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Get comfortable with being uncomfortable

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    I'm a professional troublemaker.
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    As my job is to critique the world,
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    the shoddy systems, and the people
    who refuse to do better,
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    as a writer, as a speaker,
    as a shady Nigerian,
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    I feel like my purpose is to be this cat.
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    (Laughter)
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    I am the person who is
    looking at other people,
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    like, "I need you to fix it."
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    That is me.
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    I want us to leave this world
    better than we found it,
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    and how I choose to effect change
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    is by speaking up,
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    by being the first
    and by being the domino.
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    For a line of dominos to fall,
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    one has to fall first,
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    which then leads the other
    choiceless to do the same.
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    And that domino that falls,
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    we're hoping that, okay,
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    the next person that sees this
    is inspired to be a domino.
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    Being the domino for me
    looks like speaking up
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    and doing the things
    that are really difficult,
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    especially when they are needed,
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    with the hope that others
    will follow suit.
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    And here's the thing:
    I'm the person who says
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    what you might be thinking
    but dared not to say,
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    and a lot of times people
    think that we're fearless,
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    the people who do this, we're fearless.
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    We're not fearless.
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    We're not unafraid of the consequences
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    or the sacrifices that we have to make
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    by speaking truth to power.
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    What happens is, we feel like we have to,
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    because there are too few
    people in the world
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    willing to be the domino,
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    too few people willing to take that fall.
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    We're not doing it without fear.
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    Now let's talk about fear.
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    I knew exactly what I wanted
    to be when I grew up.
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    I was like, "I'm going to be a doctor."
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    Doctor Luvvie was the dream.
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    I was Doc McStuffins
    before it was a thing.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I remember when I went to college,
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    my freshman year,
    I had to take Chemistry 101
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    for my premed major.
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    I got the first and last D
    of my academic career.
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    (Laughter)
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    So I went to my advisor, and I was like,
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    "Okay, let's drop the premed, because
    this doctor thing is not going to work,
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    because I don't even like hospitals.
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    So" -- (Laughter) --
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    "let's just consider that done for.
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    And that same semester,
    I started blogging.
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    That was 2003.
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    So as that one dream was ending,
    another was beginning.
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    And then what was a cute hobby
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    became my full-time job
    when I lost my marketing job in 2010.
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    But it still took me two more years
    to say I'm a writer,
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    nine years after I started writing,
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    before I said I'm a writer,
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    because I was afraid of what happens
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    without 401ks,
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    without, how am I going
    to keep up my shoe habit?
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    That's important to me.
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    (Laughter)
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    So it took me that long to own this thing
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    that was what my purpose was,
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    and then I realized,
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    fear has a very concrete power
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    of keeping us from doing and saying
    the things that are our purpose.
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    And I was like, you know what?
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    I'm not going to let fear rule my life.
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    I'm not going to let fear
    dictate what I do.
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    And then all of these
    awesome things started happening,
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    and dominos started to fall.
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    So when I realized that,
    I was like, okay, 2015,
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    I turned 30,
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    it's going to be my year of do it anyway.
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    Anything that scares me,
    I'm going to actively pursue it.
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    So I'm a Capricorn.
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    I like my feel solidly on the ground.
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    I decided to take
    my first ever solo vacation,
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    and it was out of the country
    to the Dominican Republic.
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    So on my birthday, what did I do?
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    I went ziplining through
    the forests of Punta Cana.
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    And for some odd reason,
    I had on business casual.
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    Don't ask why.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I had an incredible time.
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    Also, I don't like being
    submerged in water.
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    I like to be, again, on solid ground.
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    So I went to Mexico
    and swam with dolphins underwater.
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    And then the cool thing
    that I did also that year
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    that was my mountain
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    was I wrote my book,
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    "I'm Judging You: The Do-Better Manual,"
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    and I had to own -- (Applause) --
    that whole writing thing now, right?
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    Yes.
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    But the very anti-me thing
    that I did that year
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    that scared the crap out of me,
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    I went skydiving.
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    We're about to fall out of the plane.
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    I was like, I've done some stupid
    things in life. This is one of them.
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    (Laughter)
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    And then we come falling down to Earth
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    and I literally lose my breath
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    as I see Earth, and I was like,
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    I just fell out of a perfectly good
    plane on purpose.
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    (Laughter)
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    What is wrong with me?!
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    But then I looked down at the beauty,
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    and I was like, this is
    the best thing I could have done.
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    This is an amazing decision.
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    And I think about the times
    when I have to speak truth.
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    It feels like I am falling
    out of that plane.
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    It feels like that moment
    when I'm at the edge of the plane,
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    and I'm like, you shouldn't do this,
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    but then I do it anyway,
    because I realize I have to.
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    Sitting at the edge of that plane
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    and kind of staying on that plane
    is comfort to me,
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    and I feel like every day
    that I'm speaking truth
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    against institutions
    and people who are bigger than me
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    and just forces that are
    more powerful than me,
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    I feel like I'm falling out of that plane,
