聽(tīng)力課堂TED音頻欄目主要包括TED演講的音頻MP3及中英雙語(yǔ)文稿,供各位英語(yǔ)愛(ài)好者學(xué)習(xí)使用。本文主要內(nèi)容為演講MP3+雙語(yǔ)文稿:小小乒乓球,如何改變了我的人生,希望你會(huì)喜歡!
【演講者及介紹】Pico Iyer
作家皮科·艾耶,他寫(xiě)的主題從古巴革命到伊斯蘭神秘主義,從格雷厄姆格林到被遺忘的國(guó)家和21世紀(jì)的全球秩序。皮科·艾耶的書(shū)已經(jīng)被翻譯成了20多種語(yǔ)言。
【演講主題】小小乒乓球,是如何改變了我的人生
【中英文字幕】
翻譯者 Lipeng Chen 校對(duì)者 psjmz mz
00:01
Every other night in Japan, I step out ofmy apartment, I climb up a hill for 15 minutes, and then I head into my localhealth club, where three ping-pong tables are set up in a studio. And space islimited, so at every table, one pair of players practices forehands, anotherpractices backhands, and every now and then, the balls collide in midair andeverybody says, "Wow!" Then, choosing lots, we select partners andplay doubles. But I honestly couldn't tell you who's won, because we changepartners every five minutes. And everybody is trying really hard to win points,but nobody is keeping track of who is winning games. And after an hour or so offurious exertion, I can honestly tell you that not knowing who has won feelslike the ultimate victory.
我在日本的時(shí)候,每隔一晚就會(huì)出門(mén),爬山 15 分鐘,然后再到當(dāng)?shù)氐慕】稻銟?lè)部,那里有三張乒乓桌??臻g有限,所以在每張乒乓桌上,有一對(duì)球員練習(xí)正手,另一對(duì)練習(xí)反手,時(shí)不時(shí)地,球就會(huì)在空中碰撞,每個(gè)人就感嘆道,“哇!”然后,我們抽簽選擇搭檔進(jìn)行雙打。但是說(shuō)實(shí)話我沒(méi)法告訴你們是誰(shuí)贏了,因?yàn)槲覀兠课宸昼娋蜁?huì)更換搭檔。每個(gè)人都為了贏分拼盡全力,但是沒(méi)有人在記錄到底是誰(shuí)贏了比賽。在經(jīng)過(guò)一小時(shí)激烈的角逐后,老實(shí)說(shuō),不知道誰(shuí)贏了卻像是最終的勝利。
01:09
In Japan, it's been said, they've created acompetitive spirit without competition.
在日本,有一種說(shuō)法是,他們不通過(guò)比賽卻創(chuàng)造出了比賽的精神。
01:18
Now, all of you know that geopolitics isbest followed by watching ping-pong.
你們都知道可以通過(guò)看乒乓了解地緣政治。
01:25
(Laughter)
(笑聲)
01:26
The two strongest powers in the world werefiercest enemies until, in 1972, an American ping-pong team was allowed tovisit Communist China. And as soon as the former adversaries were gatheredaround some small green tables, each of them could claim a victory, and thewhole world could breathe more easily. China's leader, Mao Zedong, wrote awhole manual on ping-pong, and he called the sport "a spiritual nuclearweapon." And it's been said that the only honorary lifelong member of theUS Table Tennis Association is the then-President Richard Nixon, who helped toengineer this win-win situation through ping-pong diplomacy. But long beforethat, really, the history of the modern world was best told through thebouncing white ball.
