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Childless by choice - a powerful act of fulfillment | Vicki McLeod | TEDxGastownWomen

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    I remember the conversation well.
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    I was 42, and I was sitting
    at the dining room table
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    with my new husband,
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    and I had finally decided
    not to have children.
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    "Well, of course," you might say.
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    The biological clock had
    finally wound down,
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    stopped ticking, so to speak,
    so of course, naturally.
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    But that would be an oversimplification
    of a much more complicated process.
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    And it's a process I think
    some of you might be familiar with.
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    We live in a time
    when science and technology
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    allow us to expand far beyond
    our biological limitations.
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    We have options like in vitro,
    fertility drugs, egg and embryo donation,
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    egg freezing, not to mention
    surrogacy or adoption.
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    It's a world of choices.
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    And in that world, this world,
    I chose to remain childless.
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    But before I tell you more
    about my own story,
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    let me give you a little context.
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    I'm in very good company.
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    Never before have more women remained
    childless to the end of their fertility,
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    or waited longer before
    having their first child.
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    Nearly half of us,
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    nearly 50% of North American women
    are making this choice.
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    Yet we are still perceived
    as the exception rather than the norm.
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    We're choosing to remain childless.
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    So let me start here
    with this term, "childless."
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    I have to admit I have a problem with it
    even though I'm using it in this talk.
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    It implies that there's something missing.
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    It implies that there's somehow a deficit
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    in those of us that choose
    not to have children.
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    And this is interesting
    because we're all born childless.
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    And it's not like being born without
    a limb or with a missing vital organ.
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    But the term implies
    that there's something missing.
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    A "lessness" that must somehow
    be addressed or fulfilled.
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    And even more interesting,
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    this is a term that is applied
    almost exclusively to women.
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    We don't hear a lot
    about men being childless.
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    In fact, my husband tells me he is
    rarely if ever asked if he has children.
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    I am asked all the time,
    and usually it goes something like this:
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    "Do you have children?" "No." "Oh."
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    (Laughter)
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    As though there's something missing.
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    As though I'm to be
    pitied for this choice.
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    As though we assume that it is
    the biological destiny of women,
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    all women, to bear children.
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    And I'm going to propose
    that our destinies are our own business.
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    A powerful choice we make
    to be fulfilled on our own terms.
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    And those terms might
    include children and they might not.
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    So don't get me wrong here.
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    I love children, in fact
    I am a world-class cool auntie.
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    (Laughter)
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    But loving children
    doesn't mean bearing them.
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    In 1976, when I had
    my first serious boyfriend,
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    and you all know what I mean by serious,
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    (Laughter)
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    everyone was afraid I would get pregnant.
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    And that concern went on
    through my late teens and my 20s
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    until my 30s when suddenly everyone
    was afraid I wouldn't get pregnant.
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    (Laughter)
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    Right?
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    My womb was so interesting to people.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, I didn't get pregnant.
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    And over those years
    I went back and forth,
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    exploring options, undecided.
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    Until that day at the dining
    room table when I knew
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    that what I wanted, more than children,
    was a fulfilled life, a life of meaning.
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    In coaching, we say that having
    a fulfilled life is a radical act.
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    And choosing to have a fulfilled life
    in an unconventional way,
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    well, that's just even more radical.
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    But it's a deeply personal choice.
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    So I'm going to take you back in time,
    further back than the 1970s,
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    and introduce you to a famous woman
    who might be familiar to you,
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    who made a personal choice
    in a radical act for her time:
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    Queen Elizabeth the First, a virgin queen,
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    which we know, based
    on historical fact, is not true.
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    (Laughter)
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    She was a queen.
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    (Laughter)
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    Which brings us to sex.
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    Particularly if you were a married woman,
    choosing not to have children,
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    it implies that you might
    just be having sex for pleasure.
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    Another radical notion.
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    (Laughter)
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    But, meanwhile, back in the 1500s,
    Queen Elizabeth is the reigning monarch,
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    the Virgin Queen, excellent PR
    for a childless woman of her time,
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    and despite the fact
    that she's the monarch
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    and she herself is
    an unmarried, childless woman,
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    women's choices are severely limited.
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    Women cannot go to school.
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    They can be educated at home
    but they can't go to school.
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    Nor can they enter professions
    such as politics, law, or medicine.
