Happiness in body and soul
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0:01 - 0:03I bet you're worried.
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0:03 - 0:05(Laughter)
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0:05 - 0:09I was worried. That's why I began this piece.
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0:09 - 0:15I was worried about vaginas. I was worried what we think about vaginas,
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0:15 - 0:19and even more worried that we don't think about them.
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0:19 - 0:21I was worried about my own vagina.
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0:21 - 0:26It needed a context, a culture, a community of other vaginas.
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0:26 - 0:30There is so much darkness and secrecy surrounding them.
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0:30 - 0:35Like the Bermuda Triangle, nobody ever reports back from there.
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0:35 - 0:36(Laughter)
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0:36 - 0:40In the first place, it's not so easy to even find your vagina.
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0:40 - 0:43Women go days, weeks, months, without looking at it.
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0:43 - 0:45I interviewed a high-powered businesswoman;
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0:45 - 0:48she told me she didn't have time.
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0:48 - 0:51"Looking at your vagina," she said, "is a full day's work."
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0:51 - 0:52(Laughter)
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0:52 - 0:55"You've got to get down there on your back, in front of a mirror,
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0:55 - 0:58full-length preferred. You've got to get in the perfect position,
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0:58 - 1:02with the perfect light, which then becomes shadowed by the angle you're at.
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1:02 - 1:05You're twisting your head up, arching your back, it's exhausting."
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1:05 - 1:08She was busy; she didn't have time.
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1:08 - 1:11So I decided to talk to women about their vaginas.
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1:11 - 1:14They began as casual vagina interviews,
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1:14 - 1:17and they turned into vagina monologues.
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1:17 - 1:21I talked with over 200 women. I talked to older women,
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1:21 - 1:24younger women, married women, lesbians, single women;
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1:24 - 1:29I talked to corporate professionals, college professors, actors, sex workers;
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1:29 - 1:33I talked to African-American women, Asian-American women,
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1:33 - 1:37Native-American women, Caucasian women, Jewish women.
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1:37 - 1:42OK, at first women were a little shy, a little reluctant to talk.
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1:42 - 1:45Once they got going, you couldn't stop them.
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1:45 - 1:49Women love to talk about their vaginas -- they do.
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1:49 - 1:52Mainly because no one's ever asked them before.
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1:52 - 1:53(Laughter)
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1:53 - 1:58Let's just start with the word "vagina" -- vagina, vagina.
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1:58 - 2:03It sounds like an infection at best. Maybe a medical instrument.
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2:03 - 2:05"Hurry, nurse, bring the vagina."
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2:05 - 2:06(Laughter)
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2:06 - 2:09Vagina, vagina, vagina. It doesn't matter how many times
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2:09 - 2:12you say the word, it never sounds like a word you want to say.
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2:12 - 2:17It's a completely ridiculous, totally un-sexy word.
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2:17 - 2:20If you use it during sex, trying to be politically correct,
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2:20 - 2:26"Darling, would you stroke my vagina," you kill the act right there.
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2:26 - 2:27(Laughter)
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2:27 - 2:31I'm worried what we call them and don't call them.
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2:31 - 2:34In Great Neck, New York, they call it a "pussy-cat."
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2:34 - 2:36A woman told me there, her mother used to tell her,
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2:36 - 2:38"Don't wear panties, dear, underneath your pajamas.
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2:38 - 2:40You need to air out your pussy-cat."
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2:40 - 2:44(Laughter)
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2:44 - 2:49In Westchester they call it a "pooky," in New Jersey a "twat."
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2:49 - 2:54There's powder-box, derriere, a pooky, a poochy, a poopy,
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2:54 - 2:58a poopaloo, a pooninana, a padepachetchki, a pow, and a peach.
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2:58 - 3:00(Laughter)
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3:00 - 3:05There's toadie, dee dee, nishi, dignity, coochie snorcher, cooter,
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3:05 - 3:14labi, gladis siegelman, va, wee-wee, whore-spot, nappy dugout,
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3:14 - 3:20mungo, ghoulie, powder-box, a "mimi" in Miami,
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3:20 - 3:26a "split knish" in Philadelphia, and a "schmende" in the Bronx.
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3:26 - 3:27(Laughter)
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3:27 - 3:29I am worried about vaginas.
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3:29 - 3:32This is how the "Vagina Monologues" begins.
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3:32 - 3:38But it really didn't begin there; it began with a conversation with a woman.
