How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are
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0:01 - 0:04As a student of adversity,
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0:04 - 0:06I've been struck over the years
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0:06 - 0:08by how some people
-
0:08 - 0:09with major challenges
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0:09 - 0:12seem to draw strength from them,
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0:12 - 0:14and I've heard the popular wisdom
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0:14 - 0:16that that has to do with finding meaning.
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0:16 - 0:18And for a long time,
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0:18 - 0:21I thought the meaning was out there,
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0:21 - 0:24some great truth waiting to be found.
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0:24 - 0:26But over time, I've come to feel
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0:26 - 0:28that the truth is irrelevant.
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0:28 - 0:31We call it finding meaning,
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0:31 - 0:35but we might better call it forging meaning.
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0:35 - 0:37My last book was about how families
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0:37 - 0:40manage to deal with various kinds of challenging
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0:40 - 0:42or unusual offspring,
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0:42 - 0:44and one of the mothers I interviewed,
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0:44 - 0:47who had two children with
multiple severe disabilities, -
0:47 - 0:50said to me, "People always give us
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0:50 - 0:52these little sayings like,
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0:52 - 0:55'God doesn't give you any
more than you can handle,' -
0:55 - 0:57but children like ours
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0:57 - 1:01are not preordained as a gift.
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1:01 - 1:06They're a gift because that's what we have chosen."
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1:06 - 1:11We make those choices all our lives.
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1:11 - 1:13When I was in second grade,
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1:13 - 1:16Bobby Finkel had a birthday party
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1:16 - 1:20and invited everyone in our class but me.
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1:20 - 1:23My mother assumed there
had been some sort of error, -
1:23 - 1:24and she called Mrs. Finkel,
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1:24 - 1:27who said that Bobby didn't like me
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1:27 - 1:30and didn't want me at his party.
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1:30 - 1:33And that day, my mom took me to the zoo
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1:33 - 1:36and out for a hot fudge sundae.
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1:36 - 1:38When I was in seventh grade,
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1:38 - 1:40one of the kids on my school bus
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1:40 - 1:42nicknamed me "Percy"
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1:42 - 1:45as a shorthand for my demeanor,
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1:45 - 1:48and sometimes, he and his cohort
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1:48 - 1:50would chant that provocation
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1:50 - 1:52the entire school bus ride,
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1:52 - 1:5645 minutes up, 45 minutes back,
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1:56 - 2:00"Percy! Percy! Percy! Percy!"
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2:00 - 2:02When I was in eighth grade,
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2:02 - 2:05our science teacher told us
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2:05 - 2:06that all male homosexuals
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2:06 - 2:09develop fecal incontinence
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2:09 - 2:13because of the trauma to their anal sphincter.
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2:13 - 2:15And I graduated high school
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2:15 - 2:18without ever going to the cafeteria,
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2:18 - 2:19where I would have sat with the girls
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2:19 - 2:22and been laughed at for doing so,
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2:22 - 2:23or sat with the boys
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2:23 - 2:25and been laughed at for being a boy
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2:25 - 2:28who should be sitting with the girls.
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2:28 - 2:31I survived that childhood through a mix
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2:31 - 2:33of avoidance and endurance.
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2:33 - 2:35What I didn't know then,
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2:35 - 2:37and do know now,
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2:37 - 2:39is that avoidance and endurance
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2:39 - 2:44can be the entryway to forging meaning.
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2:44 - 2:46After you've forged meaning,
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2:46 - 2:48you need to incorporate that meaning
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2:48 - 2:51into a new identity.
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2:51 - 2:54You need to take the traumas and make them part
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2:54 - 2:56of who you've come to be,
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2:56 - 2:59and you need to fold the worst events of your life
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2:59 - 3:01into a narrative of triumph,
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3:01 - 3:03evincing a better self
-
3:03 - 3:06in response to things that hurt.
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3:06 - 3:08One of the other mothers I interviewed
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3:08 - 3:10when I was working on my book
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3:10 - 3:13had been raped as an adolescent,
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3:13 - 3:16and had a child following that rape,
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3:16 - 3:19which had thrown away her career plans
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3:19 - 3:23and damaged all of her emotional relationships.
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3:23 - 3:26But when I met her, she was 50,
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3:26 - 3:27and I said to her,
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3:27 - 3:30"Do you often think about the man who raped you?"
