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The Power of Gratutude: Florence Servan Schreiber at TEDxParisSalon

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    I admire washing machine repairers
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    because there is something special
    about them.
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    When one comes over to my house,
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    I feel for this person,
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    because I have absolutely no idea
    how to do the things he or she can do,
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    an extremely important sense of recognition.
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    And when I feel this,
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    not only the washing machine is repaired,
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    but in fact I also live longer.
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    But how exactly do I live longer?
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    I present to you David,
    David Servan Schreiber.
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    David was a psychiatrist.
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    David Servan Schreiber
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    was my cousin.
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    And, a little over a year ago,
    he was taken over
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    by a type of brain cancer.
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    When he was 30 years old,
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    the first tumor was detected on him.
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    We couldn't exactly say
    that David was someone who,
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    statistically speaking,
    had luck on his side.
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    From then on, he mobilized
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    all of his knowledge,
    all of his energy
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    to try and find out how he could live,
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    not only as long as possible
    under these circumstances,
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    but also the best possible way.
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    So what we know about him
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    is that he changed his diet,
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    practised meditation,
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    and exercised every day.
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    But what we don't know,
    because he didn't make these things public,
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    is the amount of attention he paid
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    to all the details
    and the small things in his life.
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    Up to his last breath, David was
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    someone full of thanks and gratitude.
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    Gratitude is an emotion
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    of recognition that we feel
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    when we realize the flavour
    of the lives we're living.
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    It is, for example,
    a ray of sunshine on the deck,
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    the fragrance of a baby,
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    especially when it's our own child.
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    It's the act of pushing yourself
    to go out and learn new things
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    one evening.
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    It's, for us, the absolute pleasure
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    to have the chance to present to you
    what we are passionate about.
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    But why did David guide me into all of this?
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    We talked a lot about psychology together.
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    It's because there are
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    entire labs and departments that study
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    the circumstances
    and consequences of gratitude.
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    There's a gentleman called
    Prof. Robert Emmons
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    who works at UC Davis in California,
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    he's very fortunate,
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    for 12 years of diligent study
    and research in the field
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    of positive psychology
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    he has been trying to understand
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    how it works and the effect
    it can have on us.
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    And here's what he realized.
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    First of all, on a psychological level
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    when we know that we appreciate
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    all the small details
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    that surround you in your everyday life,
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    from the temperature in your room
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    to being able to arrive on time,
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    we feel happier,
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    we feel more connected with others,
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    we feel more alert and aware,
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    and we feel more alive.
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    And next, we have the secondary benefits
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    that deal with relationships.
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    Above all, being the fact that we feel
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    a lot less lonely.
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    This is because gratitude
    always comes from
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    something or someone
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    who is separate from us.
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    This is an emotion that makes us humble,
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    that makes us want
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    to take our turn to give.
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    But all of this is nothing.
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    The most shocking are the effects
    that were discovered
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    on the physiological level, or simply
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    how our body works.
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    Here I'd like to talk about a study
    that was conducted
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    in Minnesota in 1986.
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    A researcher hypothesized the following,
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    and asked
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    whether there was a link between
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    feeling grateful,
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    thus knowing how to appreciate things,
    and longevity.
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    So how do we study something like this?
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    We have to find people
    who live in the exact
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    same way, who eat the same things,
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    who breathe the same air,
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    who have the same job,
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    who have the same number of kids,
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    which is especially important with women,
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    with zero being an ideal number.
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    Furthermore, if everyone could be married
    to the same person,
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    that would be great.
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    And they found these people.
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    They found them in an abbey.
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    More specifically in an abbey
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    with 150 years old archives.
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    When these young women
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    arrived at the abbey,
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    at the age of 20,
    the first thing they were asked to do
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    was to write a letter
    that introduced themselves
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    and told their life story.
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    They did the same thing
    at the age of 40,
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    and at the age of 70.
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    We had 150 years of biographical letters.
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    We also had 150 years of medical records.
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    We passed these letters on to semanticists,
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    those who study diction
    and the content of vocabulary,
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    and asked them to quantify the nature
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    of words used that expressed
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    appreciation, optimism,
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    or gratitude.
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    And then we could correlate
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    the level of gratification of these women
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    with, not only their health,
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    but also their lifespans.
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    It was found that the more of these words
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    that expressed gratitude and appreciation
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    were used after the age of 20,
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    the longer the women lived.
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    We could quantify it to such an extent
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    that we know these women
    had a life expectancy
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    longer than their sisters by 7 years.
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    The same data comparison was conducted
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    with more current cases
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    concerning the middle class,
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    and the same results were yielded.
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    I'm like some of you here,
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    I was born and raised in Paris,
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    it's probably not the most appropriate thing
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    to talk about what's going well
    and what makes us grateful.
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    However, after having visited David
    so many times,
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    after having read
    all of these documents and articles,
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    I still wanted to try
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    and see.
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    I had to look at the hard evidence.
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    Martin Seligman, very influential
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    in the field of positive psychology
    and researcher at the University of Pennsylvania,
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    we definitely speak about him
    quite a bit today,
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    recognized the following:
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    In a day, it's enough to
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    identify 3 events,
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    moments, interactions,
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    tastes, sensations
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    that made us feel good