世界上最強(qiáng)大的兩個(gè)國(guó)家曾是針?shù)h相對(duì)的敵人,直到 1972 年,美國(guó)乒乓球隊(duì)被允許訪問(wèn)中國(guó)。當(dāng)曾經(jīng)的對(duì)手集結(jié)在這些小綠桌旁邊時(shí),每一方都獲得了勝利,整個(gè)世界也能松一口氣。中國(guó)的領(lǐng)導(dǎo)人毛澤東為乒乓球?qū)懥艘徽臼謨?cè),他稱(chēng)這項(xiàng)運(yùn)動(dòng)為“精神核武器”。據(jù)說(shuō)美國(guó)乒乓球協(xié)會(huì)唯一的終生榮譽(yù)會(huì)員就是當(dāng)時(shí)的總統(tǒng)理查德·尼克松,他通過(guò)乒乓外交幫助實(shí)現(xiàn)了這樣的雙贏局面。但是在那之前,現(xiàn)代世界的歷史通過(guò)這些往復(fù)的白色塑料球來(lái)講述,效果最好
02:30
"Ping-pong" sounds like a cousinof "sing-song," like something Eastern, but actually, it's believedthat it was invented by high-class Brits during Victorian times, who startedhitting wine corks over walls of books after dinner.
“乒乓(ping-pong)”聽(tīng)起來(lái)像是“合唱(sing-song)”的表親,像是來(lái)自東方,但實(shí)際上,乒乓被認(rèn)為是由維多利亞時(shí)代的英國(guó)貴族發(fā)明的,那時(shí)他們?cè)谕盹埡笥脮?shū)對(duì)著墻擊打葡萄酒軟塞。
02:48
(Laughter)
(笑聲)
02:49
No exaggeration.
沒(méi)有夸張。
02:50
(Laughter)
02:51
And by the end of World War I, the sportwas dominated by players from the former Austro-Hungarian Empire: eight out ofnine early world championships were claimed by Hungary. And Eastern Europeansgrew so adept at hitting back everything that was hit at them that they almostbrought the whole sport to a standstill. In one championship match in Prague in1936, the first point is said to have lasted two hours and 12 minutes. Thefirst point! Longer than a "Mad Max" movie. And according to one of theplayers, the umpire had to retire with a sore neck before the point wasconcluded.
第一次世界大戰(zhàn)結(jié)束時(shí),這項(xiàng)運(yùn)動(dòng)被來(lái)自原來(lái)的奧匈帝國(guó)的球員壟斷:早期世錦賽的九個(gè)冠軍中有八個(gè)被匈牙利摘取。東歐人對(duì)把球打來(lái)打去變得如此熟練,以至于他們近乎把這項(xiàng)運(yùn)動(dòng)帶入了停滯狀態(tài)。在 1936 年布拉格的一場(chǎng)世錦賽中,第一分據(jù)說(shuō)在過(guò)了兩小時(shí)12分后才被拿下。第一分!比《瘋狂麥克斯》的電影還要長(zhǎng)。據(jù)其中一個(gè)球員說(shuō),裁判在這一比分結(jié)束前因?yàn)椴弊铀岫坏貌煌藞?chǎng)。
03:37
(Laughter)
(笑聲)
03:38
That player started hitting the ball backwith his left hand and dictating chess moves between shots.
運(yùn)動(dòng)員甚至開(kāi)始用左手擊球,并在擊打間隙指揮下象棋。
03:45
(Laughter)
(笑聲)
03:46
Many in the audience started, of course,filing out, as that single point lasted maybe 12,000 strokes. And an emergencymeeting of the International Table Tennis Association had to be held then andthere, and soon the rules were changed so that no game could last longer than20 minutes.
當(dāng)然,觀眾席中的許多人開(kāi)始計(jì)數(shù),這一比分可能持續(xù)了 12000 下?lián)舸?。?guó)際乒乓球協(xié)會(huì)的緊急會(huì)議不得不在現(xiàn)場(chǎng)立刻召開(kāi),隨后規(guī)則改變,沒(méi)有一輪比賽可以長(zhǎng)于 20 分鐘。
04:08
(Laughter)
(笑聲)
04:10
Sixteen years later, Japan entered thepicture, when a little-known watchmaker called Hiroji Satoh showed up at theworld championships in Bombay in 1952. And Satoh was not very big, he wasn'thighly rated, he was wearing spectacles, but he was armed with a paddle thatwas not pimpled, as other paddles were, but covered by a thick spongy rubberfoam. And thanks to this silencing secret weapon, the little-known Satoh won agold medal. One million people came out into the streets of Tokyo to greet himupon his return, and really, Japan's postwar resurgence was set into motion.
