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Five Things I've Learned as a Foreign Correspondent - Lara Setrakian at TEDxYerevan

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    When I was growing up in New Jersey
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    I dreamed of having a passport to everywhere.
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    That was my code for the opportunity
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    to see new lands and meet new people
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    and to take in especially the extremes,
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    the ends of every spectrum, so that you could
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    understand where everything else falls in between.
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    I got that passport as a foreign correspondent
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    for ABC News and Bloomberg Television.
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    It's taken me to see life in the Islamic Republic.
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    It's taken me to hunt for pirates
    off the coast of Somalia.
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    It's taken me to the heart of the revolution
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    in Tahrir Square.
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    And like Garman said, wherever I go
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    I try to take snapshots of culture.
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    In the news reports, but also for myself,
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    I write them down in a notebook like this.
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    This one's come with me from London to Kathmandu.
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    And this is a snapshot of what's inside.
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    In the middle there جعل أحلامك الحقيقية،
    Literally, make your dreams real.
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    It's from a home mortgage ad in Tunisia.
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    And than on the right there,
    "Ridha Allah Al-Walidain"
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    my friend Sulaf in Jordan wrote that
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    in memory of her father.
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    It's an Arabic Muslim concept of the special
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    karma you get, a blessing from parents,
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    passed from mother or father to child.
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    A colleague from Turkey wrote this one:
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    "Deliye hergun bayram"
    If you're mad everyday is a feast.
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    In other words, if you are just crazy enough,
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    you can have everything you want.
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    That's Arabic for .الاندفاع يأتي من الشيطان.
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    "anything too rush, probably comes from the devil."
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    This one is kind of blurry, "Partzratzeer Partzratzoor".
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    Rise up and bring others with you.
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    An below that:
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    "Voneh jeeshtek, voruh perceeh an guh leenee."
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    Have faith that what's true and what's right
    is gonna work out in the end.
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    I learned that from our TEDx organizer Kristine.
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    And the last one: "Satyameva Jayate".
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    It's an Indian proverb:
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    "Truth should win no matter who else losses."
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    So traveling around you fill a lot of notebooks,
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    and you learn a lot and even just
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    the act of doing journalism evolves you,
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    gives you lessons for life,
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    and I am so grateful for all of them that
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    I wanted to share some of them with you today.
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    So here are five things I've learned
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    as a foreign correspondent that you can too.
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    No. 1: Perception can count as much as intention.
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    It's not just what you intend, it's what you project
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    that can get you in or out of trouble.
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    I learned that traveling to Saudi Arabia.
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    I landed in the middle of the night,
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    I was making my way to Riyadh on my own,
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    and I realized that because of how I look
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    I have to be extra careful.
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    If you are a western women and
    you look foreign in Saudi Arabia
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    for the most part people won't mess with you.
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    Because of my dark features I have this mix
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    of an eastern face and western attitude.
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    And I had to be aware of how that could be interpreted.
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    I had to be situationally aware.
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    I might have to talk a little softer or keep a low profile.
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    And I just thought of it as putting my hand on
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    a volume of me-ness and adjusting slightly
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    just to make sure you stay safe.
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    No. 2: Fear is amplified with distance.
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    The further away you are from something,
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    the scarier it seems.
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    And I learned that over time traveling to Lebanon,
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    a country that is routinely on the brink of civil war.
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    Everything is calm, then all of the sudden,
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    a bombing in Beirut or a shootout on the border.
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    And everyday different parties at each other's throats,
    armed to the teeth.
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    And from afar it can seem pretty scary,
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    especially when it's just this big bubble of fear,
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    and the airport's shut down,
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    and you need to drive your way into Beirut.
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    But as you get closer you can localize the fear.
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    Figure out what's real and what's hype.
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    Call people who know the terrain.
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    Figure out how to keep yourself safe.
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    And just generally, get a sense of
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    the objective volume, not the subjective fear.
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    And that applies for a lot of things in your life.
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    At home, at work, a lot of things that seem threatening,
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    seem more threatening from far away,
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    because fear is amplified with distance.
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    If you get up close, you can get a sense
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    of what's real and what's hype.
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    You can localize the threat,
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    attack what you need and keep yourself safe.
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    No. 3: It's not who you know or what you know.
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    It's how you work. How hard and how smart.
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    Life, like journalism, is not a perfect meritocracy,
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    but effort counts.
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    When I started in media in New York City,
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    I would often hear people say,
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    "It's who you know, it's not what you know."
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    And I just didn't believe it
    because I didn't know anybody.
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    My parents were immigrants,
    we all started from scratch.
