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My 12 pairs of legs

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    I was speaking to a group of about 300 kids,
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    ages six to eight, at a children's museum,
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    and I brought with me a bag full of legs,
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    similar to the kinds of things you see up here,
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    and had them laid out on a table for the kids.
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    And, from my experience, you know, kids are naturally curious
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    about what they don't know, or don't understand,
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    or is foreign to them.
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    They only learn to be frightened of those differences
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    when an adult influences them to behave that way,
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    and maybe censors that natural curiosity,
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    or you know, reins in the question-asking
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    in the hopes of them being polite little kids.
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    So I just pictured a first grade teacher out in the lobby
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    with these unruly kids, saying, "Now, whatever you do,
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    don't stare at her legs."
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    But, of course, that's the point.
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    That's why I was there, I wanted to invite them to look and explore.
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    So I made a deal with the adults
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    that the kids could come in without any adults for two minutes
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    on their own.
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    The doors open, the kids descend on this table of legs,
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    and they are poking and prodding, and they're wiggling toes,
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    and they're trying to put their full weight on the sprinting leg
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    to see what happens with that.
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    And I said, "Kids, really quickly --
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    I woke up this morning, I decided I wanted to be able to jump over a house --
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    nothing too big, two or three stories --
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    but, if you could think of any animal, any superhero, any cartoon character,
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    anything you can dream up right now,
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    what kind of legs would you build me?"
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    And immediately a voice shouted, "Kangaroo!"
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    "No, no, no! Should be a frog!"
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    "No. It should be Go Go Gadget!"
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    "No, no, no! It should be the Incredibles."
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    And other things that I don't -- aren't familiar with.
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    And then, one eight-year-old said,
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    "Hey, why wouldn't you want to fly too?"
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    And the whole room, including me, was like, "Yeah."
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    (Laughter)
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    And just like that, I went from being a woman
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    that these kids would have been trained to see as "disabled"
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    to somebody that had potential that their bodies didn't have yet.
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    Somebody that might even be super-abled.
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    Interesting.
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    So some of you actually saw me at TED, 11 years ago.
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    And there's been a lot of talk about how life-changing this conference is
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    for both speakers and attendees, and I am no exception.
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    TED literally was the launch pad to the next decade of my life's exploration.
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    At the time, the legs I presented were groundbreaking in prosthetics.
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    I had woven carbon fiber sprinting legs
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    modeled after the hind leg of a cheetah,
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    which you may have seen on stage yesterday.
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    And also these very life-like, intrinsically painted silicone legs.
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    So at the time, it was my opportunity to put a call out
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    to innovators outside the traditional medical prosthetic community
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    to come bring their talent to the science and to the art
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    of building legs.
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    So that we can stop compartmentalizing form, function and aesthetic,
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    and assigning them different values.
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    Well, lucky for me, a lot of people answered that call.
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    And the journey started, funny enough, with a TED conference attendee --
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    Chee Pearlman, who hopefully is in the audience somewhere today.
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    She was the editor then of a magazine called ID,
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    and she gave me a cover story.
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    This started an incredible journey.
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    Curious encounters were happening to me at the time;
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    I'd been accepting numerous invitations to speak
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    on the design of the cheetah legs around the world.
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    And people would come up to me after the conference, after my talk,
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    men and women.
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    And the conversation would go something like this,
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    "You know Aimee, you're very attractive.
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    You don't look disabled."
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    (Laughter)
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    I thought, "Well, that's amazing,
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    because I don't feel disabled."
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    And it really opened my eyes to this conversation
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    that could be explored, about beauty.
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    What does a beautiful woman have to look like?
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    What is a sexy body?
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    And interestingly, from an identity standpoint,
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    what does it mean to have a disability?
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    I mean, people -- Pamela Anderson has more prosthetic in her body than I do.
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    Nobody calls her disabled.
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    (Laughter)
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    So this magazine, through the hands of graphic designer Peter Saville,
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    went to fashion designer Alexander McQueen, and photographer Nick Knight,
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    who were also interested in exploring that conversation.
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    So, three months after TED I found myself on a plane
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    to London, doing my first fashion shoot,
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    which resulted in this cover --
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    "Fashion-able"?