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    and that made us want to say,
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    "Thank you." --
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    to improve one's level
    of happiness permanently
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    after only 3 weeks.
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    I read this, I went home
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    relatively excited by this information,
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    sat down at the table
    with my husband and 3 kids,
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    who are between 8 and 14 years old,
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    and I told them
    that I read something crazy today
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    that says that if you can spot in a day
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    a moment, "here's a great moment"
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    in brief,
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    what I told them, was that
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    if you can spot 3 good things in your day,
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    you'll live longer,
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    you'll be in better health,
    and you'll be happier.
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    And we started to do so.
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    It's not easy for everyone.
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    It's not obvious.
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    Our immediate level of access
    to gratitude is a bit
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    different from person to person.
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    It was especially difficult for Léon,
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    the youngest of my kids.
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    He was under pressure,
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    he didn't even want to play.
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    One of my proudest achievements as a mom
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    is that today Léon is 14
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    and he can come down these stairs
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    and stand right in front of you
    to tell you all,
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    "Here, my 3 good things are
    this, this, and this."
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    My children have learnt this.
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    It's a way of doing things.
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    When we do this with people we know,
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    people we live with,
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    people we work with,
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    people who we don't know,
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    people who we've just met,
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    something very special happens,
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    because it's not a common
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    conversation topic.
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    If it moves you, it moves me.
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    When we listen to others talk about
    what made them happy today,
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    there's a rule we need to follow;
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    that is not to comment or criticize it.
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    When someone chooses to share
    their spot of happiness, we listen,
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    we absorb and generally,
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    we realize that we also
    have this event to appreciate
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    and we add it to our own lists.
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    This is one way to do it,
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    level zero.
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    And then we have level one.
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    If you don't necessarily want
    to talk about it,
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    in fact you can
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    start to keep a little notebook
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    on your night stand.
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    I like to call it a "book of happy things",
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    and in laboratories they call it
    a "journal of gratitude".
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    It lets you write down
    your sources of gratitude
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    before you go to sleep,
    and it's the last thing
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    you do before sleeping.
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    When you turn off your iPad,
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    you can pick up your little diary.
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    Dr Emmons has discovered
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    that when doing this is the last thing
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    we do in our day,
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    we sleep deeper,
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    for a longer time,
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    and if we suffer from a chronic pain
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    the pain weakens and wears off.
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    And the next level
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    is the letter of appreciation.
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    And here's what happens in our brains
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    when we associate ourselves
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    with feelings and emotions of appreciation.
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    It is impossible for our brains to,
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    at the same time,
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    feel resentment or anger.
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    And hence the moment when you sit down
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    and say, "I'm going to write to someone",
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    we can recollect our thoughts
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    to realize the wonder
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    that we have around us.
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    For one year I made no presents;
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    the only gifts I made
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    were letters that I'd written
    for my friends' birthdays.
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    I wrote them letters of appreciation.
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    I examined and re-examined
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    my friendships, my relationships,
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    and I suddenly became aware
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    of how fortunate I was.
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    This was a letter, in fact,
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    that let me say, "If you weren't in my life,
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    here's what I wouldn't become,
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    and here's what I wouldn't know."
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    It lets us get a grasp of the scope
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    and depth of the relationships
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    we have with others.
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    And so now what Martin Seligman did,
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    was that he sent these messages of gratitude
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    by visiting the receiver.
    You'd write the letter,
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    and instead of sending it,
    you'd take it to a meeting
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    with the recipient,
    wouldn't tell them anything,
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    why you came,
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    and you'd go and read him your letter.
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    I've done this once, I confess, not more.
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    It's hard,
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    and I needed quite a bit Kleenex
    during the experience,
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    quite a bit of Kleenex
    when I was getting feedback.
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    I wrote a letter of appreciation
    to my husband,
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    who's sitting here tonight,
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    and I've never said this in front of him,
    but I'll say this
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    even if he's here.
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    We've been together for 25 years.
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    In 25 years together,
    a list of complaints
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    would be very, very easy to write.
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    But that's not the point.
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    The point is in telling him,
    "If you' were not in my life,
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    if I had not met you,
    if I hadn't fallen for you that day,
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    here are all the things
    that I wouldn't have become."
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    And I did just that.
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    And I'll tell you a secret, sorry, Alex,
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    Alex reads on the toilet.
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    And when I sat down to write this letter
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    I realized that
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    without his pile of magazines
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    I would've never learnt so many things.
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    I owe it all to him.
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    I heard myself telling that to him.
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    I told him.
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    And here is exactly what gratitude does.
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    It's simply living the exact same life,
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    but better.
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    I haven't changed any characters,
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    I haven't changed any details.
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    And where it truly gets extraordinarily useful
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    is when things aren't going so well.
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    It's when life doesn't give us
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    what we want,
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    and when life gives us the opposite
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    of what we want.
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    When the time that we've spent
    and have yet to spend
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    with someone we love, is limited --
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    we realize,
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    in looking at things through this lens,
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    despite everything that's happening,
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    how fortunate we are.
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    For me, luck is to be there
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    with all of you today,
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    sitting patiently.
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    I sincerely thank you all.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The Power of Gratutude: Florence Servan Schreiber at TEDxParisSalon
Description:

Florence explores the power of gratitude in our lives. Highlighting a few examples, she takes us on a beautiful journey towards connecting with others.

more » « less
Video Language:
French
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
12:17

English subtitles

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