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名人演講:This is Water 這就是水[大衛(wèi)·福斯特·華萊士]

所屬教程:名人演講

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2018年04月23日

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https://online2.tingclass.net/lesson/shi0529/0009/9807/1002621F.mp3
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This is Water 這就是水
——David Foster Wallace 大衛(wèi)·福斯特·華萊士

This is Water 這就是水 David Foster Wallace 大衛(wèi)·福斯特·華萊士
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  • [00:04.16]Greetings, thanks
  • [00:05.30]and congratulations
  • [00:06.05]to Kenyon's graduating class of 2005.
  • [00:11.03]There are these two young fish
  • [00:12.28]swimming along
  • [00:13.76]and they happen to meet an older fish
  • [00:15.42]swimming the other way,
  • [00:16.69]who nods at them and says
  • [00:17.67]Morning, boys. How's the water
  • [00:20.99]And the two young fish
  • [00:21.85]swim on for a bit,
  • [00:23.07]and then eventually
  • [00:24.28]one of them looks over
  • [00:25.17]at the other and goes
  • [00:26.21]What the hell is water
  • [00:29.95]This is a standard requirement
  • [00:31.47]of US commencement speeches,
  • [00:32.86]the deployment of didactic
  • [00:34.75]little parable-ish stories.
  • [00:37.56]The story thing turns out to be
  • [00:38.71]one of the better,
  • [00:39.78]less bullshitty conventions of the genre,
  • [00:42.59]but if you're worried
  • [00:43.18]that I plan to present myself here
  • [00:44.33]as the wise,
  • [00:45.23]older fish explaining
  • [00:46.59]what water is to you younger fish,
  • [00:49.09]please don't be.
  • [00:50.54]I am not the wise old fish.
  • [00:53.30]The point of the fish story
  • [00:54.35]is merely that the most obvious,
  • [00:55.83]important realities
  • [00:56.88]are often the ones
  • [00:57.78]that are hardest to see
  • [00:58.96]and talk about.
  • [01:00.49]Stated as an English sentence,
  • [01:02.07]of course,
  • [01:02.79]this is just a banal platitude,
  • [01:05.30]but the fact is that
  • [01:06.08]in the day to day trenches
  • [01:07.73]of adult existence,
  • [01:08.91]banal platitudes
  • [01:09.89]can have a life or death importance,
  • [01:12.33]or so I wish to suggest to you
  • [01:13.95]on this dry and lovely morning.
  • [01:17.07]Of course
  • [01:17.56]the main requirement
  • [01:18.40]of speeches like this is
  • [01:19.46]that I'm supposed
  • [01:20.52]to talk about your liberal
  • [01:22.04]arts education's meaning,
  • [01:23.81]to try to explain
  • [01:24.81]why the degree you are
  • [01:25.80]about to receive
  • [01:26.58]has actual human value
  • [01:28.40]instead of just a material payoff.
  • [01:31.98]So let's talk about
  • [01:32.72]the single most pervasive cliché
  • [01:34.27]in the commencement speech genre,
  • [01:36.43]which is that a liberal arts education
  • [01:38.36]is not so much about
  • [01:39.54]filling you up with knowledge
  • [01:40.97]As It Is about
  • [01:42.71]"teaching you how to think".
  • [01:45.61]If you're like me as a student,
  • [01:47.30]you've never liked hearing this,
  • [01:49.12]and you tend to feel a bit insulted
  • [01:50.72]by the claim that you needed
  • [01:52.02]anybody to teach you
  • [01:52.78]how to think,
  • [01:53.91]since the fact that you even
  • [01:54.88]got admitted to a college this good
  • [01:56.48]seems like proof that
  • [01:57.50]you already know how to think.
  • [02:01.89]But I'm going to posit to you
  • [02:03.00]that the liberal arts cliché
  • [02:04.25]turns out not to
  • [02:05.17]be insulting at all,
  • [02:06.71]because the really
  • [02:07.56]significant education
  • [02:08.51]in thinking that we're supposed
  • [02:09.88]to get in a place like this
  • [02:11.09]isn't really about
  • [02:12.42]the capacity to think,
  • [02:14.25]but rather about the choice
  • [02:15.49]of what to think about.
  • [02:17.83]If your total freedom
  • [02:18.64]of choice regarding
  • [02:19.62]what to think about seems
  • [02:20.64]too obvious to waste time discussing,
  • [02:22.90]I'd ask you to think
  • [02:23.96]about fish and water,
  • [02:25.41]and to bracket for just
  • [02:26.65]a few minutes your skepticism
  • [02:28.47]about the value of the totally obvious.