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3:30 - 3:34And she said, "I used to think about him with anger,
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3:34 - 3:37but now only with pity."
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3:37 - 3:39And I thought she meant pity because he was
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3:39 - 3:43so unevolved as to have done this terrible thing.
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3:43 - 3:44And I said, "Pity?"
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3:44 - 3:46And she said, "Yes,
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3:46 - 3:48because he has a beautiful daughter
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3:48 - 3:51and two beautiful grandchildren
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3:51 - 3:54and he doesn't know that, and I do.
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3:54 - 4:00So as it turns out, I'm the lucky one."
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4:00 - 4:04Some of our struggles are things we're born to:
-
4:04 - 4:09our gender, our sexuality, our race, our disability.
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4:09 - 4:11And some are things that happen to us:
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4:11 - 4:15being a political prisoner, being a rape victim,
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4:15 - 4:17being a Katrina survivor.
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4:17 - 4:21Identity involves entering a community
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4:21 - 4:23to draw strength from that community,
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4:23 - 4:25and to give strength there too.
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4:25 - 4:30It involves substituting "and" for "but" --
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4:30 - 4:34not "I am here but I have cancer,"
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4:34 - 4:40but rather, "I have cancer and I am here."
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4:40 - 4:41When we're ashamed,
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4:41 - 4:43we can't tell our stories,
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4:43 - 4:48and stories are the foundation of identity.
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4:48 - 4:52Forge meaning, build identity,
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4:52 - 4:56forge meaning and build identity.
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4:56 - 4:58That became my mantra.
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4:58 - 5:02Forging meaning is about changing yourself.
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5:02 - 5:05Building identity is about changing the world.
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5:05 - 5:08All of us with stigmatized identities
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5:08 - 5:10face this question daily:
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5:10 - 5:12how much to accommodate society
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5:12 - 5:14by constraining ourselves,
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5:14 - 5:17and how much to break the limits
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5:17 - 5:20of what constitutes a valid life?
-
5:20 - 5:23Forging meaning and building identity
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5:23 - 5:26does not make what was wrong right.
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5:26 - 5:31It only makes what was wrong precious.
-
5:31 - 5:33In January of this year,
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5:33 - 5:37I went to Myanmar to interview political prisoners,
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5:37 - 5:40and I was surprised to find them less bitter
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5:40 - 5:42than I'd anticipated.
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5:42 - 5:44Most of them had knowingly committed
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5:44 - 5:46the offenses that landed them in prison,
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5:46 - 5:49and they had walked in with their heads held high,
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5:49 - 5:52and they walked out with their heads
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5:52 - 5:56still held high, many years later.
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5:56 - 5:59Dr. Ma Thida, a leading human rights activist
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5:59 - 6:01who had nearly died in prison
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6:01 - 6:03and had spent many years in solitary confinement,
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6:03 - 6:07told me she was grateful to her jailers
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6:07 - 6:10for the time she had had to think,
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6:10 - 6:12for the wisdom she had gained,
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6:12 - 6:16for the chance to hone her meditation skills.
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6:16 - 6:17She had sought meaning
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6:17 - 6:21and made her travail into a crucial identity.
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6:21 - 6:23But if the people I met
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6:23 - 6:25were less bitter than I'd anticipated
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6:25 - 6:27about being in prison,
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6:27 - 6:30they were also less thrilled than I'd expected
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6:30 - 6:32about the reform process going on
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6:32 - 6:33in their country.
-
6:33 - 6:35Ma Thida said,
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6:35 - 6:36"We Burmese are noted
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6:36 - 6:40for our tremendous grace under pressure,
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6:40 - 6:44but we also have grievance under glamour,"
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6:44 - 6:47she said, "and the fact that there have been
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6:47 - 6:48these shifts and changes
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6:48 - 6:50doesn't erase the continuing problems
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6:50 - 6:52in our society
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6:52 - 6:54that we learned to see so well
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6:54 - 6:56while we were in prison."
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6:56 - 6:58And I understood her to be saying
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6:58 - 7:02that concessions confer only a little humanity,
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7:02 - 7:04where full humanity is due,
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7:04 - 7:06that crumbs are not the same
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7:06 - 7:08as a place at the table,
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7:08 - 7:11which is to say you can forge meaning
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7:11 - 7:17and build identity and still be mad as hell.
