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12 truths I learned from life and writing

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    My seven-year-old grandson
    sleeps just down the hall from me,
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    and he wakes up a lot of mornings
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    and he says,
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    "You know, this could be
    the best day ever."
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    And other times,
    in the middle of the night,
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    he calls out in a tremulous voice,
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    "Nana, will you ever get sick and die?"
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    I think this pretty much says it for me
    and most of the people I know,
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    that we're a mixed grill
    of happy anticipation
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    and dread.
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    So I sat down a few days
    before my 61st birthday,
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    and I decided to compile a list
    of everything I know for sure.
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    There's so little truth
    in the popular culture,
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    and it's good to be sure of a few things.
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    For instance, I am no longer 47,
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    although this is the age I feel,
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    and the age I like to think
    of myself as being.
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    My friend Paul used to say in his late 70s
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    that he felt like a young man
    with something really wrong with him.
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    (Laughter)
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    Our true person is outside
    of time and space,
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    but looking at the paperwork,
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    I can, in fact, see
    that I was born in 1954.
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    My inside self is outside
    of time and space.
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    It doesn't have an age.
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    I'm every age I've ever been,
    and so are you,
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    although I can't help
    mentioning as an aside
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    that it might have been helpful
    if I hadn't followed
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    the skin care rules of the '60s,
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    which involved getting
    as much sun as possible
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    while slathered in baby oil
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    and basking in the glow
    of a tinfoil reflector shield.
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    (Laughter)
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    It was so liberating, though,
    to face the truth
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    that I was no longer
    in the last throes of middle age,
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    that I decided to write down
    every single true thing I know.
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    People feel really doomed
    and overwhelmed these days,
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    and they keep asking me what's true.
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    So I hope that my list of things
    I'm almost positive about
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    might offer some basic
    operating instructions
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    to anyone who is feeling
    really overwhelmed or beleaguered.
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    Number one:
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    the first and truest thing
    is that all truth is a paradox.
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    Life is both a precious,
    unfathomably beautiful gift,
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    and it's impossible here,
    on the incarnational side of things.
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    It's been a very bad match
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    for those of us who were born
    extremely sensitive.
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    It's so hard and weird
    that we sometimes wonder
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    if we're being punked.
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    It's filled simultaneously
    with heartbreaking sweetness and beauty,
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    desperate poverty,
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    floods and babies and acne and Mozart,
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    all swirled together.
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    I don't think it's an ideal system.
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    (Laughter)
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    Number two: almost
    everything will work again
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    if you unplug it for a few minutes --
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    including you.
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    Three: there is almost
    nothing outside of you
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    that will help in any kind of lasting way,
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    unless you're waiting for an organ.
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    You can't buy, achieve or date
    serenity and peace of mind.
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    This is the most horrible truth,
    and I so resent it.
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    But it's an inside job,
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    and we can't arrange peace
    or lasting improvement
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    for the people we love most in the world.
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    They have to find their own ways,
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    their own answers.
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    You can't run alongside
    your grown children
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    with sunscreen and ChapStick
    on their hero's journey.
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    You have to release them.
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    It's disrespectful not to.
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    And if it's someone else's problem,
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    you probably don't have
    the answer, anyway.
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    (Laughter)
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    Our help is usually not very helpful.
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    Our help is often toxic.
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    And help is the sunny side of control.
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    Stop helping so much.
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    Don't get your help and goodness
    all over everybody.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    This brings us to number four:
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    everyone is screwed up,
    broken, clingy and scared,
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    even the people who seem
    to have it most together.
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    They are much more like you
    than you would believe,
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    so try not to compare your insides
    to other people's outsides.
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    It will only make you worse
    than you already are.
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    (Laughter)
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    Also, you can't save, fix
    or rescue any of them
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    or get anyone sober.
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    What helped me get clean
    and sober 30 years ago
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    was the catastrophe
    of my behavior and thinking.
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    So I asked some sober friends for help,
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    and I turned to a higher power.
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    One acronym for God
    is the "gift of desperation,"
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    G-O-D,
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    or as a sober friend put it,
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    by the end I was deteriorating faster
    than I could lower my standards.
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    (Laughter)
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    So God might mean, in this case,
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    "me running out of any more good ideas."