  • [02:33.09]Here's another didactic little story.
  • [02:35.25]There are these two guys
  • [02:36.14]sitting together in a bar
  • [02:37.33]in the remote Alaskan wilderness.
  • [02:39.35]One of the guys is religious,
  • [02:40.86]the other is an atheist,
  • [02:42.62]and the two are arguing
  • [02:43.89]about the existence of God
  • [02:45.20]with that special intensity
  • [02:46.54]that comes after about the fourth beer.
  • [02:49.62]And the atheist says:
  • [02:50.69]Look, it's not like
  • [02:51.50]I don't have actual reasons
  • [02:52.94]for not believing in God.
  • [02:54.56]It's not like
  • [02:55.44]I haven't ever experimented
  • [02:56.52]with the whole God
  • [02:57.51]and prayer thing.
  • [02:58.68]Just last month
  • [02:59.74]I got caught away from the camp
  • [03:01.14]in that terrible blizzard,
  • [03:02.71]and I was totally lost
  • [03:04.02]and I couldn't see a thing,
  • [03:05.39]and it was 50 below,
  • [03:06.88]and so I tried it
  • [03:08.13]I fell to my knees in the snow
  • [03:09.48]and CRIed out
  • [03:10.22]Oh, God, if there is a God,
  • [03:11.85]I'm lost in this blizzard,
  • [03:13.18]and I'm gonna die
  • [03:13.99]if you don't help me.
  • [03:15.98]And now,
  • [03:16.56]in the bar,
  • [03:17.41]the religious guy looks at the atheist
  • [03:18.99]all puzzled.
  • [03:20.42]Well then you must believe now,
  • [03:21.81]he says,
  • [03:22.67]After all, here you are, alive.
  • [03:25.78]The atheist just rolls his eyes.
  • [03:27.84]No, man,
  • [03:28.64]all that was a couple Eskimos
  • [03:30.37]happened to come wandering by
  • [03:31.64]and showed me the way back to camp.
  • [03:35.02]It's easy to run this story
  • [03:36.34]through kind of
  • [03:36.97]a standard liberal arts analysis
  • [03:39.43]the exact same experience
  • [03:40.76]can mean two totally different things
  • [03:42.58]to two different people,
  • [03:44.00]given those people's two different belief
  • [03:45.72]templates and two different ways
  • [03:47.32]of constructing meaning
  • [03:48.52]from experience.
  • [03:50.35]Because we prize tolerance
  • [03:51.90]and diversity of belief,
  • [03:53.84]nowhere in our liberal arts analysis
  • [03:55.97]do we want to claim
  • [03:56.53]that one guy's interpretation
  • [03:57.75]is true and the other guy's is false or bad.
  • [04:02.13]Which is fine,
  • [04:03.04]except we also never end up
  • [04:04.30]talking about just
  • [04:05.72]where these individual templates
  • [04:06.90]and beliefs come from.
  • [04:08.42]Meaning, where they come from
  • [04:09.60]INSIDE the two guys.
  • [04:11.58]As if a person's most basic orientation
  • [04:14.14]toward the world,
  • [04:15.17]and the meaning of his experience
  • [04:16.74]were somehow just hard-wired,
  • [04:18.53]like height or shoe-size;
  • [04:20.44]or automatically absorbed
  • [04:22.12]from the culture,
  • [04:23.09]like language.
  • [04:24.76]As if how we construct meaning
  • [04:26.15]were not actually a matter of personal,
  • [04:28.07]intentional choice.
  • [04:36.61]Plus, there's the whole matter
  • [04:37.65]of arrogance.
  • [04:38.75]The nonreligious guy
  • [04:39.74]is so totally certain
  • [04:41.33]in his dismissal of the possibility
  • [04:43.05]that the passing Eskimos
  • [04:44.27]had anything to do
  • [04:45.56]with his prayer for help.
  • [04:47.76]True, there are plenty of religious people
  • [04:49.77]who seem arrogant
  • [04:50.64]and certain of their own interpretations too.
  • [04:53.30]They're probably even
  • [04:54.88]more repulsive than atheists,
  • [04:56.70]at least to most of us.
  • [04:59.12]But religious dogmatists' problem
  • [05:00.64]is exactly the same
  • [05:01.83]as the story's unbeliever
  • [05:03.60]blind certainty,
  • [05:05.54]a close-mindedness
  • [05:06.63]that amounts to an imprisonment
  • [05:07.95]so total that the prisoner
  • [05:09.31]doesn't even know he's locked up.
  • [05:12.47]The point here is that
  • [05:13.79]I think this is one part
  • [05:15.05]of what teaching me
  • [05:16.34]how to think is really
  • [05:17.67]supposed to mean.
