Where does creativity hide? | Amy Tan

455,596 views ・ 2008-04-23

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:18
The Value of Nothing: Out of Nothing Comes Something.
0
18330
4000
00:22
That was an essay I wrote when I was 11 years old
1
22330
4000
00:26
and I got a B+. (Laughter)
2
26330
2000
00:28
What I'm going to talk about: nothing out of something, and how we create.
3
28330
4000
00:32
And I'm gonna try and do that within
4
32330
2000
00:34
the 18-minute time span that we were told to stay within,
5
34330
5000
00:39
and to follow the TED commandments:
6
39330
2000
00:41
that is, actually, something that creates
7
41330
3000
00:44
a near-death experience,
8
44330
2000
00:46
but near-death is good for creativity.
9
46330
2000
00:48
(Laughter) OK.
10
48330
4000
00:52
So, I also want to explain,
11
52330
2000
00:54
because Dave Eggers said he was going to heckle me
12
54330
3000
00:57
if I said anything that was a lie, or not true to universal creativity.
13
57330
5000
01:02
And I've done it this way for half the audience, who is scientific.
14
62330
3000
01:05
When I say we, I don't mean you, necessarily;
15
65330
4000
01:09
I mean me, and my right brain, my left brain
16
69330
3000
01:12
and the one that's in between that is the censor
17
72330
2000
01:14
and tells me what I'm saying is wrong.
18
74330
2000
01:16
And I'm going do that also by looking at
19
76330
3000
01:19
what I think is part of my creative process,
20
79330
3000
01:22
which includes a number of things that happened, actually --
21
82330
3000
01:25
the nothing started even earlier than the moment
22
85330
3000
01:28
in which I'm creating something new.
23
88330
3000
01:31
And that includes nature, and nurture,
24
91330
5000
01:36
and what I refer to as nightmares.
25
96330
3000
01:39
Now in the nature area, we look at whether or not
26
99330
4000
01:43
we are innately equipped with something, perhaps
27
103330
3000
01:46
in our brains, some abnormal chromosome
28
106330
3000
01:49
that causes this muse-like effect.
29
109330
4000
01:53
And some people would say that we're born with it in some other means.
30
113330
6000
01:59
And others, like my mother,
31
119330
2000
02:01
would say that I get my material from past lives.
32
121330
6000
02:07
Some people would also say that creativity
33
127330
3000
02:10
may be a function of some other neurological quirk --
34
130330
5000
02:15
van Gogh syndrome -- that you have a little bit of, you know, psychosis, or depression.
35
135330
5000
02:20
I do have to say, somebody -- I read recently
36
140330
3000
02:23
that van Gogh wasn't really necessarily psychotic,
37
143330
3000
02:26
that he might have had temporal lobe seizures,
38
146330
2000
02:28
and that might have caused his spurt of creativity, and I don't --
39
148330
4000
02:32
I suppose it does something in some part of your brain.
40
152330
3000
02:35
And I will mention that I actually developed
41
155330
2000
02:37
temporal lobe seizures a number of years ago,
42
157330
4000
02:41
but it was during the time I was writing my last book,
43
161330
3000
02:44
and some people say that book is quite different.
44
164330
4000
02:48
I think that part of it also begins with a sense of identity crisis:
45
168330
5000
02:53
you know, who am I, why am I this particular person,
46
173330
4000
02:57
why am I not black like everybody else?
47
177330
5000
03:02
And sometimes you're equipped with skills,
48
182330
2000
03:04
but they may not be the kind of skills that enable creativity.
49
184330
4000
03:08
I used to draw. I thought I would be an artist.
50
188330
3000
03:11
And I had a miniature poodle.
51
191330
2000
03:13
And it wasn't bad, but it wasn't really creative.
52
193330
2000
03:15
Because all I could really do was represent in a very one-on-one way.
53
195330
5000
03:20
And I have a sense that I probably copied this from a book.
54
200330
4000
03:24
And then, I also wasn't really shining in a certain area that I wanted to be,
55
204330
6000
03:30
and you know, you look at those scores, and it wasn't bad,
56
210330
4000
03:34
but it was not certainly predictive that I would one day make
57
214330
4000
03:38
my living out of the artful arrangement of words.
58
218330
4000
03:42
Also, one of the principles of creativity is to have a little childhood trauma.