-
7:17 - 7:19I've never been raped,
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7:19 - 7:22and I've never been in anything
remotely approaching -
7:22 - 7:24a Burmese prison,
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7:24 - 7:26but as a gay American,
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7:26 - 7:30I've experienced prejudice and even hatred,
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7:30 - 7:34and I've forged meaning and I've built identity,
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7:34 - 7:37which is a move I learned from people
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7:37 - 7:39who had experienced far worse privation
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7:39 - 7:42than I've ever known.
-
7:42 - 7:43In my own adolescence,
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7:43 - 7:47I went to extreme lengths to try to be straight.
-
7:47 - 7:49I enrolled myself in something called
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7:49 - 7:51sexual surrogacy therapy,
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7:51 - 7:55in which people I was encouraged to call doctors
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7:55 - 7:59prescribed what I was encouraged to call exercises
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7:59 - 8:02with women I was encouraged to call surrogates,
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8:02 - 8:05who were not exactly prostitutes
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8:05 - 8:08but who were also not exactly anything else.
-
8:08 - 8:12(Laughter)
-
8:12 - 8:14My particular favorite
-
8:14 - 8:16was a blonde woman from the Deep South
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8:16 - 8:18who eventually admitted to me
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8:18 - 8:21that she was really a necrophiliac
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8:21 - 8:23and had taken this job after she got in trouble
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8:23 - 8:25down at the morgue.
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8:25 - 8:29(Laughter)
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8:31 - 8:34These experiences eventually allowed me to have
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8:34 - 8:37some happy physical relationships with women,
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8:37 - 8:39for which I'm grateful,
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8:39 - 8:41but I was at war with myself,
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8:41 - 8:46and I dug terrible wounds into my own psyche.
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8:46 - 8:49We don't seek the painful experiences
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8:49 - 8:52that hew our identities,
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8:52 - 8:54but we seek our identities
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8:54 - 8:57in the wake of painful experiences.
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8:57 - 9:00We cannot bear a pointless torment,
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9:00 - 9:03but we can endure great pain
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9:03 - 9:06if we believe that it's purposeful.
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9:06 - 9:08Ease makes less of an impression on us
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9:08 - 9:10than struggle.
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9:10 - 9:12We could have been ourselves without our delights,
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9:12 - 9:14but not without the misfortunes
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9:14 - 9:17that drive our search for meaning.
-
9:17 - 9:21"Therefore, I take pleasure in infirmities,"
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9:21 - 9:23St. Paul wrote in Second Corinthians,
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9:23 - 9:28"for when I am weak, then I am strong."
-
9:28 - 9:31In 1988, I went to Moscow
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9:31 - 9:34to interview artists of the Soviet underground,
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9:34 - 9:36and I expected their work to be
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9:36 - 9:38dissident and political.
-
9:38 - 9:41But the radicalism in their work actually lay
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9:41 - 9:44in reinserting humanity into a society
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9:44 - 9:46that was annihilating humanity itself,
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9:46 - 9:49as, in some senses, Russian society
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9:49 - 9:51is now doing again.
-
9:51 - 9:54One of the artists I met said to me,
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9:54 - 9:58"We were in training to be not artists but angels."
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9:58 - 10:01In 1991, I went back to see the artists
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10:01 - 10:03I'd been writing about,
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10:03 - 10:05and I was with them during the putsch
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10:05 - 10:07that ended the Soviet Union,
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10:07 - 10:09and they were among the chief organizers
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10:09 - 10:12of the resistance to that putsch.
-
10:12 - 10:15And on the third day of the putsch,
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10:15 - 10:18one of them suggested we walk up to Smolenskaya.
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10:18 - 10:20And we went there,
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10:20 - 10:23and we arranged ourselves in
front of one of the barricades, -
10:23 - 10:25and a little while later,
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10:25 - 10:27a column of tanks rolled up,
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10:27 - 10:29and the soldier on the front tank said,
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10:29 - 10:31"We have unconditional orders
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10:31 - 10:33to destroy this barricade.
-
10:33 - 10:34If you get out of the way,
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10:34 - 10:36we don't need to hurt you,
-
10:36 - 10:38but if you won't move, we'll have no choice
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10:38 - 10:40but to run you down."