  • [05:19.05]To be just a little less arrogant.
  • [05:21.33]To have just a little CRItical awareness
  • [05:23.67]about myself
  • [05:24.28]and my certainties.
  • [05:25.85]Because a huge percentage
  • [05:27.09]of the stuff that I tend
  • [05:28.52]to be automatically certain of is,
  • [05:29.82]it turns out,
  • [05:31.35]totally wrong and deluded.
  • [05:34.53]I have learned this the hard way,
  • [05:36.64]as I predict you graduates will, too.
  • [05:39.54]Here is just one example
  • [05:40.63]of the total wrongness
  • [05:41.91]of something I tend
  • [05:42.76]to be automatically sure of
  • [05:44.86]everything in my own immediate experience
  • [05:47.23]supports my deep belief
  • [05:48.52]that I am the absolute centre
  • [05:50.30]of the universe;
  • [05:52.81]the realest, most vivid
  • [05:54.24]and important person in existence.
  • [05:56.81]We rarely talk about
  • [05:58.15]this sort of natural,
  • [05:59.13]basic self-centeredness
  • [06:00.50]because it's so socially repulsive.
  • [06:02.88]But it's pretty much the same
  • [06:03.87]for all of us.
  • [06:05.61]It is our default setting,
  • [06:07.59]hard-wired into our boards at birth.
  • [06:09.82]Think about it:
  • [06:11.85]there is no experience
  • [06:13.02]you have had
  • [06:14.25]that you are not the absolute centre of.
  • [06:16.50]The world as you experience
  • [06:18.59]it is there in front of YOU
  • [06:20.29]or behind YOU,
  • [06:21.61]to the left or right of YOU,
  • [06:23.49]on YOUR TV or YOUR monitor.
  • [06:26.16]And so on.
  • [06:27.57]Other people's thoughts
  • [06:28.50]and feelings have to be communicated
  • [06:30.07]to you somehow,
  • [06:31.24]but your own are so immediate, urgent, real.
  • [06:35.79]Please don't worry that
  • [06:37.51]I'm getting ready
  • [06:38.29]to lecture you
  • [06:39.11]about compassion
  • [06:39.66]or other-directedness
  • [06:40.81]or all the so-called virtues.
  • [06:42.89]This is not a matter of virtue.
  • [06:44.53]It's a matter of my choosing
  • [06:46.24]to do the work of somehow
  • [06:47.84]altering or getting free of my natural,
  • [06:50.15]hard-wired default setting
  • [06:52.07]which is to be deeply
  • [06:53.11]and literally self-centered
  • [06:55.38]and to see and interpret everything
  • [06:57.20]through this lens of self.
  • [07:00.23]People who can adjust
  • [07:01.34]their natural default setting this way
  • [07:02.50]are often desCRIbed as being
  • [07:04.10]well-adjusted
  • [07:05.92]which I suggest to you
  • [07:06.95]is not an accidental term.
  • [07:09.18]Given the triumphant
  • [07:11.09]academic setting here
  • [07:12.56]an obvious question is
  • [07:14.18]how much of this work
  • [07:15.04]of adjusting our default setting involves
  • [07:16.90]actual knowledge or intellect.
  • [07:19.23]This question gets very tricky.
  • [07:22.15]Probably the most dangerous thing
  • [07:23.41]about an academic education
  • [07:24.73]at least in my own case
  • [07:26.90]is that it enables my tendency
  • [07:28.48]to over-intellectualise stuff,
  • [07:30.94]to get lost in abstract argument
  • [07:32.82]inside my head,
  • [07:34.21]instead of simply paying attention
  • [07:35.58]to what is going on right
  • [07:36.95]in front of me,
  • [07:38.26]paying attention to
  • [07:39.68]what is going on inside me.
  • [07:41.98]As I'm sure
  • [07:43.15]you guys know by now,
  • [07:44.51]it is extremely difficult
  • [07:45.79]to stay alert and attentive,
  • [07:47.87]instead of getting hypnotised
  • [07:49.25]by the constant monologue
  • [07:50.57]inside your own head
  • [07:52.17](may be happening right now).
  • [07:54.48]Twenty years after my own graduation,
  • [07:56.62]I have come gradually
  • [07:57.58]to understand
  • [07:58.41]that the liberal arts cliché
  • [07:59.68]about teaching you
  • [08:00.87]how to think is actually shorthand
  • [08:02.81]for a much deeper,
  • [08:03.98]more serious idea:
  • [08:05.91]learning how to think really
  • [08:07.47]means learning how to exercise
  • [08:08.89]some control over how
  • [08:10.44]and what you think.
