-
So a while ago, I tried an experiment.
-
For one year, I would say yes
to all the things that scared me.
-
Anything that made me nervous,
took me out of my comfort zone,
-
I forced myself to say yes to.
-
Did I want to speak in public?
-
No, but yes.
-
Did I want to be on live TV?
-
No, but yes.
-
Did I want to try acting?
-
No, no, no, but yes, yes, yes.
-
And a crazy thing happened:
-
the very act of doing
the thing that scared me
-
undid the fear,
-
made it not scary.
-
My fear of public speaking,
my social anxiety, poof, gone.
-
It's amazing, the power of one word.
-
"Yes" changed my life.
-
"Yes" changed me.
-
But there was one particular yes
-
that affected my life
in the most profound way,
-
in a way I never imagined,
-
and it started with a question
from my toddler.
-
I have these three amazing daughters,
Harper, Beckett, and Emerson,
-
and Emerson is a toddler who inexplicably
refers to everyone as "honey",
-
as though she's a Southern waitress.
-
(Laughter)
-
"Honey, I'm gonna need some milk
for my sippy cup."
-
(Laughter)
-
The Southern waitress asked me
to play with her one evening
-
when I was on my way somewhere,
and I said, "Yes."
-
And that yes was the beginning
of a new way of life for my family.
-
I made a vow that from now on,
-
every time one of my children
asks me to play,
-
no matter what I'm doing
or where I'm going,
-
I say yes, every single time.
-
Almost. I'm not perfect at it,
but I try hard to practice it.
-
And it's had a magical effect on me,
-
on my children, on our family.
-
But it's also had a stunning side effect,
-
and it wasn't until recently
that I fully understood it,
-
that I understood that saying yes
to playing with my children
-
likely saved my career.
-
See, I have what most people
would call a dream job.
-
I'm a writer. I imagine.
I make stuff up for a living.
-
Dream job.
-
No.
-
I'm a titan.
-
Dream job.
-
I create television.
I executive produce television.
-
I make television,
a great deal of television.
-
In one way or another, this TV season,
-
I'm responsible for bringing about
70 hours of programming to the world.
-
Four television programs,
70 hours of TV --
-
(Applause)
-
Three shows in production
at a time, sometimes four.
-
Each show creates hundreds of jobs
that didn't exist before.
-
The budget for one episode
of network television
-
can be anywhere
from three to six million dollars.
-
Let's just say five.
-
A new episode made every nine days
times four shows,
-
so every nine days that's
20 million dollars worth of television,
-
four television programs, 70 hours of TV,
-
three shows in production at a time,
sometimes four,
-
16 episodes going on at all times:
-
24 episodes of "Grey's",
21 episodes of "Scandal",
-
15 episodes of
"How To Get Away With Murder",
-
10 episodes of "The Catch",
that's 70 hours of TV,
-
that's 350 million dollars for a season.
-
In America, my television shows
-
are back to back to back
on Thursday night.
-
Around the world, my shows air
in 256 territories in 67 languages
-
for an audience of 30 million people.
-
My brain is global,
-
and 45 hours of that 70 hours of TV
are shows I personally created
-
and not just produced,
so on top of everything else,
-
I need to find time,
real quiet, creative time,
-
to gather my fans around the campfire
-
and tell my stories.
-
Four television programs, 70 hours of TV,
-
three shows in production at a time,
-
sometimes four, 350 million dollars,
campfires burning all over the world.
-
You know who else is doing that?
-
Nobody, so like I said, I'm a titan.
-
Dream job.
-
(Applause)
-
Now, I don't tell you this to impress you.
-
I tell you this because I know what you
think of when you hear the word "writer."
-
I tell you this so that all of you
out there who work so hard,
-
whether you run a company
or a country or a classroom
-
or a store or a home,
-
take me seriously
when I talk about working,
-
so you'll get that I don't
peck at a computer and imagine all day,
-
so you'll hear me when I say
-
that I understand that a dream job
is not about dreaming.
-
It's all job, all work, all reality,
all blood, all sweat, no tears.
-
I work a lot, very hard, and I love it.