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3:38 - 3:41We were having a conversation about menopause,
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3:41 - 3:43and we got onto the subject of her vagina --
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3:43 - 3:45which you'll do if you're talking about menopause.
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3:45 - 3:48And she said things that really shocked me about her vagina --
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3:48 - 3:52that it was dried-up and finished and dead -- and I was kind of shocked.
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3:52 - 3:55And so I said to a friend casually, "Well, what do you think about your vagina?"
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3:55 - 3:58And that woman said something more amazing,
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3:58 - 4:00and then the next woman said something more amazing,
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4:00 - 4:02and before I knew it, every woman was telling me
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4:02 - 4:05I had to talk to somebody about their vagina because they had an amazing story,
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4:05 - 4:08and I was sucked down the vagina trail.
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4:08 - 4:10(Laughter)
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4:10 - 4:13And I really haven't gotten off it. I think if you had told me
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4:13 - 4:16when I was younger that I was going to grow up, and be in shoe stores,
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4:16 - 4:19and people were going to scream out, "There she is, the Vagina Lady!"
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4:19 - 4:22I don't know that that would have been my life ambition.
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4:22 - 4:23(Laughter)
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4:23 - 4:26But I want to talk a little bit about happiness and the relationship
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4:26 - 4:28to this whole vagina journey because
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4:28 - 4:31it has been an extraordinary journey that began eight years ago.
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4:31 - 4:34I think before I did the "Vagina Monologues"
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4:34 - 4:37I didn't really believe in happiness.
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4:37 - 4:40I thought that only idiots were happy, to be honest.
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4:40 - 4:44I remember when I started practicing Buddhism 14 years ago,
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4:44 - 4:47and I was told that the end of this practice was to be happy,
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4:47 - 4:50I said, "How could you be happy and live in this world of suffering
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4:50 - 4:56and live in this world of pain?" I mistook happiness for a lot of other things,
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4:56 - 5:00like numbness or decadence or selfishness.
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5:00 - 5:02And what happened through the course of the "Vagina Monologues"
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5:02 - 5:05and this journey is I think I have come to understand
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5:05 - 5:07a little bit more about happiness.
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5:07 - 5:10There're three qualities I want to talk about.
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5:10 - 5:15One is seeing what's right in front of you, and talking about it,
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5:15 - 5:19and stating it. I think what I learned from talking about the vagina,
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5:19 - 5:22and speaking about the vagina, is it was the most obvious thing --
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5:22 - 5:25it was right in the center of my body and the center of the world --
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5:25 - 5:28and yet it was the one thing nobody talked about.
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5:28 - 5:32The second thing is that what talking about the vagina did
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5:32 - 5:35is it opened this door which allowed me to see
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5:35 - 5:38that there was a way to serve the world to make it better.
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5:38 - 5:42And that's where the deepest happiness has actually come from.
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5:42 - 5:46And the third principle of happiness, which I've realized recently.
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5:46 - 5:50Eight years ago, this momentum and this energy, this "V-wave" started --
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5:50 - 5:53and I can only describe it as a "V-wave" because, to be honest,
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5:53 - 5:57I really don't understand it completely; I feel at the service of it.
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5:57 - 6:00But this wave started, and if I question the wave,
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6:00 - 6:03or try to stop the wave or look back at the wave,
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6:03 - 6:06I often have the experience of whiplash
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6:06 - 6:10or the potential of my neck breaking. But if I go with the wave,
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6:10 - 6:13and I trust the wave and I move with the wave, I go to the next place,
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6:13 - 6:16and it happens logically and organically and truthfully.
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6:16 - 6:22And I started this piece, particularly with stories and narratives,
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6:22 - 6:25and I was talking to one woman and that led to another woman
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6:25 - 6:29and that led to another woman, and then I wrote those stories down
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6:29 - 6:31and I put them out in front of other people.
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6:31 - 6:33And every single time I did the show at the beginning,
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6:33 - 6:36women would literally line up after the show
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6:36 - 6:39because they wanted to tell me their stories.
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6:39 - 6:41And at first I thought, "Oh great, I'll hear about wonderful orgasms,
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6:41 - 6:45and great sex lives, and how women love their vaginas."
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6:45 - 6:48But in fact, that's not what women lined up to tell me.