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    While fixing and saving
    and trying to rescue is futile,
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    radical self-care is quantum,
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    and it radiates out from you
    into the atmosphere
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    like a little fresh air.
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    It's a huge gift to the world.
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    When people respond by saying,
    "Well, isn't she full of herself,"
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    just smile obliquely like Mona Lisa
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    and make both of you a nice cup of tea.
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    Being full of affection
    for one's goofy, self-centered,
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    cranky, annoying self
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    is home.
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    It's where world peace begins.
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    Number five:
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    chocolate with 75 percent cacao
    is not actually a food.
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    (Laughter)
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    Its best use is as a bait in snake traps
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    or to balance the legs of wobbly chairs.
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    It was never meant
    to be considered an edible.
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    Number six --
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    (Laughter)
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    writing.
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    Every writer you know writes
    really terrible first drafts,
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    but they keep their butt in the chair.
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    That's the secret of life.
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    That's probably the main difference
    between you and them.
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    They just do it.
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    They do it by prearrangement
    with themselves.
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    They do it as a debt of honor.
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    They tell stories that come through them
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    one day at a time, little by little.
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    When my older brother was in fourth grade,
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    he had a term paper on birds
    due the next day,
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    and he hadn't started.
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    So my dad sat down with him
    with an Audubon book,
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    paper, pencils and brads --
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    for those of you who have gotten
    a little less young and remember brads --
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    and he said to my brother,
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    "Just take it bird by bird, buddy.
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    Just read about pelicans
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    and then write about pelicans
    in your own voice.
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    And then find out about chickadees,
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    and tell us about them in your own voice.
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    And then geese."
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    So the two most important things
    about writing are: bird by bird
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    and really god-awful first drafts.
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    If you don't know where to start,
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    remember that every single thing
    that happened to you is yours,
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    and you get to tell it.
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    If people wanted you to write
    more warmly about them,
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    they should've behaved better.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    You're going to feel like hell
    if you wake up someday
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    and you never wrote the stuff
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    that is tugging on the sleeves
    of your heart:
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    your stories, memories,
    visions and songs --
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    your truth,
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    your version of things --
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    in your own voice.
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    That's really all you have to offer us,
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    and that's also why you were born.
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    Seven: publication and temporary
    creative successes
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    are something you have to recover from.
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    They kill as many people as not.
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    They will hurt, damage and change you
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    in ways you cannot imagine.
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    The most degraded
    and evil people I've ever known
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    are male writers who've had
    huge best sellers.
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    And yet, returning to number one,
    that all truth is paradox,
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    it's also a miracle
    to get your work published,
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    to get your stories read and heard.
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    Just try to bust yourself
    gently of the fantasy
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    that publication will heal you,
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    that it will fill the Swiss-cheesy
    holes inside of you.
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    It can't.
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    It won't.
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    But writing can.
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    So can singing in a choir
    or a bluegrass band.
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    So can painting community
    murals or birding
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    or fostering old dogs
    that no one else will.
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    Number eight: families.
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    Families are hard, hard, hard,
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    no matter how cherished
    and astonishing they may also be.
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    Again, see number one.
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    (Laughter)
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    At family gatherings where you suddenly
    feel homicidal or suicidal --
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    (Laughter)
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    remember that in all cases,
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    it's a miracle that any of us,
    specifically, were conceived and born.
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    Earth is forgiveness school.
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    It begins with forgiving yourself,
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    and then you might as well
    start at the dinner table.
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    That way, you can do this work
    in comfortable pants.
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    (Laughter)
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    When William Blake said that we are here
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    to learn to endure the beams of love,
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    he knew that your family would be
    an intimate part of this,
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    even as you want to run screaming
    for your cute little life.
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    But I promise you are up to it.
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    You can do it, Cinderella, you can do it,
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    and you will be amazed.
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    Nine: food.
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    Try to do a little better.
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    I think you know what I mean.
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    (Laughter)
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    Number 10 --
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    (Laughter)
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    grace.
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    Grace is spiritual WD-40,
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    or water wings.
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    The mystery of grace is that God loves
    Henry Kissinger and Vladimir Putin
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    and me
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    exactly as much as He or She
    loves your new grandchild.
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    Go figure.