  • [08:12.54]It means being conscious
  • [08:13.81]and aware enough to choose
  • [08:15.33]what you pay attention to
  • [08:16.66]and to choose how you construct meaning
  • [08:18.99]from experience.
  • [08:20.97]Because if you cannot exercise
  • [08:22.69]this kind of choice in adult life,
  • [08:24.39]you will be totally hosed.
  • [08:27.08]Think of the old cliché
  • [08:28.52]about "the mind being an excellent servant
  • [08:31.46]but a terrible master".
  • [08:33.25]This, like many clichés,
  • [08:35.35]so lame and unexciting
  • [08:37.47]on the surface,
  • [08:38.23]actually expresses a great
  • [08:39.65]and terrible truth.
  • [08:41.77]It is not the least bit coincidental
  • [08:43.49]that adults who commit suicide
  • [08:45.14]with firearms almost always
  • [08:46.72]shoot themselves in the head.
  • [08:50.31]They shoot the terrible master.
  • [08:53.11]And the truth is that most of
  • [08:54.38]these suicides are actually dead
  • [08:55.88]long before they pull the trigger.
  • [08:58.33]And I submit that this is
  • [08:59.93]what the real,
  • [09:01.03]no bullshit value of your liberal arts
  • [09:02.19]education is supposed to be about
  • [09:05.24]how to keep from going
  • [09:06.51]through your comfortable,
  • [09:07.62]prosperous,
  • [09:08.27]respectable adult life dead,
  • [09:11.53]unconscious,
  • [09:13.13]a slave to your head
  • [09:14.50]and to your natural default setting
  • [09:16.25]of being uniquely,
  • [09:17.39]completely,
  • [09:18.47]imperially alone
  • [09:20.65]day in and day out.
  • [09:24.77]That may sound like hyperbole,
  • [09:26.29]or abstract nonsense.
  • [09:28.84]Let's get concrete.
  • [09:30.26]The plain fact
  • [09:31.25]is that you graduating seniors
  • [09:32.62]do not yet have any clue what
  • [09:33.89]"day in day out" really means.
  • [09:38.82]There happen to be whole,
  • [09:39.66]large parts of adult American life
  • [09:41.46]that nobody talks about
  • [09:42.53]in commencement speeches.
  • [09:45.55]One such part involves boredom,
  • [09:47.30]routine and petty frustration.
  • [09:51.04]The parents and older folks here
  • [09:52.58]will know all too well
  • [09:53.39]what I'm talking about.
  • [09:55.29]By way of example,
  • [09:56.38]let's say it's an average adult day,
  • [09:58.47]and you get up in the morning,
  • [09:59.85]go to your challenging,
  • [10:00.77]white-collar,
  • [10:01.37]college-graduate job,
  • [10:03.11]and you work hard for eight
  • [10:04.34]or ten hours,
  • [10:05.24]and at the end of the day
  • [10:05.95]you're tired and somewhat stressed
  • [10:07.99]and all you want is to go home
  • [10:09.26]and have a good supper
  • [10:10.36]and maybe unwind for an hour,
  • [10:11.36]and then hit the sack early because,
  • [10:13.08]of course,
  • [10:14.22]you have to get up the next day
  • [10:14.86]and do it all again.
  • [10:16.33]But then you remember
  • [10:16.99]there's no food at home.
  • [10:18.67]You haven't had time
  • [10:19.49]to shop this week
  • [10:20.50]because of your challenging job,
  • [10:22.47]and so now after work
  • [10:23.99]you have to get in your car
  • [10:25.21]and drive to the supermarket.
  • [10:26.82]It's the end of the work day
  • [10:28.55]and the traffic is apt to be
  • [10:29.94]very bad.
  • [10:31.45]So getting to the store
  • [10:32.48]takes way longer than it should,
  • [10:33.89]and when you finally get there,
  • [10:36.38]the supermarket is very crowded,
  • [10:37.40]because of course
  • [10:38.34]it's the time of day
  • [10:39.20]when all the other people
  • [10:40.37]with jobs also try
  • [10:41.23]to squeeze in some grocery shopping.