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6:48 - 6:51What women lined up to tell me was how they were raped,
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6:51 - 6:54and how they were battered, and how they were beaten,
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6:54 - 6:56and how they were gang-raped in parking lots,
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6:56 - 6:58and how they were incested by their uncles.
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6:58 - 7:01And I wanted to stop doing the "Vagina Monologues"
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7:01 - 7:04because it felt too daunting. I felt like a war photographer
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7:04 - 7:08who takes pictures of terrible events, but doesn't intervene on their behalf.
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7:08 - 7:12And so in 1997, I said, "Let's get women together.
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7:12 - 7:17What could we do with this information that all these women are being violated?"
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7:17 - 7:21And it turned out, after thinking and investigating,
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7:21 - 7:24that I discovered -- and the UN has actually said this recently --
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7:24 - 7:27that one out of every three women on this planet
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7:27 - 7:30will be beaten or raped in her lifetime.
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7:30 - 7:35That's essentially a gender; that's essentially a resource of the planet, which is women.
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7:35 - 7:38So in 1997 we got all these incredible women together and we said,
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7:38 - 7:43"How can we use the play, this energy, to stop violence against women?"
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7:43 - 7:45And we put on one event in New York City, in the theater,
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7:45 - 7:48and all these great actors came -- from Susan Sarandon,
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7:48 - 7:51to Glenn Close, to Whoopi Goldberg -- and we did one performance
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7:51 - 7:57on one evening, and that catalyzed this wave, this energy.
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7:57 - 8:01And within five years, this extraordinary thing began to happen.
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8:01 - 8:05One woman took that energy and she said, "I want to bring this wave,
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8:05 - 8:09this energy, to college campuses," and so she took the play
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8:09 - 8:12and she said, "Let's use the play and have performances of the play
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8:12 - 8:15once a year, where we can raise money to stop violence against women
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8:15 - 8:18in local communities all around the world."
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8:18 - 8:21And in one year, it went to 50 colleges, and then it expanded.
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8:21 - 8:24And over the course of the last six years, it's spread
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8:24 - 8:27and it's spread and it's spread and it's spread around the world.
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8:27 - 8:33What I have learned is two things. One: that the epidemic
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8:33 - 8:37of violence towards women is shocking; it's global;
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8:37 - 8:39it is so profound and it is so devastating,
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8:39 - 8:42and it is so in every little pocket of every little crater,
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8:42 - 8:44of every little society, that we don't even recognize it
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8:44 - 8:50because it's become ordinary. This journey has taken me to Afghanistan,
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8:50 - 8:55where I had the extraordinary honor and privilege to go into
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8:55 - 8:58parts of Afghanistan under the Taliban -- I was dressed in a burqa --
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8:58 - 9:01and I went in with an extraordinary group called the
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9:01 - 9:04Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan,
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9:04 - 9:07and I saw firsthand how women had been stripped
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9:07 - 9:11of every single right that was possible to strip women of --
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9:11 - 9:15from being educated, to being employed, to being
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9:15 - 9:17actually allowed to eat ice cream.
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9:17 - 9:20For those of you who don't know it, it was illegal to eat ice cream under the Taliban.
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9:20 - 9:24And I actually saw and met women who had been flogged
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9:24 - 9:27by being caught eating vanilla ice cream.
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9:27 - 9:31And I was taken to the secret ice cream-eating place in a little town,
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9:31 - 9:34where we went to a back room, and women were seated
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9:34 - 9:38and a curtain was pulled around us, and they were served vanilla ice cream.
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9:38 - 9:41And women lifted their burqas and ate this ice cream,
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9:41 - 9:44and I don't think I ever understood pleasure until that moment,
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9:44 - 9:48and how women have found a way to keep their pleasure alive.
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9:48 - 9:51It has taken me, this journey, to Islamabad, where I have
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9:51 - 9:54witnessed and met women with their faces melted off.
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9:54 - 9:58It has taken me to Juarez, Mexico, where I was a week ago,
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9:58 - 10:01where I have literally been there in parking lots
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10:01 - 10:04where bones of women have washed up and been dumped
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10:04 - 10:07next to Coca-Cola bottles.
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10:07 - 10:09It has taken me to universities
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10:09 - 10:12all over this country where girls are date-raped and drugged.
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10:12 - 10:16I have seen terrible, terrible, terrible violence.
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10:16 - 10:20But I have also recognized, in the course of seeing that violence,
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10:20 - 10:23that being in the face of things and seeing actually
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10:23 - 10:29what's in front of us is the antidote to depression and to a feeling
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10:29 - 10:31that one is worthless and has no value.