十六年后,日本進(jìn)入了人們的視野,一位名叫佐藤博治的無(wú)名制表匠出現(xiàn)在了 1952 年孟買(mǎi)的國(guó)際錦標(biāo)賽上。佐藤博治沒(méi)有名氣,排名也不高,他還戴著眼鏡,但是他的球拍并不像其他的球拍那樣坑坑洼洼的,而是覆蓋著厚厚的海綿狀橡膠泡沫。多虧了這個(gè)秘密武器,默默無(wú)聞的佐藤博治摘得了金牌。當(dāng)他回國(guó)時(shí),在東京有一百萬(wàn)人走上街頭夾道歡迎他凱旋,日本的戰(zhàn)后復(fù)興也真正開(kāi)始了。
05:04
What I learned, though, at my regular gamesin Japan, is more what could be called the inner sport of global domination,sometimes known as life. We never play singles in our club, only doubles, andbecause, as I say, we change partners every five minutes, if you do happen tolose, you're very likely to win six minutes later. We also play best-of-twosets, so often, there's no loser at all. Ping-pong diplomacy.
不過(guò),我在日本的常規(guī)乒乓賽中學(xué)到的,更恰當(dāng)?shù)卣f(shuō)是全面占優(yōu)的內(nèi)在運(yùn)動(dòng),有時(shí)也被稱(chēng)作人生。我們俱樂(lè)部從不打單打,只進(jìn)行雙打,因?yàn)?,正如我所說(shuō),我們每五分鐘就會(huì)更換搭檔,如果你不巧輸了,那么在六分鐘后,你很有可能贏下比賽。我們也玩兩局制,通常就沒(méi)有輸家。乒乓外交。
05:42
And I always remember that as a boy growingup in England, I was taught that the point of a game was to win. But in Japan,I'm encouraged to believe that, really, the point of a game is to make as manypeople as possible around you feel that they are winners. So you're notcareening up and down as an individual might, but you're part of a regular,steady chorus. The most skillful players in our club deploy their skills toturn a 9-1 lead for their team into a 9-9 game in which everybody is intenselyinvolved. And my friend who hits these high, looping lobs that smaller playersflail at and miss -- well, he wins a lot of points, but I think he's thought ofas a loser. In Japan, a game of ping-pong is really like an act of love. You'relearning how to play with somebody, rather than against her.
我一直記得,作為在英格蘭長(zhǎng)大的男孩,我被教育比賽的關(guān)鍵是獲勝。但在日本,我被鼓勵(lì)相信比賽的要義是讓你身邊盡可能多的人認(rèn)為他們是贏家。所以你不會(huì)以一個(gè)個(gè)體上下沉浮,相反,你是常規(guī),穩(wěn)定的團(tuán)體的一部分。我們俱樂(lè)部打得最好的球員能夠利用他們的技巧將他們球隊(duì) 9 比 1 的領(lǐng)先,進(jìn)行到 9 比 9,這樣每個(gè)人都能積極參與其中。我有個(gè)朋友會(huì)打吊高轉(zhuǎn)球,小個(gè)子球員只能亂打,根本接不到——他能贏很多分,但我覺(jué)得他卻是個(gè)輸家。在日本,乒乓比賽真的像是愛(ài)的舉動(dòng)。你學(xué)習(xí)如何和別人一起比賽,而不是贏過(guò)別人。
06:47
And I'll confess, at first, this seemed tome to take all the fun out of the sport. I couldn't exult after a tremendousupset victory against our strongest players, because six minutes later, with anew partner, I was falling behind again. On the other hand, I never feltdisconsolate. And when I flew away from Japan and started playing singles againwith my English archrival, I noticed that after every defeat, I was reallybrokenhearted. But after every victory, I couldn't sleep either, because I knewthere was only one way to go, and that was down.