  • [10:43.48]And the store is hideously lit
  • [10:45.35]and infused with soul-killing muzak
  • [10:49.06]or corporate pop
  • [10:51.04]and it's pretty much the last place
  • [10:52.46]you want to be
  • [10:53.50]but you can't just get in
  • [10:54.55]and quickly out;
  • [10:55.83]you have to wander all over the huge,
  • [10:57.40]over-lit store's confusing aisles
  • [10:59.44]to find the stuff you want
  • [11:01.31]and you have to manoeuvre your junky
  • [11:02.68]cart through all these other tired,
  • [11:04.35]hurried people with carts
  • [11:07.34]et cetera, et cetera,
  • [11:08.41]cutting stuff out
  • [11:09.19]because this is a long ceremony
  • [11:10.14]and eventually
  • [11:12.60]you get all your supper supplies,
  • [11:14.12]except now it turns out
  • [11:15.17]there aren't enough
  • [11:15.96]check-out lanes open
  • [11:16.81]even though
  • [11:17.75]it's the end-of-the-day rush.
  • [11:19.04]So the checkout line is incredibly long,
  • [11:20.98]which is stupid and infuriating.
  • [11:22.97]But you can't take your frustration out
  • [11:25.55]on the frantic lady working the register,
  • [11:27.37]who is overworked
  • [11:28.88]at a job whose daily tedium
  • [11:30.33]and meaninglessness surpasses the imagination
  • [11:32.38]of any of us here at a prestigious college.
  • [11:35.32]But anyway,
  • [11:36.54]you finally get to
  • [11:37.40]the checkout line's front,
  • [11:38.26]and you pay for your food,
  • [11:39.99]and you get told to
  • [11:41.37]Have a nice day
  • [11:42.84]in a voice that is
  • [11:43.71]the absolute voice of death.
  • [11:46.61]Then you have to take your creepy,
  • [11:47.84]flimsy, plastic bags of groceries
  • [11:49.37]in your cart with the one crazy wheel
  • [11:51.75]that pulls maddeningly to the left,
  • [11:53.39]all the way out through the crowded,
  • [11:55.69]bumpy, littery parking lot,
  • [11:57.57]and then you have to drive
  • [11:58.76]all the way home through
  • [11:59.82]slow, heavy, SUV-intensive,
  • [12:01.35]rush-hour traffic,
  • [12:02.82]et cetera et cetera.
  • [12:05.08]Everyone here has done this,
  • [12:06.28]of course.
  • [12:07.25]But it hasn't yet been part
  • [12:08.22]of you graduates' actual life routine,
  • [12:10.66]day after week after month after year.
  • [12:14.36]But it will be.
  • [12:16.97]And many more dreary,
  • [12:18.12]annoying, seemingly
  • [12:19.40]meaningless routines besides.
  • [12:22.26]But that is not the point.
  • [12:23.59]The point is that petty,
  • [12:24.57]frustrating crap
  • [12:25.73]like this is exactly
  • [12:26.85]where the work of choosing
  • [12:28.62]is gonna come in.
  • [12:30.29]Because the traffic jams
  • [12:31.42]and crowded aisles
  • [12:32.59]and long checkout lines
  • [12:33.95]give me time to think,
  • [12:35.87]and if I don't make a conscious decision
  • [12:37.54]about how to think
  • [12:38.66]and what to pay attention to,
  • [12:40.14]I'm gonna be pissed
  • [12:41.26]and miserable every time
  • [12:42.82]I have to shop.
  • [12:44.39]Because my natural default setting
  • [12:46.07]is the certainty that situations
  • [12:47.68]like this are really all about me.
  • [12:50.47]About MY hungriness
  • [12:51.53]and MY fatigue
  • [12:52.74]and MY desire to just get home,
  • [12:54.87]and it's going to seem
  • [12:55.83]for all the world
  • [12:56.85]like everybody else is just
  • [12:58.28]in my way.
  • [13:00.25]And who are all these people
  • [13:01.59]in my way?
  • [13:02.52]And look at how repulsive most
  • [13:03.99]of them are,
  • [13:04.97]and how stupid
  • [13:05.73]and cow-like and dead-eyed
  • [13:06.81]and nonhuman they seem in the checkout line,
  • [13:09.39]or at how annoying
  • [13:10.29]and rude it is that people
  • [13:11.43]are talking loudly on cell phones
  • [13:12.89]in the middle of the line.
  • [13:14.50]And look at how deeply
  • [13:15.47]and personally unfair this is.