-
10:40 - 10:41And the artists I was with said,
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10:41 - 10:43"Give us just a minute.
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10:43 - 10:47Give us just a minute to tell you why we're here."
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10:47 - 10:49And the soldier folded his arms,
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10:49 - 10:54and the artist launched into a
Jeffersonian panegyric to democracy -
10:54 - 10:56such as those of us who live
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10:56 - 10:58in a Jeffersonian democracy
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10:58 - 11:01would be hard-pressed to present.
-
11:01 - 11:03And they went on and on,
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11:03 - 11:05and the soldier watched,
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11:05 - 11:06and then he sat there for a full minute
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11:06 - 11:08after they were finished
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11:08 - 11:11and looked at us so bedraggled in the rain,
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11:11 - 11:14and said, "What you have said is true,
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11:14 - 11:18and we must bow to the will of the people.
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11:18 - 11:20If you'll clear enough space for us to turn around,
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11:20 - 11:23we'll go back the way we came."
-
11:23 - 11:25And that's what they did.
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11:25 - 11:27Sometimes, forging meaning
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11:27 - 11:30can give you the vocabulary you need
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11:30 - 11:33to fight for your ultimate freedom.
-
11:33 - 11:36Russia awakened me to the lemonade notion
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11:36 - 11:39that oppression breeds the power to oppose it,
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11:39 - 11:42and I gradually understood that as the cornerstone
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11:42 - 11:44of identity.
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11:44 - 11:48It took identity to rescue me from sadness.
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11:48 - 11:51The gay rights movement posits a world
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11:51 - 11:53in which my aberrances are a victory.
-
11:53 - 11:57Identity politics always works on two fronts:
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11:57 - 12:00to give pride to people who have a given condition
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12:00 - 12:02or characteristic,
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12:02 - 12:03and to cause the outside world
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12:03 - 12:07to treat such people more gently and more kindly.
-
12:07 - 12:10Those are two totally separate enterprises,
-
12:10 - 12:12but progress in each sphere
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12:12 - 12:14reverberates in the other.
-
12:14 - 12:18Identity politics can be narcissistic.
-
12:18 - 12:22People extol a difference only because it's theirs.
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12:22 - 12:24People narrow the world and function
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12:24 - 12:27in discrete groups without empathy for one another.
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12:27 - 12:29But properly understood
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12:29 - 12:31and wisely practiced,
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12:31 - 12:33identity politics should expand
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12:33 - 12:36our idea of what it is to be human.
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12:36 - 12:38Identity itself
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12:38 - 12:40should be not a smug label
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12:40 - 12:42or a gold medal
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12:42 - 12:45but a revolution.
-
12:45 - 12:48I would have had an easier life if I were straight,
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12:48 - 12:50but I would not be me,
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12:50 - 12:53and I now like being myself better
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12:53 - 12:55than the idea of being someone else,
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12:55 - 12:56someone who, to be honest,
-
12:56 - 12:59I have neither the option of being
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12:59 - 13:01nor the ability fully to imagine.
-
13:01 - 13:03But if you banish the dragons,
-
13:03 - 13:06you banish the heroes,
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13:06 - 13:07and we become attached
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13:07 - 13:10to the heroic strain in our own lives.
-
13:10 - 13:12I've sometimes wondered
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13:12 - 13:14whether I could have ceased
to hate that part of myself -
13:14 - 13:17without gay pride's technicolor fiesta,
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13:17 - 13:22of which this speech is one manifestation.
-
13:22 - 13:24I used to think I would know myself to be mature
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13:24 - 13:27when I could simply be gay without emphasis,
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13:27 - 13:31but the self-loathing of that period left a void,
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13:31 - 13:35and celebration needs to fill and overflow it,
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13:35 - 13:39and even if I repay my private debt of melancholy,
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13:39 - 13:41there's still an outer world of homophobia
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13:41 - 13:44that it will take decades to address.
-
13:44 - 13:48Someday, being gay will be a simple fact,
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13:48 - 13:50free of party hats and blame,
-
13:50 - 13:52but not yet.
-
13:52 - 13:55A friend of mine who thought gay pride
-
13:55 - 13:57was getting very carried away with itself,
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13:57 - 13:58once suggested that we organize
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13:58 - 14:00Gay Humility Week.