我承認(rèn),起初,我覺(jué)得這樣完全剝奪了運(yùn)動(dòng)的樂(lè)趣。我無(wú)法在贏下最強(qiáng)球員后感受到勝利的喜悅,因?yàn)榱昼姾?,和一個(gè)新的搭檔在一起。我又落后了。另一方面,我從未感到悲傷。當(dāng)我飛離日本,又開(kāi)始和我的英國(guó)同僚進(jìn)行單打時(shí),我注意到每次失敗后,我真的非常傷心。但每次勝利后,我也無(wú)法入眠,因?yàn)槲抑澜酉聛?lái)只有一條路可走,那就是下坡路。
07:31
Now, if I were trying to do business inJapan, this would lead to endless frustration. In Japan, unlike elsewhere, ifthe score is still level after four hours, a baseball game ends in a tie, andbecause the league standings are based on winning percentage, a team with quitea few ties can finish ahead of a team with more victories.
如果我嘗試在日本做生意,這會(huì)導(dǎo)致無(wú)盡的沮喪。在日本,不像其他地方,如果四小時(shí)后比分依然持平,棒球比賽會(huì)以平局結(jié)束,而因?yàn)槁?lián)賽排名依據(jù)勝率,一個(gè)有一些平局的隊(duì)伍可以比贏得多場(chǎng)比賽的隊(duì)伍排名更靠前。
08:00
One of the first times an American was everbrought over to Japan to lead a professional Japanese baseball team, BobbyValentine, in 1995, he took this really mediocre squad, he lead them to astunning second-place finish, and he was instantly fired. Why?"Well," said the team spokesman, "because of his emphasis onwinning."
起初有一個(gè)名叫鮑比·瓦倫丁的美國(guó)人被帶到日本來(lái)領(lǐng)導(dǎo)一個(gè)職業(yè)日本棒球隊(duì),那時(shí)是 1995 年,他帶著這個(gè)平庸的隊(duì)伍,最終驚人的拿下了第二名,然而他立刻被解雇了。為什么?“嗯,”球隊(duì)發(fā)言人說(shuō),“因?yàn)樗倧?qiáng)調(diào)贏下比賽?!?/p>
08:25
(Laughter)
(笑聲)
08:26
Official Japan can feel quite a lot likethat point that was said to last two hours and 12 minutes, and playing not tolose can take all the imagination, the daring, the excitement, out of things.
官方的日本感覺(jué)像是那據(jù)說(shuō)花了兩小時(shí) 12 分鐘才拿下的一分,而不想輸球的比賽會(huì)剝奪所有的想象、冒險(xiǎn)和興奮。
08:42
At the same time, playing ping-pong inJapan reminds me why choirs regularly enjoy more fun than soloists. In a choir,your only job is to play your small part perfectly, to hit your notes withfeeling, and by so doing, to help to create a beautiful harmony that's muchgreater than the sum of its parts. Yes, every choir does need a conductor, butI think a choir releases you from a child's simple sense of either-ors. Youcome to see that the opposite of winning isn't losing -- it's failing to seethe larger picture.
同時(shí),在日本打乒乓讓我想到了為何相比獨(dú)唱,合唱常常更有趣。在合唱隊(duì),你的唯一工作就是唱好你的那一聲部,有感情的唱對(duì)音符,這樣做才能構(gòu)建比單純齊唱更美的和聲。是的,每個(gè)合唱團(tuán)都需要一個(gè)指揮,但我認(rèn)為合唱讓你脫離了對(duì)于對(duì)錯(cuò)的簡(jiǎn)單理解。你意識(shí)到勝利的對(duì)面并不是失敗——而是不能看到更大的格局。
09:31
As my life goes on, I'm really startled tosee that no event can properly be assessed for years after it has unfolded. Ionce lost everything I owned in the world, every last thing, in a wildfire. Butin time, I came to see that it was that seeming loss that allowed me to live onthe earth more gently, to write without notes, and actually, to move to Japanand the inner health club known as the ping-pong table. Conversely, I oncestumbled into the perfect job, and I came to see that seeming happiness canstand in the way of true joy even more than misery does.