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    but I realize comfort is overrated,
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    because being quiet is comfortable,
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    keeping things the way
    they've been is comfortable,
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    and all comfort has done
    is maintain the status quo.
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    So we've got to get comfortable
    with being uncomfortable
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    by speaking these hard truths
    when they're necessary.
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    And I -- (Applause)
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    And for me, though, I realize that
    I have to speak these truths,
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    because honesty is so important to me.
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    My integrity is something I hold dear.
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    Justice, I don't think justice
    should be an option.
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    We should always have justice.
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    Also, I believe in shea butter
    as a core value, and --
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    (Laughter) --
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    and I think the world would be better
    if we were more moisturized.
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    But besides that, with these
    as my core values,
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    I have to speak the truth.
    I have no other choice in the matter.
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    But then people like me,
    the professional troublemakers,
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    should not be the only ones who are
    committed to being these dominos
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    who are always falling out of planes
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    or being the first one to take this hit.
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    People are so afraid
    of these acute consequences,
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    not realizing that there are many times
    when we walk in rooms
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    and we are some of the most
    powerful people in those rooms.
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    We might be the second-most powerful,
    third-most powerful,
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    and I firmly believe
    that our job in those times
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    is to disrupt what is happening,
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    and that if we're not the most powerful,
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    if two more of us band together,
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    it makes us powerful.
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    It's like cosigning
    the woman in the meeting,
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    you know, the woman who can't
    seem to get her word out,
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    or just making sure that other person
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    who can't make a point is being heard.
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    Our job is to make sure
    they have room for that.
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    Everyone's involved
    in this community business.
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    If we made that a point,
    we're understand that
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    for the times that we need help,
    we wouldn't have to look around so hard,
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    if we made sure we
    were somebody else's help.
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    And there are times when I feel like I
    have taken very public tumbles and falls,
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    like the time that I was asked
    to speak at a conference,
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    and they wanted me to pay my way there,
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    and then I did some research and found out
    the white men who spoke there
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    got compensated
    and got their travel paid for.
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    The white women who spoke there
    got their travel paid for.
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    The black women who spoke there were
    expected to actually pay to speak there.
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    And I was like, "What do I do?"
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    And I knew that if I spoke up
    about this publicly,
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    I could face financial loss,
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    but then I also understood
    that my silence serves no one.
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    So I fearfully spoke up about it publicly,
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    and other women started
    coming out to talk about,
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    "I too have faced
    this type of pay inequality,"
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    and it started a conversation
    about discriminatory pay practices
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    that this conference was participating in.
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    I felt like I was the domino
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    the time I read a disturbing
    memoir by a public figure
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    and wrote a piece about it,
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    and I knew this person
    was more powerful than me
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    and could impact my career,
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    but I was like, "I gotta do this.
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    I gotta sit at the edge of this plane
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    maybe for two hours."
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    And I did, and I pressed
    publish, and I ran away.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I came back to a viral post
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    and people being like, "Oh my God,
    I'm so glad somebody finally said this."
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    And it started a conversation
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    about mental health and self care,
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    and I was like, okay, alright,
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    this thing that I'm doing,
    I'm guess, alright, it's doing something.
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    And then so many people
    have been the domino
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    when they talk about
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    how they've been assaulted
    by powerful men,
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    and it's made millions of women
    join in and say, "Me too."
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    So shout out to Tarana Burke
    for igniting that movement.
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    (Applause)
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    People and systems count on our silence
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    to keep us exactly where we are.
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    Now, being the domino
    sometimes comes down
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    to being exactly who you are.
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    So I've been a shady somebody
    since I was three.
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    (Laughter)
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    This was me on my third birthday.
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    But I've been this girl all my life,
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    and I feel like even that's
    been the domino,
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    because in a world that wants us
    to walk us to walk around
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    as representatives of ourselves,
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    being yourself can be
    a revolutionary act,
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    and in a world that wants us to whisper,
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    I choose to yell.
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    (Applause)
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    When it's time to say these hard things,
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    I ask myself three things.
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    One, did you mean it?
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    Two, can you defend it?
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    Three, did you say it with love?
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    If the answer is yes to all three,
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    I say it and let the chips fall.
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    That's important.
    That checkpoint with myself
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    always tells me, yes,
    you're supposed to do this.
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    Telling the truth,
    telling thoughtful truths
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    should not be a revolutionary act.
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    Speaking truths to power
    should not be sacrificial, but they are.
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    But I think if more of us chose
    to do this for the greater good,
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    we'd be in better spaces
    than we are right now.
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    Speaking of the greater good,
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    I think we commit ourselves
    to telling truths to build bridges
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    to common ground,
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    and bridges that aren't based
    on truth will collapse,
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    so it is our job,
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    it is our obligation, it is our duty
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    to speak truth to power, to be the domino,
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    not just when it's difficult,
    especially when it's difficult.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Get comfortable with being uncomfortable
Speaker:
Luvvie Ajayi
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:54

English subtitles

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