  • [13:19.50]Or, of course,
  • [13:20.17]if I'm in a more socially conscious
  • [13:21.89]liberal arts form
  • [13:22.95]of my default setting,
  • [13:24.02]I can spend time
  • [13:25.24]in the end-of-the-day traffic
  • [13:26.42]being disgusted about all the huge,
  • [13:28.71]stupid,
  • [13:29.24]lane-blocking SUV's
  • [13:30.43]and Hummers
  • [13:31.34]and V-12 pickup trucks,
  • [13:33.24]burning their wasteful,
  • [13:34.32]selfish, 40-gallon tanks of gas,
  • [13:37.31]and I can dwell on the fact
  • [13:38.43]that the patriotic
  • [13:39.65]or religious bumper-stickers
  • [13:40.71]always seem to be on the biggest,
  • [13:42.13]most disgustingly selfish vehicles,
  • [13:44.56]driven by the ugliest
  • [13:52.25]this is an example
  • [13:52.91]of how NOT to think,
  • [13:55.85]though most disgustingly selfish vehicles,
  • [13:57.72]driven by the ugliest,
  • [13:58.91]most inconsiderate
  • [14:00.05]and aggressive drivers.
  • [14:01.62]And I can think about
  • [14:02.32]how our children's children
  • [14:03.51]will despise us for wasting
  • [14:04.82]all the future's fuel,
  • [14:06.30]and probably screwing up the climate,
  • [14:07.86]and how spoiled and stupid
  • [14:09.24]and selfish and disgusting we all are,
  • [14:11.38]and how modern consumer society
  • [14:14.06]just sucks, and so on and so forth.
  • [14:16.92]You get the idea.
  • [14:17.95]If I choose to think this way
  • [14:19.49]in a store and on the freeway,
  • [14:21.03]fine. Lots of us do.
  • [14:24.97]Except thinking this way
  • [14:26.18]tends to be so easy
  • [14:27.30]and automatic that it doesn't
  • [14:28.47]have to be a choice.
  • [14:30.16]It is my natural default setting.
  • [14:32.60]It's the automatic way
  • [14:33.87]that I experience the boring,
  • [14:35.34]frustrating, crowded parts
  • [14:37.38]of adult life when I'm operating
  • [14:39.43]on the automatic,
  • [14:40.49]unconscious belief
  • [14:41.75]that I am the centre of the world,
  • [14:43.21]and that my immediate needs
  • [14:44.89]and feelings are
  • [14:45.86]what should determine the world's priorities.
  • [14:48.03]The thing is that,
  • [14:48.91]of course,
  • [14:49.57]there are totally different ways
  • [14:50.53]to think about these kinds of situations.
  • [14:53.22]In this traffic,
  • [14:54.44]all these vehicles stopped
  • [14:55.96]and idling in my way,
  • [14:57.68]it's not impossible
  • [14:59.09]that some of these people
  • [15:00.26]in SUV's have been
  • [15:01.43]in horrible auto accidents
  • [15:02.44]in the past,
  • [15:03.41]and now find driving
  • [15:04.47]so terrifying that their therapist
  • [15:06.00]has all but ordered them
  • [15:07.42]to get a huge, heavy SUV
  • [15:09.10]so they can feel safe enough to drive.
  • [15:12.19]Or that the Hummer
  • [15:12.90]that just cut me off is
  • [15:14.02]maybe being driven
  • [15:15.10]by a father whose
  • [15:16.03]little child is hurt or sick
  • [15:17.55]in the seat next to him,
  • [15:19.06]and he's trying to get this kid
  • [15:20.13]to the hospital,
  • [15:21.26]and he's in a way bigger,
  • [15:22.33]more legitimate hurry
  • [15:23.49]than I am
  • [15:24.62]it is actually I who am in HIS way.
  • [15:28.32]Or I can choose to force myself
  • [15:29.79]to consider the likelihood
  • [15:31.05]that everyone else
  • [15:31.86]in the supermarket's checkout line
  • [15:33.09]is just as bored
  • [15:34.37]and frustrated as I am,
  • [15:36.47]and that some of these people
  • [15:37.54]probably have harder,
  • [15:38.61]more tedious and painful lives than I do.
  • [15:42.87]Again, please don't think
  • [15:44.44]that I'm giving you moral advice,
  • [15:46.26]or that I'm saying you are supposed
  • [15:47.43]to think this way,
  • [15:48.24]or that anyone expects you
  • [15:49.24]to just automatically do it.
  • [15:51.07]Because it's hard.
  • [15:52.71]It takes will and effort,
  • [15:54.69]and if you are like me,
  • [15:55.89]some days you won't be able to do it,
  • [15:58.23]or you just flat out won't want to.
  • [16:00.76]But most days,
  • [16:01.99]if you're aware enough
  • [16:03.10]to give yourself a choice,
  • [16:04.26]you can choose
  • [16:05.44]to look differently at this fat,
  • [16:07.06]dead-eyed, over-made-up lady
  • [16:08.33]who just screamed at her kid
  • [16:10.24]in the checkout line.
  • [16:12.17]Maybe she's not usually like this.