59
222330
6000
03:48
And I had the usual kind that I think a lot of people had,
60
228330
4000
03:52
and that is that, you know, I had expectations placed on me.
61
232330
4000
03:56
That figure right there, by the way,
62
236330
3000
03:59
figure right there was a toy given to me when I was but nine years old,
63
239330
5000
04:04
and it was to help me become a doctor from a very early age.
64
244330
5000
04:09
I have some ones that were long lasting: from the age of five to 15,
65
249330
5000
04:14
this was supposed to be my side occupation,
66
254330
3000
04:17
and it led to a sense of failure.
67
257330
3000
04:20
But actually, there was something quite real in my life
68
260330
3000
04:23
that happened when I was about 14.
69
263330
2000
04:25
And it was discovered that my brother, in 1967, and then my father,
70
265330
5000
04:30
six months later, had brain tumors.
71
270330
2000
04:32
And my mother believed that something had gone wrong,
72
272330
5000
04:37
and she was gonna find out what it was, and she was gonna fix it.
73
277330
3000
04:40
My father was a Baptist minister, and he believed in miracles,
74
280330
4000
04:44
and that God's will would take care of that.
75
284330
3000
04:47
But, of course, they ended up dying, six months apart.
76
287330
3000
04:50
And after that, my mother believed that it was fate, or curses
77
290330
4000
04:54
-- she went looking through all the reasons in the universe
78
294330
3000
04:57
why this would have happened.
79
297330
2000
04:59
Everything except randomness. She did not believe in randomness.
80
299330
5000
05:04
There was a reason for everything.
81
304330
2000
05:06
And one of the reasons, she thought, was that her mother,
82
306330
2000
05:08
who had died when she was very young, was angry at her.
83
308330
5000
05:13
And so, I had this notion of death all around me,
84
313330
3000
05:16
because my mother also believed that I would be next, and she would be next.
85
316330
5000
05:21
And when you are faced with the prospect of death very soon,
86
321330
3000
05:24
you begin to think very much about everything.
87
324330
5000
05:29
You become very creative, in a survival sense.
88
329330
4000
05:33
And this, then, led to my big questions.
89
333330
4000
05:37
And they're the same ones that I have today.
90
337330
3000
05:40
And they are: why do things happen, and how do things happen?
91
340330
5000
05:45
And the one my mother asked: how do I make things happen?
92
345330
7000
05:52
It's a wonderful way to look at these questions, when you write a story.
93
352330
5000
05:57
Because, after all, in that framework, between page one and 300,
94
357330
6000
06:03
you have to answer this question of why things happen, how things happen,
95
363330
4000
06:07
in what order they happen. What are the influences?
96
367330
3000
06:10
How do I, as the narrator, as the writer, also influence that?
97
370330
4000
06:14
And it's also one that, I think, many of our scientists have been asking.
98
374330
4000
06:18
It's a kind of cosmology, and I have to develop a cosmology of my own universe,
99
378330
6000
06:24
as the creator of that universe.
100
384330
2000
06:26
And you see, there's a lot of back and forth
101
386330
4000
06:30
in trying to make that happen, trying to figure it out
102
390330
3000
06:33
-- years and years, oftentimes.
103
393330
4000
06:37
So, when I look at creativity, I also think that it is this sense or this inability
104
397330
7000
06:44
to repress, my looking at associations in practically anything in life.
105
404330
4000
06:48
And I got a lot of them during what's been going on
106
408330
4000
06:52
throughout this conference,
107
412330
3000
06:55
almost everything that's been going on.
108
415330
2000
06:57
And so I'm going to use, as the metaphor, this association:
109
417330
4000
07:01
quantum mechanics, which I really don't understand,
110
421330
4000
07:05
but I'm still gonna use it as the process
111
425330
2000
07:07
for explaining how it is the metaphor.
112
427330
4000
07:11
So, in quantum mechanics, of course, you have dark energy and dark matter.
113
431330
7000
07:18
And it's the same thing in looking at these questions of how things happen.
114
438330
4000
07:22
There's a lot of unknown, and you often don't know what it is except by its absence.
115
442330
6000
07:28
But when you make those associations,
116
448330
2000
07:30
you want them to come together in a kind of synergy in the story,
117
450330
4000
07:34
and what you're finding is what matters. The meaning.