-
When I'm hard at work,
when I'm deep in it,
-
there is no other feeling.
-
For me my work is at all times
building a nation out of thin air.
-
It is manning the troops.
It is painting a canvas.
-
It is hitting every high note.
It is running a marathon.
-
It is being Beyonce.
-
And it is all of those things
at the same time.
-
I love working.
-
It is creative and mechanical
and exhausting and exhilarating
-
and hilarious and disturbing
and clinical and maternal
-
and cruel and judicious,
-
and what makes it all so good is the hum.
-
There is some kind of shift inside me
when the work gets good.
-
A hum begins in my brain,
-
and it grows and it grows
and that hum sounds like the open road,
-
and I could drive it forever.
-
And a lot of people,
when I try to explain the hum,
-
they assume that I'm talking
about the writing,
-
that my writing brings me joy.
-
And don't get me wrong, it does.
-
But the hum,
-
it wasn't until I started
making television
-
that I started working, working and making
-
and building and creating
and collaborating,
-
that I discovered this thing,
this buzz, this rush, this hum.
-
The hum is more than writing.
-
The hum is action and activity.
The hum is a drug.
-
The hum is music.
The hum is light and air.
-
The hum is God's whisper right in my ear.
-
And when you have a hum like that,
-
you can't help but strive for greatness.
-
That feeling, you can't help
but strive for greatness at any cost.
-
That's called the hum.
-
Or maybe it's called being a workaholic.
-
(Laughter)
-
Maybe it's called genius.
-
Maybe it's called ego.
-
Maybe it's just fear of failure.
-
I don't know.
-
I just know that
I'm not built for failure,
-
and I just know that I love the hum.
-
I just know that I want
to tell you I'm a titan,
-
and I know that
I don't want to question it.
-
But here's the thing:
-
the more successful I become,
-
the more shows, the more episodes,
the more barriers broken,
-
the more work there is to do,
-
the more balls in the air,
-
the more eyes on me,
the more history stares,
-
the more expectations there are.
-
The more I work to be successful,
-
the more I need to work.
-
And what did I say about work?
-
I love working, right?
-
The nation I'm building,
the marathon I'm running,
-
the troops, the canvas,
the high note, the hum,
-
the hum, the hum.
-
I like that hum. I love that hum.
-
I need that hum. I am that hum.
-
Am I nothing but that hum?
-
And then the hum stopped.
-
Overworked, overused,
-
overdone, burned out.
-
The hum stopped.
-
Now, my three daughters
are used to the truth
-
that their mother
is a single working titan.
-
Harper tells people,
-
"My mom won't be there
but you can text my nanny."
-
And Emerson says, "Honey,
I'm wanting to go to ShondaLand."
-
They're children of a titan.
-
They're baby titans.
-
They were 12, 3, and 1
when the hum stopped.
-
The hum of the engine died.
-
I stopped loving work.
I couldn't restart the engine.
-
The hum would not come back.
-
My hum was broken.
-
I was doing the same things
I always did, all the same titan work,
-
15-hour days, working
straight through the weekends,
-
no regrets, never surrender,
a titan never sleeps, a titan never quits,
-
full hearts, clear eyes, yada, whatever.
-
But there was no hum.
-
Inside me was silence.
-
Four television programs, 70 hours of TV,
three shows in production at a time,
-
sometimes four.
-
Four television programs, 70 hours of TV,
three shows in production at a time ...
-
I was the perfect titan.
-
I was a titan you could
take home to your mother.
-
All the colors were the same,
and I was no longer having any fun.
-
And it was my life.
-
It was all I did.
-
I was the hum, and the hum was me.
-
So what do you do when the thing you do,
-
the work you love,
starts to taste like dust?
-
Now, I know somebody's out there thinking,
-
"Cry me a river,
stupid writer titan lady."
-
(Laughter)
-
But you know, you do,
-
if you make, if you work,
if you love what you do,
-
being a teacher, being a banker,
being a mother, being a painter,
-
being Bill Gates,
-
if you simply love another person
and that gives you the hum,
-
if you know the hum,
-
if you know what the hum feels like,
if you have been to the hum,
-
when the hum stops, who are you?