  • [16:14.11]Maybe she's been up
  • [16:15.18]three straight nights
  • [16:16.29]holding the hand of a husband
  • [16:17.51]who is dying of bone cancer.
  • [16:19.54]Or maybe this very lady is
  • [16:20.91]the low-wage clerk
  • [16:22.08]at the motor vehicle department,
  • [16:23.32]who just yesterday
  • [16:24.65]helped your spouse resolve a horrific,
  • [16:26.43]infuriating, red-tape problem
  • [16:28.60]through some small act
  • [16:30.03]of bureaucratic kindness.
  • [16:32.26]Of course,
  • [16:32.77]none of this is likely,
  • [16:33.77]but it's also not impossible.
  • [16:36.21]It just depends
  • [16:37.17]what you want to consider.
  • [16:39.03]If you're automatically sure
  • [16:40.66]that you know what reality is,
  • [16:43.03]and who and what is really important,
  • [16:45.32]if you wanna operating
  • [16:46.33]on your default setting,
  • [16:47.49]then you, like me,
  • [16:49.27]probably won't consider possibilities
  • [16:51.08]that aren't annoying and miserable.
  • [16:54.01]But if you really learn
  • [16:54.77]how to think,
  • [16:56.75]how to pay attention,
  • [16:58.27]then you will know
  • [16:59.61]you have other options.
  • [17:01.17]It will actually be within your power
  • [17:03.26]to experience a crowded,
  • [17:04.98]hot, slow, consumer-hell type situation
  • [17:09.02]as not only meaningful,
  • [17:10.40]but sacred, on fire with the same force
  • [17:13.69]that made the stars
  • [17:15.07]love, fellowship,
  • [17:16.99]the mystical oneness
  • [17:18.46]of all things deep down.
  • [17:21.46]Not that that mystical stuff
  • [17:22.68]is necessarily true.
  • [17:23.95]The only thing
  • [17:24.66]that's capital-T True
  • [17:25.82]is that you get to decide
  • [17:27.80]how you're gonna try to see it.
  • [17:30.13]This, I submit,
  • [17:31.16]is the freedom
  • [17:32.33]of a real education,
  • [17:33.77]of learning how to be well-adjusted.
  • [17:36.19]You get to consciously decide
  • [17:37.51]what has meaning
  • [17:38.67]and what doesn't.
  • [17:40.49]You get to decide what to worship.
  • [17:43.83]Because here's something else
  • [17:45.80]that's weird but true
  • [17:47.69]in the day-to-day trenches
  • [17:48.95]of adult life,
  • [17:49.95]there is actually no such thing
  • [17:51.58]as atheism.
  • [17:53.14]There is no such thing
  • [17:54.15]as not worshipping.
  • [17:55.62]Everybody worships.
  • [17:57.74]The only choice we get
  • [17:58.85]is what to worship.
  • [18:01.03]And the compelling reason
  • [18:02.30]for maybe choosing some sort
  • [18:03.92]of god or spiritual-type thing
  • [18:05.73]to worship
  • [18:07.14]be it JC or Allah,
  • [18:08.57]be it YHWH
  • [18:09.65]or the Wiccan Mother Goddess,
  • [18:11.11]or the Four Noble Truths,
  • [18:12.28]or some inviolable set of ethical principles
  • [18:15.11]is that pretty much anything else
  • [18:16.48]you worship will eat you alive.
  • [18:19.51]If you worship money and things,
  • [18:21.70]if they are where you tap
  • [18:22.91]real meaning in life,
  • [18:24.54]then you will never have enough,
  • [18:26.45]never feel you have enough.
  • [18:28.45]It's the truth.
  • [18:30.07]Worship your own body
  • [18:31.13]and beauty and sexual allure
  • [18:32.81]and you will always feel ugly.
  • [18:35.04]And when time and age start showing,
  • [18:36.88]you will die a million deaths
  • [18:38.66]before they finally grieve you.
  • [18:41.09]On one level,
  • [18:42.05]we all know this stuff already.
  • [18:43.37]It's been codified as myths,
  • [18:45.25]proverbs, clichés, epigrams, parables;
  • [18:49.41]the skeleton of every great story.
  • [18:52.69]The whole trick is keeping
  • [18:54.26]the truth up front in daily consciousness.
  • [18:57.55]Worship power,
  • [18:58.81]you will end up feeling weak
  • [19:00.29]and afraid,
  • [19:01.50]and you will need
  • [19:02.26]ever more power
  • [19:02.91]over others to numb you
  • [19:04.39]to your own fear.
  • [19:06.00]Worship your intellect,
  • [19:07.47]being seen as smart,
  • [19:08.63]you will end up feeling stupid,
  • [19:10.76]a fraud, always on the verge
  • [19:12.95]of being found out.