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    (Laughter)
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    The movement of grace
    is what changes us, heals us
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    and heals our world.
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    To summon grace, say, "Help,"
    and then buckle up.
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    Grace finds you exactly where you are,
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    but it doesn't leave you
    where it found you.
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    And grace won't look
    like Casper the Friendly Ghost,
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    regrettably.
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    But the phone will ring
    or the mail will come
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    and then against all odds,
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    you'll get your sense of humor
    about yourself back.
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    Laughter really is carbonated holiness.
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    It helps us breathe again and again
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    and gives us back to ourselves,
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    and this gives us faith
    in life and each other.
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    And remember -- grace always bats last.
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    Eleven: God just means goodness.
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    It's really not all that scary.
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    It means the divine or a loving,
    animating intelligence,
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    or, as we learned
    from the great "Deteriorata,"
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    "the cosmic muffin."
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    A good name for God is: "Not me."
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    Emerson said that
    the happiest person on Earth
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    is the one who learns from nature
    the lessons of worship.
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    So go outside a lot and look up.
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    My pastor said you can trap bees
    on the bottom of mason jars without lids
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    because they don't look up,
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    so they just walk around bitterly
    bumping into the glass walls.
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    Go outside. Look up.
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    Secret of life.
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    And finally: death.
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    Number 12.
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    Wow and yikes.
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    It's so hard to bear when the few people
    you cannot live without die.
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    You'll never get over these losses,
    and no matter what the culture says,
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    you're not supposed to.
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    We Christians like to think of death
    as a major change of address,
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    but in any case, the person
    will live again fully in your heart
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    if you don't seal it off.
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    Like Leonard Cohen said,
    "There are cracks in everything,
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    and that's how the light gets in."
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    And that's how we feel
    our people again fully alive.
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    Also, the people will make
    you laugh out loud
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    at the most inconvenient times,
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    and that's the great good news.
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    But their absence will also be a lifelong
    nightmare of homesickness for you.
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    Grief and friends, time and tears
    will heal you to some extent.
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    Tears will bathe and baptize
    and hydrate and moisturize you
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    and the ground on which you walk.
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    Do you know the first thing
    that God says to Moses?
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    He says, "Take off your shoes."
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    Because this is holy ground,
    all evidence to the contrary.
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    It's hard to believe,
    but it's the truest thing I know.
  • 14:06 - 14:10
    When you're a little bit older,
    like my tiny personal self,
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    you realize that death
    is as sacred as birth.
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    And don't worry -- get on with your life.
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    Almost every single death
    is easy and gentle
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    with the very best people surrounding you
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    for as long as you need.
  • 14:28 - 14:29
    You won't be alone.
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    They'll help you cross over
    to whatever awaits us.
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    As Ram Dass said,
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    "When all is said and done,
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    we're really just all walking
    each other home."
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    I think that's it,
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    but if I think of anything else,
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    I'll let you know.
  • 14:48 - 14:49
    Thank you.
  • 14:49 - 14:51
    (Applause)
  • 14:51 - 14:52
    Thank you.
  • 14:52 - 14:54
    (Applause)
  • 14:54 - 14:56
    I was very surprised to be asked to come,
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    because it is not my realm,
  • 14:59 - 15:01
    technology or design or entertainment.
  • 15:01 - 15:05
    I mean, my realm is sort of
    faith and writing
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    and kind of lurching along together.
  • 15:08 - 15:09
    And I was surprised,
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    but they said I could give a talk,
    and I said I'd love to.
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    (Video) If you don't know where to start,
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    remember that every single thing
    that happened to you is yours
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    and you get to tell it.
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    Anne Lamott: People are very frightened
    and feel really doomed
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    in America these days,
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    and I just wanted to help people
    get their sense of humor about it
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    and to realize how much isn't a problem.
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    If you take an action,
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    take a really healthy or loving
    or friendly action,
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    you'll have loving and friendly feelings.
Title:
12 truths I learned from life and writing
Speaker:
Anne Lamott
Description:

A few days before she turned 61, writer Anne Lamott decided to write down everything she knew for sure. She dives into the nuances of being a human who lives in a confusing, beautiful, emotional world, offering her characteristic life-affirming wisdom and humor on family, writing, the meaning of God, death and more.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:55

English subtitles

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