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    Women can go into marriage, motherhood,
    domestic service, or the sex trade.
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    Or, if you wanted a life of the mind,
    free of domesticity,
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    you could become a nun.
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    Basically, those were your choices.
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    So Elizabeth wasn't stupid,
    she understood the culture she was in,
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    and she chose powerfully her own destiny.
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    Her reign is known as the Golden Age.
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    It brought us new frontiers
    in art, music, and literature,
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    and a renaissance in thinking
    that influences us to this day.
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    But no heirs.
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    Still, a legacy.
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    [#untrending]
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    Elizabeth chose to untrend.
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    She chose personal and professional
    satisfaction over childbearing,
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    and it was a radical act.
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    And I'm here to say it still is.
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    We're still stigmatized
    for making this choice
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    even though we live
    in a very different time.
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    Oops. Sorry.
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    There we are.
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    We are doctors, we are teachers,
    we are lawyers.
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    We are archbishops, we are judges.
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    We have the kind of choice
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    that an Elizabethan woman
    couldn't even have dreamed of.
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    We are the rulers of our own destinies.
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    We have the right, the political,
    economic, and social rights and freedoms
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    that our feminist grandmothers, aunties,
    godmothers, and mothers fought for.
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    So given that, may we also
    not consider another choice?
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    May we choose not to have children
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    and consider instead
    the notion of "otherhood."
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    Now, wish I could lay claim
    to this term, I can't.
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    It comes from Melanie Notkin's 2014
    book of the same title, but I love it.
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    So, what is otherhood?
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    Well, I'm entering the third act
    of my particular story.
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    I'm nearly 60 years old,
    and the plot is getting tricky.
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    I'm asking myself questions like
    "Has all this mattered?"
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    And in my recent book, Untrending,
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    I ask about things
    like legacy and leave-behind.
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    These are big questions.
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    And there's a way that having children
    begins to answer these questions for us.
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    Having children is
    a fulfilling and creative act.
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    Motherhood gives our lives
    purpose, for sure.
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    But what about otherhood?
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    Otherhood is another place
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    where we find purpose, wholeness,
    meaning, and satisfaction,
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    simply by living our personal truth.
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    It's where we trust
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    that a life of creative purpose
    is not exclusive to procreation
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    and that our legacies
    are not just biological.
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    It includes loving,
    mentoring and nurturing
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    the other humans that cross our path.
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    Fighting for the rights
    of the world's children,
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    making poetry, art, or music, or forging
    a path in entrepreneurship or science,
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    or simply getting up every day
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    and living a life that is true
    to your own deep choosing.
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    Does this mean a life
    that is free of longing?
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    No.
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    Does this mean that I don't wonder
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    what my life would've been like
    if I'd had children?
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    Of course I do.
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    And I wonder about that
    the same way I wonder
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    what would my life would have been like
    if I'd become an archaeologist,
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    or moved to Paris in my 20s
    when the notion struck me,
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    or not married my first husband.
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    But our longings make us who we are.
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    Our longings make our lives richer.
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    Our longings lead us
    to new dreams and desires.
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    And living with longing,
    making peace with longing,
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    that is spiritual warriorship.
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    That is fulfillment.
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    That is powerful choice-making.
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    And there's also this:
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    trust.
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    Trust that what life serves you
    is a magnificent unfolding,
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    and that the spiritual warrior in you
    chose this path and put you on it
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    because it leads to your fulfillment
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    and the world's.
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    And finally, let me ask you, together,
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    can we give ourselves permission
    to live radical lives of fulfillment
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    and embrace a woman's right
    to choose her own destiny?
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause) (Cheers)
Title:
Childless by choice - a powerful act of fulfillment | Vicki McLeod | TEDxGastownWomen
Description:

Living a fulfilled life is a radical act. It is even more radical when you choose to live it in an unconventional way. In her talk Vicki explores the history, stigma, trends, and social impacts of choosing to be childless.

Vicki explores the notion of radical fulfillment as living life on your own terms, free of outside expectations, guided by creative desire, and leaving a legacy that goes beyond biology.

Vicki McLeod is an award-winning entrepreneur and the author of #UNTRENDING, A Field Guide to Social Media That Matters - How to Post, Tweet and Like Your Way to a More Meaningful Life. She is a newspaper columnist, podcaster, and blogger. She is the President of Main Street Communications Ltd, where for more than two decades she has worked with businesses, organizations, and governments to implement comprehensive communications and marketing strategies and sustain meaningful change. She also leads personal and professional development workshops and retreats and has held senior positions in the arts, and environmental and economic development sectors. A certified business and personal coach, consultant, and trainer, Vicki is an advocate for everyday happiness, mindfulness, and living a passionate and creatively engaged life.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
10:04

English subtitles

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