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    Three months after that, I did my first runway show for Alexander McQueen
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    on a pair of hand-carved wooden legs made from solid ash.
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    Nobody knew -- everyone thought they were wooden boots.
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    Actually, I have them on stage with me:
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    grapevines, magnolias -- truly stunning.
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    Poetry matters.
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    Poetry is what elevates the banal and neglected object
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    to a realm of art.
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    It can transform the thing that might have made people fearful
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    into something that invites them to look,
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    and look a little longer,
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    and maybe even understand.
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    I learned this firsthand with my next adventure.
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    The artist Matthew Barney, in his film opus called the "The Cremaster Cycle."
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    This is where it really hit home for me --
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    that my legs could be wearable sculpture.
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    And even at this point, I started to move away from the need to replicate human-ness
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    as the only aesthetic ideal.
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    So we made what people lovingly referred to as glass legs
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    even though they're actually optically clear polyurethane,
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    a.k.a. bowling ball material.
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    Heavy!
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    Then we made these legs that are cast in soil
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    with a potato root system growing in them, and beetroots out the top,
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    and a very lovely brass toe.
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    That's a good close-up of that one.
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    Then another character was a half-woman, half-cheetah --
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    a little homage to my life as an athlete.
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    14 hours of prosthetic make-up
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    to get into a creature that had articulated paws,
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    claws and a tail that whipped around,
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    like a gecko.
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    (Laughter)
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    And then another pair of legs we collaborated on were these --
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    look like jellyfish legs,
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    also polyurethane.
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    And the only purpose that these legs can serve,
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    outside the context of the film,
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    is to provoke the senses and ignite the imagination.
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    So whimsy matters.
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    Today, I have over a dozen pair of prosthetic legs
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    that various people have made for me,
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    and with them I have different negotiations of the terrain under my feet,
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    and I can change my height --
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    I have a variable of five different heights.
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    (Laughter)
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    Today, I'm 6'1".
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    And I had these legs made a little over a year ago
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    at Dorset Orthopedic in England
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    and when I brought them home to Manhattan,
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    my first night out on the town, I went to a very fancy party.
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    And a girl was there who has known me for years
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    at my normal 5'8".
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    Her mouth dropped open when she saw me,
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    and she went, "But you're so tall!"
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    And I said, "I know. Isn't it fun?"
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    I mean, it's a little bit like wearing stilts on stilts,
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    but I have an entirely new relationship to door jams
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    that I never expected I would ever have.
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    And I was having fun with it.
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    And she looked at me,
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    and she said, "But, Aimee, that's not fair."
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    And the incredible thing was she really meant it.
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    It's not fair that you can change your height,
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    as you want it.
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    And that's when I knew --
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    that's when I knew that the conversation with society
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    has changed profoundly
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    in this last decade.
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    It is no longer a conversation about overcoming deficiency.
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    It's a conversation about augmentation.
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    It's a conversation about potential.
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    A prosthetic limb doesn't represent the need to replace loss anymore.
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    It can stand as a symbol that the wearer
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    has the power to create whatever it is that they want to create
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    in that space.
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    So people that society once considered to be disabled
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    can now become the architects of their own identities
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    and indeed continue to change those identities
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    by designing their bodies
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    from a place of empowerment.
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    And what is exciting to me so much right now
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    is that by combining cutting-edge technology --
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    robotics, bionics --
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    with the age-old poetry,
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    we are moving closer to understanding our collective humanity.
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    I think that if we want to discover the full potential
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    in our humanity,
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    we need to celebrate those heartbreaking strengths
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    and those glorious disabilities that we all have.
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    I think of Shakespeare's Shylock:
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    "If you prick us, do we not bleed,
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    and if you tickle us, do we not laugh?"
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    It is our humanity,
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    and all the potential within it,
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    that makes us beautiful.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
My 12 pairs of legs
Speaker:
Aimee Mullins
Description:

Athlete, actor and activist Aimee Mullins talks about her prosthetic legs -- she's got a dozen amazing pairs -- and the superpowers they grant her: speed, beauty, an extra 6 inches of height ... Quite simply, she redefines what the body can be.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:46
TED edited English subtitles for My 12 pairs of legs
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