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10:31 - 10:33Because before the "Vagina Monologues,"
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10:33 - 10:36I will say that 80 percent of my consciousness was closed off
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10:36 - 10:39to what was really going on in this reality.
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10:39 - 10:44And that closing-off closed off my vitality and my life energy.
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10:44 - 10:46What has also happened is in the course of these travels --
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10:46 - 10:50and it's been an extraordinary thing -- is that every single place
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10:50 - 10:53that I have gone to in the world, I have met a new species.
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10:53 - 10:57And I really love hearing about all these species at the bottom of the sea.
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10:57 - 10:59And I was thinking about how being with these
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10:59 - 11:02extraordinary people on this particular panel
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11:02 - 11:05that it's beneath, beyond, and between,
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11:05 - 11:08and the vagina kind of fits into all those categories.
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11:08 - 11:09(Laughter)
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11:09 - 11:12But one of the things I've seen is this species --
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11:12 - 11:15and it is a species, and it is a new paradigm,
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11:15 - 11:17and it doesn't get reported in the press or in the media
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11:17 - 11:21because I don't think good news ever is news,
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11:21 - 11:23and I don't think people who are transforming the planet
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11:23 - 11:26are what gets the ratings on TV shows.
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11:26 - 11:29But every single country I have been to -- and in the last six years
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11:29 - 11:34I've been to about 45 countries, and many tiny little villages and cities and towns --
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11:34 - 11:38I have seen something what I've come to call "vagina warriors."
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11:38 - 11:42A "vagina warrior" is a woman, or a vagina-friendly man,
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11:42 - 11:46who has witnessed incredible violence or suffered it,
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11:46 - 11:50and rather than getting an AK-47 or a weapon of mass destruction
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11:50 - 11:55or a machete, they hold the violence in their bodies;
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11:55 - 12:00they grieve it; they experience it; and then they go out and devote
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12:00 - 12:04their lives to making sure it doesn't happen to anybody else.
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12:04 - 12:07I have met these women everywhere on the planet.
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12:07 - 12:09And I want to tell a few stories because I believe that
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12:09 - 12:12stories are the way that we transmit information,
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12:12 - 12:15where it goes into our bodies. And I think that one of the things
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12:15 - 12:18about being at TED that's been very interesting
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12:18 - 12:22is that I live in my body a lot, and I don't live in my head very much anymore.
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12:22 - 12:24And this is a very heady place.
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12:24 - 12:27And it's been really interesting to be in my head
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12:27 - 12:29for the last two days; I've been very disoriented --
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12:29 - 12:30(Laughter)
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12:30 - 12:34because I think the world, the V-world, is very much in your body.
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12:34 - 12:38It's a body world, and the species really exists in the body,
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12:38 - 12:40and I think there's a real significance in us
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12:40 - 12:43attaching our bodies to our heads -- that that separation
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12:43 - 12:49has created a divide that is often separating purpose from intent.
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12:49 - 12:55And the connection between body and head often brings those things into union.
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12:55 - 12:57I want to talk about three particular people
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12:57 - 13:01that I've met, vagina warriors, who really transformed my understanding
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13:01 - 13:03of this whole principle and species,
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13:03 - 13:06and one is a woman named Marsha Lopez.
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13:06 - 13:09Marsha Lopez was a woman I met in Guatemala.
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13:09 - 13:12She was 14 years old, and she was in a marriage
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13:12 - 13:15and her husband was beating her on a regular basis,
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13:15 - 13:19and she couldn't get out because she was addicted to the relationship
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13:19 - 13:22and she had no money. Her sister was younger than her
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13:22 - 13:27and she applied -- we had a "stop rape" contest a few years ago in New York --
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13:27 - 13:30and she applied, hoping that she would become a finalist
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13:30 - 13:32and she could bring her sister.
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13:32 - 13:36She did become a finalist; she brought Marsha to New York.
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13:36 - 13:38And at that time we did this extraordinary V-Day
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13:38 - 13:43at Madison Square Garden where we sold out the entire testosterone-filled dome,
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13:43 - 13:4518,000 people standing up to say
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13:45 - 13:49"yes" to vaginas, which was really a pretty incredible transformation.