-
14:00 - 14:05(Laughter) (Applause)
-
14:07 - 14:09It's a great idea,
-
14:09 - 14:11but its time has not yet come.
-
14:11 - 14:13(Laughter)
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14:13 - 14:15And neutrality, which seems to lie
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14:15 - 14:18halfway between despair and celebration,
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14:18 - 14:21is actually the endgame.
-
14:21 - 14:24In 29 states in the U.S.,
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14:24 - 14:27I could legally be fired or denied housing
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14:27 - 14:29for being gay.
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14:29 - 14:32In Russia, the anti-propaganda law
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14:32 - 14:35has led to people being beaten in the streets.
-
14:35 - 14:37Twenty-seven African countries
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14:37 - 14:40have passed laws against sodomy,
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14:40 - 14:42and in Nigeria, gay people can legally
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14:42 - 14:44be stoned to death,
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14:44 - 14:46and lynchings have become common.
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14:46 - 14:49In Saudi Arabia recently, two men
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14:49 - 14:51who had been caught in carnal acts,
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14:51 - 14:56were sentenced to 7,000 lashes each,
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14:56 - 14:59and are now permanently disabled as a result.
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14:59 - 15:01So who can forge meaning
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15:01 - 15:04and build identity?
-
15:04 - 15:07Gay rights are not primarily marriage rights,
-
15:07 - 15:10and for the millions who live in unaccepting places
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15:10 - 15:12with no resources,
-
15:12 - 15:15dignity remains elusive.
-
15:15 - 15:18I am lucky to have forged meaning
-
15:18 - 15:20and built identity,
-
15:20 - 15:22but that's still a rare privilege,
-
15:22 - 15:25and gay people deserve more collectively
-
15:25 - 15:29than the crumbs of justice.
-
15:29 - 15:32And yet, every step forward
-
15:32 - 15:34is so sweet.
-
15:34 - 15:37In 2007, six years after we met,
-
15:37 - 15:39my partner and I decided
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15:39 - 15:41to get married.
-
15:41 - 15:43Meeting John had been the discovery
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15:43 - 15:45of great happiness
-
15:45 - 15:48and also the elimination of great unhappiness,
-
15:48 - 15:51and sometimes, I was so occupied
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15:51 - 15:53with the disappearance of all that pain
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15:53 - 15:56that I forgot about the joy,
-
15:56 - 15:59which was at first the less
remarkable part of it to me. -
15:59 - 16:02Marrying was a way to declare our love
-
16:02 - 16:06as more a presence than an absence.
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16:06 - 16:09Marriage soon led us to children,
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16:09 - 16:10and that meant new meanings
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16:10 - 16:14and new identities, ours and theirs.
-
16:14 - 16:17I want my children to be happy,
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16:17 - 16:21and I love them most achingly when they are sad.
-
16:21 - 16:24As a gay father, I can teach them
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16:24 - 16:27to own what is wrong in their lives,
-
16:27 - 16:28but I believe that if I succeed
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16:28 - 16:31in sheltering them from adversity,
-
16:31 - 16:34I will have failed as a parent.
-
16:34 - 16:37A Buddhist scholar I know once explained to me
-
16:37 - 16:39that Westerners mistakenly think
-
16:39 - 16:41that nirvana is what arrives
-
16:41 - 16:44when all your woe is behind you
-
16:44 - 16:47and you have only bliss to look forward to.
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16:47 - 16:49But he said that would not be nirvana,
-
16:49 - 16:51because your bliss in the present
-
16:51 - 16:55would always be shadowed by the joy from the past.
-
16:55 - 16:57Nirvana, he said, is what you arrive at
-
16:57 - 17:00when you have only bliss to look forward to
-
17:00 - 17:02and find in what looked like sorrows
-
17:02 - 17:05the seedlings of your joy.
-
17:05 - 17:07And I sometimes wonder
-
17:07 - 17:09whether I could have found such fulfillment
-
17:09 - 17:11in marriage and children
-
17:11 - 17:13if they'd come more readily,
-
17:13 - 17:17if I'd been straight in my youth or were young now,
-
17:17 - 17:20in either of which cases this might be easier.
-
17:20 - 17:22Perhaps I could.
-
17:22 - 17:24Perhaps all the complex imagining I've done
-
17:24 - 17:26could have been applied to other topics.
