Let Curiosity Lead | Yara Shahidi | TED

216,541 views ・ 2024-01-16

TED


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Do you remember how big the world felt when we were younger?
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Because my childhood was filled with time travel and adventures.
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I sat in awe of how flowers grew from a simple seed.
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I remember looking up at the sky and wondering:
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Was the Earth moving? Was the sun moving? Or was I moving?
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And I filled the rest of the time by reading books about fantasy lands.
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But slowly, the time travel and adventures of my youth
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became using my GPS
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to figure out how much traffic I'd inevitably be sitting in.
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The flowers became the screen saver to my laptop I spent way too much time on.
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I only saw the sunrise when pulling all-nighters to get work done.
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And those fantasy lands, well,
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those became essays and articles from underfunded newspapers.
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And yes, some of this is just a part of growing up, necessary even.
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But I realized the imaginative and creative forces that drove me
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had less and less space to thrive in my young adult life.
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And in being forced to look at the world as it is,
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I was missing out on the opportunity to look at the world as it could be.
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Now more than ever,
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we live in a world that requires of us an imagination
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so that we can envision what could be different.
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And while I didn't come prepared today to answer the world's largest problems,
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I would like to make a case
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for how one tool can help us continue to build new worlds
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and find our place in it.
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Curiosity.
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I don't have any fancy graphs to show you all today,
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but I would like to think that I'm sort of an expert in the field
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as my entire life has been a case study in following my curiosities.
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It started super simple.
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My grampy and I would reimagine and act out
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the entire saga of The Odyssey with my Polly Pocket dolls,
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as one does at the age of four.
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And around the age of five,
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I asked for every religious book, I mean every religious book.
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Fast forwarding to 13, I read my first short story
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from the formidable James Baldwin,
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and my life was forever changed.
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Needless to say, I was grateful to be surrounded
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by a community of people that honored my interests.
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But as I got older, I began to get confronted
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by a big question:
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Are you sure about that?
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Now this was a question I really could not escape.
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In August of 2018, right as I was embarking on my next adventure.
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I was beginning my freshman year at Harvard
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right as my television show “Grown-ish” began filming season two.
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And I was at a crossroads, because acting for me has been more than a career.
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It's given me permission to explore my fantasies.
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I feel like I gain another level of empathy
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every time I step into a different character's shoes.
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But my education has been equally as pivotal.
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Because my education has fulfilled my endless desire to know:
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to know places, to know the events that have shaped us,
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the communities that have built us,
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the obstacles that have tried to stop us,
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the mistakes that haunt us.
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But selfishly, to know about myself and my place in the world.
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So my two lifelong passions were colliding,
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and I was being told by academic advisers and entertainment folk alike --
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although no one on my team --
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that there was no symbiotic relationship between the two worlds.
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I was searching for an "and,"
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but I kept getting presented an "either-or."
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And I almost let those five words -- “Are you sure about that?” -- stop me.
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But let me cut to the chase.
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I'm speaking to you now as a Harvard alum
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with a television show going into its sixth season.
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(Applause)
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It's cool.
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And while my college predicament may have been unusual,
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I do think this experience is quite universal.
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Because, one, I’m far from the first person
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to go to school while working.
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But also I'd go so far as to say all of us juggle multiple interests,
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passions and jobs.
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Yet there comes a moment on our paths
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where we're expected to get serious,
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to find our one thing, stick to it.
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We're told that our multiple areas of interest
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that we are equally drawn to are incompatible.
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And hit with that all-too-familiar “Are you sure about that?”
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Suddenly we go from being expected to know math and a language,
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science and history,
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to operating in this narrow silo
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for the sake of becoming an expert or really good at one thing.
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I mean, think about how many times we ask each other the question,
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"What do you do?"
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Which is really a proxy in my mind for a much more pressing question,
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"Who are you right now?"
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Because what we do is only a fraction of who we are.
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And this culture of heralding expertise
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means that our curiosities are often mislabeled as distractions.
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I would love to think through what we could be missing out on
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by not actively prioritizing our curiosity.
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Here, let me put it this way.
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Curiosity has been a lifeline for me.
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It's really easy to be 23 and a pessimist.
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It doesn't take many observational skills
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to see the deep flaws and fissures of our world,
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to see how close we remain to these systems of oppression
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we swear are behind us.
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And when I say I feel affected by these flaws,
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I'm not just talking about
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some existential "I have a degree in a social science" kind of way,
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but in the very real way that it affects me and my family
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and my community every day.
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It's also easy to be 23 and struggle to find your place.
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I remember so vividly being 16
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and thinking that I could change the world.