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13:49 - 13:52And she came, and she witnessed this, and she decided
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13:52 - 13:54that she would go back and leave her husband,
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13:54 - 13:56and that she would bring V-Day to Guatemala.
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13:56 - 14:00She was 21 years old. I went to Guatemala and she had sold out
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14:00 - 14:03the National Theater of Guatemala.
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14:03 - 14:08And I watched her walk up on stage in her red short dress, and high heels,
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14:08 - 14:10and she stood there and she said, "My name is Marsha.
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14:10 - 14:14I was beaten by my husband for five years.
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14:14 - 14:17He almost murdered me. I left and you can too."
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14:17 - 14:21And the entire 2,000 people went absolutely crazy.
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14:21 - 14:23There's a woman named Esther Chavez
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14:23 - 14:26who I met in Juarez, Mexico. And Esther Chavez
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14:26 - 14:29was a brilliant accountant in Mexico City; she was 72 years old;
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14:29 - 14:31and she was planning to retire.
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14:31 - 14:36She went to Juarez to take care of an ailing aunt, and over the course of it,
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14:36 - 14:38she began to discover what was happening to the murdered
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14:38 - 14:41and disappeared women of Juarez.
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14:41 - 14:44She gave up her life; she moved to Juarez;
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14:44 - 14:48she started to write the stories which documented the disappeared women.
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14:48 - 14:50300 women have disappeared
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14:50 - 14:52in a border town because they're brown and poor.
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14:52 - 14:54There has been no response to the disappearance,
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14:54 - 14:56and not one person has been held accountable.
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14:56 - 15:01She began to document it; she opened a center called Casa Amiga;
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15:01 - 15:03and in six years, she has literally brought this
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15:03 - 15:05to the consciousness of the world.
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15:05 - 15:08We were there a week ago, when there were 7,000 people on the street,
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15:08 - 15:12and it was truly a miracle. And as we walked through the streets,
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15:12 - 15:15the people of Juarez, who normally don't even come into the streets
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15:15 - 15:18because the streets are so dangerous, literally stood there and wept
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15:18 - 15:21to see that other people from the world had showed up
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15:21 - 15:24for that particular community.
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15:24 - 15:28There's another woman named Agnes. And Agnes, for me,
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15:28 - 15:30epitomizes what a vagina warrior is.
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15:30 - 15:36I met her three years ago in Kenya. And Agnes was mutilated as a little girl,
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15:36 - 15:38she was circumcised against her will
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15:38 - 15:42when she was 10 years old, and she really made a decision
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15:42 - 15:46that she didn't want this practice to continue anymore in her community.
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15:46 - 15:49So when she got older she created this incredible thing:
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15:49 - 15:54it's an anatomical sculpture of a woman's body; it's half a woman's body.
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15:54 - 15:57And she walked through the Rift Valley, and she had
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15:57 - 16:00vagina and vagina replacement parts where she would teach
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16:00 - 16:04girls and parents and boys and girls what a healthy vagina looks like,
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16:04 - 16:08and what a mutilated vagina looks like. And in the course of her travel
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16:08 - 16:11she walked literally for eight years through the Rift Valley,
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16:11 - 16:15through dust, through sleeping on the ground -- because the Masais are nomads,
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16:15 - 16:19and she would literally have to find them, and they would move,
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16:19 - 16:24and she would find them again. She saved 1,500 girls from being cut.
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16:24 - 16:27And in that time she created an alternative ritual which involved
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16:27 - 16:30girls coming of age without the cut.
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16:30 - 16:32When we met her three years ago,
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16:32 - 16:34we said, "What could V-Day do for you?"
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16:34 - 16:37And she said, "Well, if you got me a Jeep, I could get around a lot faster."
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16:37 - 16:38(Laughter)
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16:38 - 16:41So we bought her a Jeep. And in the year that she had the Jeep,
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16:41 - 16:45she saved 4,500 girls from being cut. So then we said to her,
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16:45 - 16:47"Agnes, well, what else could we do for you?" And she said,
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16:47 - 16:49"Well, Eve, you know, if you gave me some money,
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16:49 - 16:53I could open a house and girls could run away and they could be saved."
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16:53 - 16:56And I want to tell this little story about my own beginnings
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16:56 - 17:00because it's very interrelated to happiness and Agnes.
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17:00 - 17:03When I was a little girl -- and I grew up
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17:03 - 17:07in a wealthy community; it was an upper-middle class white community,
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17:07 - 17:09and it had all the trappings
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17:09 - 17:14and the looks of a perfectly nice, wonderful, great life.