隨著我生命的繼續(xù),我才真正認(rèn)識(shí)到?jīng)]有一個(gè)事情能夠在它發(fā)生的幾年后被正確的評(píng)價(jià)。我曾經(jīng)在一場(chǎng)野火中失去了我在這世界上擁有的所有東西,每一件東西。但是逐漸的,我意識(shí)到這看上去的損失 讓我能在地球上生活的更平和,讓我不用筆記就能寫(xiě)作,也讓我搬去日本,接觸到了內(nèi)在的健康俱樂(lè)部,也就是乒乓球桌。相反的,我曾經(jīng)有一份完美的工作,而我逐漸意識(shí)到這種表面的快樂(lè)實(shí)際上相比苦難會(huì)更加阻礙真正的快樂(lè)
10:25
Playing doubles in Japan really relieves meof all my anxiety, and at the end of an evening, I notice everybody is filingout in a more or less equal state of delight. I'm reminded every night that notgetting ahead isn't the same thing as falling behind any more than not beinglively is the same thing as being dead. And I've come to understand why it isthat Chinese universities are said to offer degrees in ping-pong, and whyresearchers have found that ping-pong can actually help a little with mildmental disorders and even autism. But as I watch the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo,I'm going to be keenly aware that it won't be possible to tell who's won orwho's lost for a very long time.
在日本打雙打讓我真正 脫離了所有的焦慮,在一天結(jié)束時(shí),我注意到每個(gè)人 都表現(xiàn)出了差不多的歡樂(lè)。我每一晚都被提醒,沒(méi)有領(lǐng)先并不等同于落后,就好似沒(méi)有活力并不等同于死亡。我意識(shí)到為什么中國(guó)大學(xué)會(huì)頒發(fā)乒乓球的文憑,為什么研究人員發(fā)現(xiàn)乒乓球?qū)嶋H上可以減緩輕度的心理疾病,甚至是自閉癥。但當(dāng)我在東京觀看 2020 年奧運(yùn)會(huì)的時(shí)候,我清楚的意識(shí)到在相當(dāng)長(zhǎng)的一段時(shí)間,誰(shuí)贏誰(shuí)輸將很難分辨。
11:27
You remember that point I mentioned thatwas said to last for two hours and 12 minutes? Well, one of the players fromthat game ended up, six years later, in the concentration camps of Auschwitzand Dachau. But he walked out alive. Why? Simply because a guard in the gaschamber recognized him from his ping-pong playing days. Had he been the winnerof that epic match? It hardly mattered. As you recall, many people had filedout before even the first point was concluded. The only thing that saved himwas the fact that he took part.
還記得我剛才提過(guò)的那個(gè)據(jù)說(shuō)持續(xù)了兩小時(shí) 12 分鐘的一分嗎?六年后,比賽中的其中一個(gè)球員被送進(jìn)了奧斯維辛和達(dá)豪集中營(yíng)。但他活著走了出來(lái)。為什么??jī)H僅是因?yàn)槎練馐业氖匦l(wèi)因?yàn)樗钠古沂论E認(rèn)出了他。他是那場(chǎng)史詩(shī)級(jí)比賽的勝者嗎?這已不重要??赡苣氵€記得,許多人在第一個(gè)比分揭曉前就離開(kāi)了。拯救他的唯一東西就是他曾經(jīng)參與了這場(chǎng)比賽的事實(shí)。
12:13
The best way to win any game, Japan tellsme every other night, is never, never to think about the score.
每隔一晚日本就告訴我,贏得任何比賽的最好方式,就是永遠(yuǎn),永遠(yuǎn)都不要想著分?jǐn)?shù)。
12:25
Thank you.
謝謝。
12:26
(Applause)
(掌聲)
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