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    He sleeps in an abandoned home
    on the West side of town, or in the park.
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    He'd keep a job if he wasn't
    so addicted to alcohol and drugs.
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    To be honest, if I had to sleep
    in a park, I might drink too.
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    What's so interesting about Aaron
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    is that he's one of the most intelligent
    people I've ever met.
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    Name a book, he's read it.
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    Aaron says the most frustrating thing
    about his situation
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    is he's invisible.
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    Most of us walk by him and avert our eyes
    or ignore him and act like he's not there,
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    or lie to him when he asks
    for spare change.
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    Aaron needs community.
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    Taryn remembers dinner
    in her house growing up
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    as a symphony of sound and activity,
    a festival of joy, memories, and laughter.
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    Taryn gets really sad
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    when she encounters someone
    who is hungry.
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    She thinks not everybody
    has had the opportunity
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    to have the memories around
    the dinner table that she has.
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    Taryn believes that those with less
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    are angels cast to earth
    to test the more fortunate.
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    Taryn strives to give
    to the less fortunate with dignity.
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    For Taryn, it's all about the food.
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    About 10 years ago, my husband and I
    started talking about this idea.
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    What if people really could work
    for their food instead of paying for it?
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    And so we started talking to people
    at shelters that we were volunteering at,
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    and we found out
    that they weren't eating there.
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    They were choosing convenience foods,
    fast food, because it was cheap and quick,
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    and sometimes tastier
    than what they were getting at shelters.
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    But what we found was
    they really desired something more.
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    So we thought about opening a place
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    where they could access
    healthy food cheaply and quickly,
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    so we came up with the idea of SAME Café.
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    We invested $30,000 of our own money
    from our savings accounts and our IRAs,
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    and we thought, you know what?
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    People experiencing poverty
    don't have access to healthy food.
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    We have to change it.
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    So there's one menu
    where everyone orders from.
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    There's one dining room
    where everyone sits together.
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    There's one donation box
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    where everyone leaves a donation
    that they feel is fair.
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    Those who can't leave a donation
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    are encouraged to work
    in exchange for their food.
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    What I've learned so much
    about being at SAME Café
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    is that people are people
    no matter their struggles in life.
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    Serving folks like Marlene,
    Aaron, and Taryn
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    has really taught me
    to see people eye-to-eye,
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    meet them face-to-face and really listen.
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    I've learned that's how
    you build community.
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    Before volunteering at SAME Café,
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    Jane was a "write a check
    to your favorite cause" kind of person.
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    She saw injustice
    and fought with her check book.
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    Then she read an article about SAME Café
    and decided to come check it out.
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    Jane, Susan, and Norma
    have have been volunteering at SAME Café
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    for three and a half years.
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    Jane says the most fascinating part
    about being at SAME Café
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    is being in on the ground floor
    and working to see change happen.
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    Jane still writes a check
    to her favorite causes,
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    but she knows
    that through her own experience,
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    it takes people working together
    to build community.
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    I've even changed the way
    I think about the term "giving back."
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    Participating at SAME Café
    has done that for me.
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    People asked,
    "Why did you start SAME Café?"
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    and I would say, "Well, I wanted
    to give something back to my community."
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    But what I didn't realize was that saying
    "giving back to my community"
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    implied that I was separate from it.
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    I was not a part of it,
    it wasn't an organic "we",
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    a lifting, supportive, encouraging,
    doing it together kind of environment.
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    The term "giving back"
    meant that I could be separated from it.
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    On the other hand, building community
    was all about being a part of something,
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    getting in on the ground floor
    and working to see something succeed.
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    Community problems don't go away
    simply because someone writes a check.
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    Someone has to be on the ground floor,
    working to make things happen.
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    They have to be in the midst of it all,
    doing the hard work day in and day out.
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    That's what it takes to build community.
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    So I encourage you today
    to look people in the eye.
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    There's a saying:
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    "Beware the everyday brutality
    of the averted gaze."
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    When you look someone in the eye,
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    you validate them
    as a human being, an equal.
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    Averting your eyes does just the opposite.
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    And give with dignity,
    give from your heart.
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    Imagine when you give that gift
    that you're on the receiving end of it
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    and how you feel.
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    Lastly, get involved.
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    Find out what you're passionate about.
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    Maybe it's healthcare, housing, children.
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    Whatever it is, make that your focus.
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    Build community, get involved.
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    Change begins with us.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Dignity, community, and a side of veggies | Libby Birky | TEDxMileHigh
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

Fostering genuine connection, perseverance and a willingness to get involved and get your hands dirty are the secrets to restoring dignity in underserved communities. Teacher and soup kitchen volunteer Libby Birky started a new restaurant with an unusual business model to do just that.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
07:41

English subtitles

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