-
What are you?
-
What am I?
-
Am I still a titan?
-
If the song of my heart ceases to play,
can I survive in the silence?
-
And then my southern waitress toddler
asks me a question.
-
I'm on my way out the door,
I'm late, and she says,
-
"Momma, wanna play?"
-
And I'm just about to say no,
when I realize two things.
-
One, I'm supposed
to say yes to everything,
-
and two, my Southern waitress
didn't call me "Honey."
-
She's not calling everyone
"Honey" anymore.
-
When did that happen?
-
I'm missing it, being a titan
and mourning my hum,
-
and here she is changing
right before my eyes.
-
And so she says, "Momma, wanna play?"
-
And I say, "Yes."
-
There's nothing special about it.
-
We play, and we're joined by her sisters,
-
and there's a lot of laughing,
-
and I give a dramatic reading
from the book "Everybody poops."
-
Nothing out of the ordinary.
-
(Laughter)
-
And yet, it is extraordinary,
-
because in my pain and my panic,
-
in the homelessness of my humlessness,
-
I have nothing to do but pay attention.
-
I focus.
-
I am still.
-
The nation I'm building,
the marathon I'm running,
-
the troops, the canvas,
the high note, does not exist.
-
All that exists are sticky fingers
-
and gooey kisses
and tiny voices and crayons
-
and that song about letting go
-
of whatever it is that frozen girl
needs to let go of.
-
(Laughter)
-
It's all peace and simplicity.
-
The air is so rare in this place for me
that I can barely breathe.
-
I can barely believe I'm breathing.
-
Play is the opposite of work.
-
And I am happy.
-
Something in me loosens.
-
A door in my brain swings open,
-
and a rush of energy comes.
-
And it's not instantaneous,
but it happens, it does happen.
-
I feel it.
-
A hum creeps back.
-
Not at full volume, barely there,
-
it's quiet, and I have to stay
very still to hear it, but it is there.
-
Not the hum, but a hum.
-
And now I feel like I know
a very magical secret.
-
Well, let's not get carried away.
-
It's just love. That's all it is.
-
No magic. No secret. It's just love.
-
It's just something we forgot.
-
The hum, the work hum,
the hum of the titan,
-
that's just a replacement.
-
If I have to ask you who I am,
-
if I have to tell you who I am,
-
if I describe myself in terms of shows
-
and hours of television
and how globally badass my brain is,
-
I have forgotten what the real hum is.
-
The hum is not power
and the hum is not work-specific.
-
The hum is joy-specific.
-
The real hum is love-specific.
-
The hum is the electricity
that comes from being excited by life.
-
The real hum is confidence and peace.
-
The real hum ignores the stare of history,
-
and the balls in the air,
and the expectation, and the pressure.
-
The real hum is singular and original.
-
The real hum is God's whisper in my ear,
-
but maybe God was whispering
the wrong words,
-
because which one of the gods
was telling me I was the titan?
-
It's just love.
-
We could all use a little more love,
-
a lot more love.
-
Any time my child asks me to play,
-
I will say yes.
-
I make it a firm rule for one reason,
-
to give myself permission,
-
to free me from all
of my workaholic guilt.
-
It's a law, so I don't have a choice,
-
and I don't have a choice,
-
not if I want to feel the hum.
-
I wish it were that easy,
-
but I'm not good at playing.
-
I don't like it.
-
I'm not interested in doing it
the way I'm interested in doing work.
-
The truth is incredibly humbling
and humiliating to face.
-
I don't like playing.
-
I work all the time
because I like working.
-
I like working more
than I like being at home.
-
Facing that fact
is incredibly difficult to handle,
-
because what kind of person
likes working more than being at home?
-
Well, me.
-
I mean, let's be honest,
I call myself a titan.
-
I've got issues.
-
(Laughter)
-
And one of those issues
isn't that I am too relaxed.
-
(Laughter)
-
We run around the yard,
up and back and up and back.
-
We have 30-second dance parties.
-
We sing show tunes. We play with balls.
-
I blow bubbles and they pop them.
-
And I feel stiff and delirious
and confused most of the time.