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17:14 - 17:17And everyone was supposed to be happy in that community
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17:17 - 17:20and, in fact, my life was hell. I lived with an alcoholic father
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17:20 - 17:23who beat me and molested me, and it was all inside that.
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17:23 - 17:28And always as a child I had this fantasy that somebody would come and rescue me.
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17:28 - 17:31And I actually made up a little character whose name was Mr. Alligator,
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17:31 - 17:34and I would call him up when things got really bad,
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17:34 - 17:36and I would say it was time to come and pick me up.
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17:36 - 17:40And I would go and pack a little bag and I would wait for Mr. Alligator to come.
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17:40 - 17:42Now, Mr. Alligator never did come,
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17:42 - 17:47but the idea of Mr. Alligator coming actually saved my sanity
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17:47 - 17:49and made it OK for me to keep going because I believed,
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17:49 - 17:53in the distance, there would be someone coming to rescue me.
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17:53 - 17:57Cut to 40-some-odd years later, we go to Kenya,
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17:57 - 18:01and we're walking, we arrive at the opening of this house --
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18:01 - 18:03and Agnes hadn't let me come to the house for days
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18:03 - 18:05because they were preparing this whole ritual.
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18:05 - 18:08And I want to tell you a great story. When Agnes first started
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18:08 - 18:12fighting to stop female genital mutilation in her community,
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18:12 - 18:15she had become an outcast, and she was exiled and she was slandered,
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18:15 - 18:17and the whole community turned against her.
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18:17 - 18:20But, being a vagina warrior, she kept going,
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18:20 - 18:23and she kept committing herself to transforming consciousness.
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18:23 - 18:28And in the Masai community, goats and cows are the most valued possession.
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18:28 - 18:32They're like the Mercedes-Benz of the Rift Valley.
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18:32 - 18:36And she said, two days before the house opened, two different people
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18:36 - 18:39arrived to give her a goat each, and she said to me,
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18:39 - 18:44"I knew then that female genital mutilation would end one day in Africa."
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18:44 - 18:47Anyway, we arrived, and when we arrived,
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18:47 - 18:51there were hundreds of girls dressed in red, homemade dresses --
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18:51 - 18:54which is the color of the Masai and the color of V-Day --
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18:54 - 18:57and they greeted us, and they had made up these songs
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18:57 - 18:59that they were singing about the end of suffering,
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18:59 - 19:02and the end of mutilation, and they walked us down the path.
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19:02 - 19:04And it was a gorgeous day in the African sun,
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19:04 - 19:07and the dust was flying and the girls were dancing,
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19:07 - 19:12and there was this house, and it said, "V-Day Safe House for the Girls."
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19:12 - 19:17And it hit me in that moment that it had taken 47 years,
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19:17 - 19:20but that Mr. Alligator had finally shown up.
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19:20 - 19:25And he'd show up obviously in a form that it took me a long time to understand,
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19:25 - 19:28which is that when we give
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19:28 - 19:34in the world what we want the most, we heal the broken part inside each of us.
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19:34 - 19:37And I feel, in the last eight years,
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19:37 - 19:40that this journey, this miraculous vagina journey,
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19:40 - 19:47has taught me this really simple thing, which is that happiness exists in action;
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19:47 - 19:51it exists in telling the truth and saying what your truth is;
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19:51 - 19:55and it exists in giving away what you want the most.
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19:55 - 19:59And I feel that knowledge and that journey
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19:59 - 20:01has been an extraordinary privilege,
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20:01 - 20:05and I feel really blessed to have been here today to communicate that to you.
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20:05 - 20:07Thank you very much.
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20:07 - 20:10(Applause)
- Title:
- Happiness in body and soul
- Speaker:
- Eve Ensler
- Description:
-
Eve Ensler, creator of The Vagina Monologues, shares how a discussion about menopause with her friends led to talking about all sorts of sexual acts onstage, waging a global campaign to end violence toward women and finding her own happiness.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TEDTalks
- Duration:
- 20:09
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Krystian Aparta commented on English subtitles for Happiness in body and soul | |
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Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for Happiness in body and soul | |
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Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for Happiness in body and soul | |
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TED edited English subtitles for Happiness in body and soul | |
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TED added a translation |
Krystian Aparta
The English transcript was updated on 11/5/2015.