  • [19:15.81]Look the insidious thing
  • [19:16.87]about these forms of worship
  • [19:17.88]is not that they're evil or sinful,
  • [19:19.75]it's that they're unconscious.
  • [19:22.14]They are default settings.
  • [19:24.28]They're the kind of worship you
  • [19:25.28]just gradually slip into,
  • [19:27.06]day after day,
  • [19:28.17]getting more and more selective
  • [19:29.58]about what you see
  • [19:30.64]and how you measure value
  • [19:31.95]without ever being fully aware
  • [19:33.37]that that's what you're doing.
  • [19:35.65]And the so-called real world
  • [19:37.21]will not discourage you
  • [19:38.58]from operating on your default settings,
  • [19:40.52]because the so-called real world
  • [19:42.48]of men and money
  • [19:44.15]and power hums merrily
  • [19:45.93]along on feel of fear
  • [19:47.80]and anger and frustration
  • [19:49.06]and craving and worship of self.
  • [19:51.93]Our own present culture has harnessed
  • [19:53.66]these forces in ways
  • [19:54.87]that have yielded extraordinary
  • [19:56.14]wealth and comfort
  • [19:57.55]and personal freedom.
  • [19:59.93]The freedom all to be lords
  • [20:01.25]of our tiny skull-sized kingdoms,
  • [20:03.82]alone at the centre of all creation.
  • [20:06.55]This kind of freedom
  • [20:08.18]has much to recommend it.
  • [20:10.40]But of course there are
  • [20:11.41]all different kinds of freedom,
  • [20:13.23]and the kind that is most precious
  • [20:14.66]you will not hear much talk about
  • [20:16.32]much in the great outside world
  • [20:18.10]of wanting and achieving and displaying.
  • [20:21.58]The really important kind
  • [20:22.64]of freedom involves attention
  • [20:25.07]and awareness and discipline,
  • [20:28.00]and being able truly
  • [20:29.07]to care about other people
  • [20:30.29]and to sacrifice for them
  • [20:31.95]over and over in myriad petty,
  • [20:34.53]unsexy ways every day.
  • [20:37.57]That is real freedom.
  • [20:39.44]That is being educated,
  • [20:41.46]and understanding how to think.
  • [20:44.14]The alternative is unconsciousness,
  • [20:46.46]the default setting,
  • [20:47.83]the rat race,
  • [20:49.25]the constant gnawing sense
  • [20:51.04]of having had,
  • [20:52.05]and lost,
  • [20:53.06]some infinite thing.
  • [20:56.19]I know that this stuff
  • [20:57.01]probably doesn't sound fun
  • [20:58.07]and breezy or grandly inspirational
  • [21:00.14]the way a commencement speech
  • [21:01.46]is supposed to sound.
  • [21:03.13]What it is,
  • [21:03.95]as far as I can see,
  • [21:05.06]is the capital-T Truth,
  • [21:06.52]with a whole lot
  • [21:07.89]of rhetorical niceties stripped away.
  • [21:09.82]You are, of course,
  • [21:10.98]free to think of it whatever you wish.
  • [21:14.21]But please don't just dismiss it
  • [21:15.79]as just some finger-wagging
  • [21:17.05]Dr Laura sermon.
  • [21:18.42]None of this stuff is really
  • [21:20.29]about morality or religion
  • [21:22.42]or dogma or big fancy questions
  • [21:24.85]of life after death.
  • [21:26.57]The capital-T Truth
  • [21:27.48]is about life BEFORE death.
  • [21:30.97]It is about the real value
  • [21:32.13]of a real education,
  • [21:33.90]which has almost nothing
  • [21:35.07]to do with knowledge,
  • [21:36.13]and everything to do with simple awareness
  • [21:40.12]awareness of what is so real and essential,
  • [21:42.55]so hidden in plain sight
  • [21:44.53]all around us,
  • [21:45.49]all the time,
  • [21:46.60]that we have to keep reminding ourselves
  • [21:48.22]over and over:
  • [21:49.83]This is water.
  • [21:51.87]This is water.
  • [21:55.25]It is unimaginably hard
  • [21:56.68]to do this,
  • [21:57.89]to stay conscious
  • [21:58.80]and alive in the adult world
  • [22:00.63]day in and day out.
  • [22:02.77]Which means yet another grand cliché
  • [22:04.90]turns out to be true
  • [22:06.36]your education really
  • [22:07.57]IS the job of a lifetime.
  • [22:10.10]And it commences: now.
  • [22:13.29]I wish you way more than luck.
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