-
I itch for my cell phone always.
-
But it is OK.
-
My tiny humans show me how to live
and the hum of the universe fills me up.
-
I play and I play until I begin to wonder
-
why we ever stop playing
in the first place.
-
You can do it too,
-
say yes every time
your child asks you to play.
-
Are you thinking that maybe
I'm an idiot in diamond shoes?
-
You're right, but you can still do this.
-
You have time.
-
You know why? Because you're not Rihanna
and you're not a Muppet.
-
Your child does not think
you're that interesting.
-
(Laughter)
-
You only need 15 minutes.
-
My two- and four-year-old
only ever want to play with me
-
for about 15 minutes or so
-
before they think to themselves
they want to do something else.
-
It's an amazing 15 minutes,
but it's 15 minutes.
-
If I'm not a ladybug or a piece of candy,
I'm invisible after 15 minutes.
-
(Laughter)
-
And my 13-year-old, if I can get
a 13-year-old to talk to me for 15 minutes
-
I'm Parent of the Year.
-
(Laughter)
-
15 minutes is all you need.
-
I can totally pull off 15 minutes
of uninterrupted time on my worst day.
-
Uninterrupted is the key.
-
No cell phone, no laundry, no anything.
-
You have a busy life.
You have to get dinner on the table.
-
You have to force them to bathe.
But you can do 15 minutes.
-
My kids are my happy place,
they're my world,
-
but it doesn't have to be your kids,
-
the fuel that feeds your hum,
-
the place where life
feels more good than not good.
-
It's not about playing with your kids,
-
it's about joy.
-
It's about playing in general.
-
Give yourself the 15 minutes.
-
Find what makes you feel good.
-
Just figure it out and play in that arena.
-
I'm not perfect at it.
In fact, I fail as often as I succeed:
-
seeing friends, reading books,
staring into space.
-
"Wanna play?" starts to become shorthand
for indulging myself
-
in ways I'd given up on right around
the time I got my first TV show,
-
right around the time
I became a titan in training,
-
right around the time I started
competing with myself for ways unknown.
-
15 minutes? What could be wrong
with giving myself my full attention
-
for 15 minutes?
-
Turns out, nothing.
-
The very act of not working has made it
possible for the hum to return,
-
as if the hum's engine
could only refuel while I was away.
-
Work doesn't work without play.
-
It takes a little time,
but after a few months,
-
one day the floodgates open
-
and there's a rush, and I find myself
standing in my office
-
filled with an unfamiliar melody,
full on groove inside me,
-
and around me, and it sends me
spinning with ideas,
-
and the humming road is open,
and I can drive it and drive it,
-
and I love working again.
-
But now, I like that hum,
but I don't love that hum.
-
I don't need that hum.
-
I am not that hum. That hum is not me,
-
not anymore.
-
I am bubbles and sticky fingers
and dinners with friends.
-
I am that hum.
-
Life's hum.
-
Love's hum.
-
Work's hum is still a piece of me,
it is just no longer all of me,
-
and I am so grateful.
-
And I don't give a crap
about being a titan,
-
because I have never once seen a titan
play Red Rover, Red Rover.
-
I said yes to less work and more play,
and somehow I still run my world.
-
My brain is still global.
My campfires still burn.
-
The more I play, the happier I am,
and the happier my kids are.
-
The more I play,
the more I feel like a good mother.
-
The more I play,
the freer my mind becomes.
-
The more I play, the better I work.
-
The more I play, the more I feel the hum,
-
the nation I'm building,
the marathon I'm running,
-
the troops, the canvas,
the high note, the hum, the hum,
-
the other hum, the real hum,
-
life's hum.
-
The more I feel that hum,
-
the more this strange,
quivering, uncocooned,
-
awkward, brand new,
-
alive nontitan feels like me.
-
The more I feel that hum,
the more I know who I am.
-
I'm a writer, I make stuff up, I imagine.
-
That part of the job,
that's living the dream.
-
That's the dream of the job.
-
Because a dream job
should be a little bit dreamy.
-
I said yes to less work and more play.
-
Titans need not apply.
-
Wanna play?
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)