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I was certain of it. I was one voting initiative away.
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I was one march away,
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I was one panel away from real change,
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the kind that lasts.
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And I remember when that assuredness was replaced by quicksand.
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It felt as though the more I moved and the more I struggled,
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the more I sank into the overwhelm.
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And I responded to feeling lost by finding comfort in my expertise,
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hiding behind this false sense of certainty,
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I really acted like I knew everything there was to know.
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I was suppressing my curiosity,
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but I realized that made it so much easier
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to pick apart every potential decision rather than take action.
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Now while I can't speak for everyone's experiences,
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from conversations I've had with my peers and my mentors,
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I know this feeling isn't relegated to being 23.
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Choosing to take on both college and entertainment at the same time,
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blending my two worlds,
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was a necessary recommitment to my curiosity.
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I found such a joy in discovering just how much I didn't know.
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Lessons came from everywhere:
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classes like hip-hop sampling,
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on how neo soul and blues became the basis to a new sound
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taught me how media can be used as a way of preserving legacy,
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as a way of bringing past cultures into the present.
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Playing Tinker Bell gave me permission to reignite my imagination.
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My class on W.E.B. Du Bois
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is where I discovered the name for our television production company,
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7th Sun.
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And building a television set and writers’ room
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gave me the ability to practice equitable hiring
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within an archaic system in real time.
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And in an independent study created by Dr. Cornel West,
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I learned my biggest lesson of all.
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See, there are certain elements of our society
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that we deem as universal, immovable truths,
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when they're, in fact, subjective.
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Not only are they subjective,
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they're oftentimes responsible for these systems of oppression,
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for these dangerous misconceptions about people,
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for this feeling of stuckness, this feeling like nothing can change.
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And to me, these universal truths can range from everything
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as big as socioeconomic exploitation
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to that "Are you sure about that?"
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that stops you from going off on your own and exploring.
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Conversely, this means academics and entertainment are most potent
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in their abilities to demonstrate alternate realities.
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This lesson reinvigorated my love for these two spaces
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because I realized they'd always been primed for imagination and exploration
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and gave us the ability to explore what can blossom from curiosity.
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This perspective shift taught me that I was thinking too small
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because I thought the task at hand was to merely alter these systems at play
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rather than to imagine entirely new ways of being.
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Because the results of curiosity are immeasurable.
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From Galileo's reordering of the universe
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to how the musician Prince undefined masculinity for generations.
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And oftentimes these discoveries can jeopardize past ways of thinking.
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I like to call the change that emerges from blossomed curiosities rupture.
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If tradition is this result of repetition,
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then rupture is the introduction of something fresh.
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It's bridging together two spaces often kept separate
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for the sake of achieving new ends,
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and it's of insisting that there are possibilities
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outside of the ones we've been presented with.
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But too often dreaming is relegated to the academy
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and to Silicon Valley, and to all of these exclusive institutions.
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When it is in fact the daily curiosities
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of every one of us
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that holds the most potential for rupture.
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Now if you aren't convinced just yet that you are
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a universe-shifting change maker,
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then it is my duty as a history nerd to remind you
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that most of these leaders of these social change movements
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that we credit with giving us the world that we live in today,
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change was not their day job.
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr was a preacher
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paying attention to the works of Gandhi across the ocean while reading Tolstoy.
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But I also think of my own papa, who used his position within education
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to enfranchise Black children in Madison, Wisconsin.
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I think of my cousin, Anousheh Ansari,
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who went from looking up at the stars in Iran
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to flying to the space station.
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I think about the protesters in Iran led by women and children,
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putting their lives on the line
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because they're curious about what a society looks like
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that values women, life and freedom.
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(Applause)
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Now if it isn't clear,
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do you know what the byproduct of curiosity is?
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Possibility, surprise!
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(Laughter)
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Now I’ve graduated from Harvard, and my television show is ending.
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And a couple of years ago, this really would have terrified me
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to leave two spaces that I know so well.
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But because I've built a life centered on honoring my interests,
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everything from the glockenspiel to Octavia Butler,
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I walk excitedly towards what's next
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because I know somewhere between the two lies my next adventure.
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Chasing curiosity means that my purpose is constantly unfolding in front of me.
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All I have to do is pay attention.
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And similarly, each and every one of us have a special set of interests
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that are totally unique to us, like a thumbprint.
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So please join me in recommitting to curiosity.
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Because honoring your so-called distractions is an act of creating.
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It's to sit in the grandeur of all of our options.
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It's to acknowledge our infinite possibilities
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when the world tries to convince us it is indeed finite.
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So refuse to let your world get smaller, and let’s build new futures together.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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