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    And I just had to believe that that wasn't true.
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    And then a producer friend of mine, David Katz,
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    in a miraculous moment of conversation
    turns to me and says,
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    "Lara, it's not who you know or what you know,
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    it's how you work. How hard, how smart.
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    Because if you do it right,
    you'll learn what you need to know.
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    And you'll meet who you should along the way.
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    In the Middle East there's a word for all the influence,
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    all the benefits you get from knowing the right people
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    and being able to pull strings.
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    That word is: wasta.
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    It gets used a lot.
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    How did that guy get a visa? Wasta.
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    How did that girl get into collage? Wasta.
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    How did those guys build a factory on the beach? Wasta.
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    Everybody hates it, everybody wants it.
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    But the truth is, if you work hard and you work smart,
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    you can build your network, work your wasta,
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    use your wasta for good and not for evil.
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    But if you just through your hands up
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    because you weren't born into the wastocracy,
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    that's giving up way too soon.
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    No. 4: You miss 100% of the shots you don't take,
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    and some of the ones you do.
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    That's borrowing some of the Wayne Gretzky's,
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    but the idea is that you have to try with abandon
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    and bounce back unscared and unscarred
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    when it doesn't work out.
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    I have to remind myself that every time
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    I try for a high profile interview.
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    I wanted to interview the president of Somalia.
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    That meant putting in a request, finding his people,
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    contact who knew his people,
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    getting to the Horn of Africa with cameramen,
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    and then sitting around and waiting.
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    And when you're in the middle of trying
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    and you not sure if it's going to workout,
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    it can feel pretty bad.
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    And it can feel much worse if it doesn't work out.
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    That time it did. But other times it doesn't.
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    And the key is to bounce back.
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    Treat the wins like the losses.
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    Just figure that you getting some of lifes'
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    necessary fails out of the way.
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    You can't weaken and you can't stop trying.
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    No. 5, my favorite: People are better than you think.
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    They're not angels, they're not perfect,
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    but they're better than you think.
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    And that's because most of the time
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    we tend to fill in the blanks
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    of what we don't know with the negative.
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    All of us sitting in the audience here,
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    we could see someone who's well-dressed
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    and assume she's a snob,
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    or see someone who is super-busy
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    and assume he's self-obsessed,
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    because we fill the blanks with a negative
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    when we don't have to.
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    For decades under Hosni Mubarak in Egypt,
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    the Coptic Christian minority and Muslim majority
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    were at each other's throats.
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    There was a lot of distrust, escalating violence,
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    bombings, shootings and whoever was
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    responsible for it, whoever was behind it,
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    was dropping that blanket of distrust
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    and negative assumption
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    across those two communities.
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    Then the most beautiful moments of the revolution
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    in Tahrir Square: they were up close.
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    You had Christians circling the square,
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    protecting the core,
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    while the Muslims bowed to the ground in prayer.
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    And then for Sunday mass it was the reverse.
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    You had the Muslims protecting the core,
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    while the Christians were bowing in prayer.
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    Once they were up-close and on the same side,
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    they stopped making those negative assumptions.
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    The word for optimist in Armenian
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    is lavades - seer of good.
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    Look for the good in people,
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    for your sake and for theirs.
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    I am not saying be naive.
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    I am not saying don't be careful.
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    I'm just saying there is no point seeing darkness
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    and shadows when you don't have to.
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    Especially when they are not there.
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    So in conclusion, how do I interpret reality?
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    Turn truth into television or at least try?
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    By absorbing everything I can about the people
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    and the places around me and then doing
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    everything I can to convey their essence.
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    And you do that by flexing
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    your empathy, sincerity,
    hustle, humility and respect.
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    By knowing when to ask for help,
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    when you're out of your depth,
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    and how to ask for help graciously and gratefully
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    and with the readiness to be proven wrong.
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    That's what I've learned in my work.
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    I've taken it through my life
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    and it's made me so much richer.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Five Things I've Learned as a Foreign Correspondent - Lara Setrakian at TEDxYerevan
Description:

Lara Setrakian is a Dubai-based correspondent for Bloomberg Television and ABC News, covering business, politics, and major events in the Middle East. She has interviewed high-profile leaders and led the network's coverage of the Arab uprisings throughout 2011. As part of Bloomberg Television's on-the-ground coverage of the crisis in Egypt, Setrakian reported live from Tahrir Square as President Hosni Mubarak ended his three-decade rule.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
09:34
  • 1:43.89 An below -> And below
    5:35.01 collage -> college
    6:25.05 lifes' -> life's

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