-
17:26 - 17:28But if seeking meaning
-
17:28 - 17:30matters more than finding meaning,
-
17:30 - 17:33the question is not whether I'd be happier
-
17:33 - 17:35for having been bullied,
-
17:35 - 17:36but whether assigning meaning
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17:36 - 17:38to those experiences
-
17:38 - 17:40has made me a better father.
-
17:40 - 17:44I tend to find the ecstasy hidden in ordinary joys,
-
17:44 - 17:46because I did not expect those joys
-
17:46 - 17:49to be ordinary to me.
-
17:49 - 17:51I know many heterosexuals who have
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17:51 - 17:53equally happy marriages and families,
-
17:53 - 17:56but gay marriage is so breathtakingly fresh,
-
17:56 - 17:59and gay families so exhilaratingly new,
-
17:59 - 18:03and I found meaning in that surprise.
-
18:03 - 18:07In October, it was my 50th birthday,
-
18:07 - 18:10and my family organized a party for me,
-
18:10 - 18:12and in the middle of it,
-
18:12 - 18:13my son said to my husband
-
18:13 - 18:15that he wanted to make a speech,
-
18:15 - 18:16and John said,
-
18:16 - 18:20"George, you can't make a speech. You're four."
-
18:20 - 18:22(Laughter)
-
18:22 - 18:24"Only Grandpa and Uncle David and I
-
18:24 - 18:26are going to make speeches tonight."
-
18:26 - 18:29But George insisted and insisted,
-
18:29 - 18:32and finally, John took him up to the microphone,
-
18:32 - 18:35and George said very loudly,
-
18:35 - 18:38"Ladies and gentlemen,
-
18:38 - 18:40may I have your attention please."
-
18:40 - 18:43And everyone turned around, startled.
-
18:43 - 18:45And George said,
-
18:45 - 18:47"I'm glad it's Daddy's birthday.
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18:47 - 18:51I'm glad we all get cake.
-
18:51 - 18:54And daddy, if you were little,
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18:54 - 18:57I'd be your friend."
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18:58 - 19:01And I thought — Thank you.
-
19:01 - 19:03I thought that I was indebted
-
19:03 - 19:05even to Bobby Finkel,
-
19:05 - 19:07because all those earlier experiences
-
19:07 - 19:10were what had propelled me to this moment,
-
19:10 - 19:12and I was finally unconditionally grateful
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19:12 - 19:16for a life I'd once have done anything to change.
-
19:16 - 19:18The gay activist Harvey Milk
-
19:18 - 19:21was once asked by a younger gay man
-
19:21 - 19:23what he could do to help the movement,
-
19:23 - 19:24and Harvey Milk said,
-
19:24 - 19:27"Go out and tell someone."
-
19:27 - 19:29There's always somebody who wants to confiscate
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19:29 - 19:31our humanity,
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19:31 - 19:34and there are always stories that restore it.
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19:34 - 19:35If we live out loud,
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19:35 - 19:37we can trounce the hatred
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19:37 - 19:40and expand everyone's lives.
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19:40 - 19:44Forge meaning. Build identity.
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19:44 - 19:46Forge meaning.
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19:46 - 19:49Build identity.
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19:49 - 19:51And then invite the world
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19:51 - 19:52to share your joy.
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19:52 - 19:56Thank you.
-
19:56 - 19:57(Applause)
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19:57 - 20:00Thank you. (Applause)
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20:00 - 20:04Thank you. (Applause)
-
20:04 - 20:08Thank you. (Applause)
- Title:
- How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are
- Speaker:
- Andrew Solomon
- Description:
-
Writer Andrew Solomon has spent his career telling stories of the hardships of others. Now he turns inward, bringing us into a childhood of struggle, while also spinning tales of the courageous people he's met in the years since. In a moving, heartfelt and at times downright funny talk, Solomon gives a powerful call to action to forge meaning from our biggest struggles.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TEDTalks
- Duration:
- 20:27
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Krystian Aparta commented on English subtitles for How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are | |
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Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are | |
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Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are | |
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Morton Bast edited English subtitles for How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are | |
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Morton Bast edited English subtitles for How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are | |
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Morton Bast approved English subtitles for How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are | |
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Morton Bast edited English subtitles for How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are | |
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Morton Bast edited English subtitles for How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are |
Krystian Aparta
The English transcript was updated on 1/4/2016.