118
454330
4000
07:38
And that's what I look for in my work, a personal meaning.
119
458330
4000
07:42
There is also the uncertainty principle, which is part of quantum mechanics,
120
462330
5000
07:47
as I understand it. (Laughter)
121
467330
2000
07:49
And this happens constantly in the writing.
122
469330
4000
07:53
And there's the terrible and dreaded observer effect,
123
473330
3000
07:56
in which you're looking for something, and
124
476330
2000
07:58
you know, things are happening simultaneously,
125
478330
3000
08:01
and you're looking at it in a different way,
126
481330
2000
08:03
and you're trying to really look for the about-ness,
127
483330
4000
08:07
or what is this story about. And if you try too hard,
128
487330
4000
08:11
then you will only write the about.
129
491330
3000
08:14
You won't discover anything.
130
494330
3000
08:17
And what you were supposed to find,
131
497330
2000
08:19
what you hoped to find in some serendipitous way,
132
499330
3000
08:22
is no longer there.
133
502330
3000
08:25
Now, I don't want to ignore
134
505330
2000
08:27
the other side of what happens in our universe,
135
507330
3000
08:30
like many of our scientists have.
136
510330
3000
08:33
And so, I am going to just throw in string theory here,
137
513330
3000
08:36
and just say that creative people are multidimensional,
138
516330
3000
08:39
and there are 11 levels, I think, of anxiety.
139
519330
4000
08:43
(Laughter) And they all operate at the same time.
140
523330
4000
08:47
There is also a big question of ambiguity.
141
527330
3000
08:50
And I would link that to something called the cosmological constant.
142
530330
6000
08:56
And you don't know what is operating, but something is operating there.
143
536330
2000
08:58
And ambiguity, to me, is very uncomfortable
144
538330
4000
09:02
in my life, and I have it. Moral ambiguity.
145
542330
3000
09:05
It is constantly there. And, just as an example,
146
545330
4000
09:09
this is one that recently came to me.
147
549330
3000
09:12
It was something I read in an editorial by a woman
148
552330
2000
09:14
who was talking about the war in Iraq. And she said,
149
554330
4000
09:18
"Save a man from drowning, you are responsible to him for life."
150
558330
3000
09:21
A very famous Chinese saying, she said.
151
561330
3000
09:24
And that means because we went into Iraq, we should stay there
152
564330
4000
09:28
until things were solved. You know, maybe even 100 years.
153
568330
4000
09:32
So, there was another one that I came across,
154
572330
5000
09:37
and it's "saving fish from drowning."
155
577330
3000
09:40
And it's what Buddhist fishermen say,
156
580330
2000
09:42
because they're not supposed to kill anything.
157
582330
3000
09:45
And they also have to make a living, and people need to be fed.
158
585330
3000
09:48
So their way of rationalizing that is they are saving the fish from drowning,
159
588330
4000
09:52
and unfortunately, in the process the fish die.
160
592330
3000
09:55
Now, what's encapsulated in both these drowning metaphors
161
595330
5000
10:00
-- actually, one of them is my mother's interpretation,
162
600330
3000
10:03
and it is a famous Chinese saying, because she said it to me:
163
603330
3000
10:06
"save a man from drowning, you are responsible to him for life."
164
606330
3000
10:09
And it was a warning -- don't get involved in other people's business,
165
609330
4000
10:13
or you're going to get stuck.
166
613330
2000
10:15
OK. I think if somebody really was drowning, she'd save them.
167
615330
4000
10:19
But, both of these sayings -- saving a fish from drowning,
168
619330
4000
10:23
or saving a man from drowning -- to me they had to do with intentions.
169
623330
4000
10:27
And all of us in life, when we see a situation, we have a response.
170
627330
5000
10:32
And then we have intentions.
171
632330
2000
10:34
There's an ambiguity of what that should be that we should do,
172
634330
5000
10:39
and then we do something.
173
639330
2000
10:41
And the results of that may not match what our intentions had been.
174
641330
3000
10:44
Maybe things go wrong. And so, after that, what are our responsibilities?
175
644330
5000
10:49
What are we supposed to do?
176
649330
2000
10:51
Do we stay in for life,
177
651330
2000
10:53
or do we do something else and justify and say, well, my intentions were good,
178
653330
5000
10:58
and therefore I cannot be held responsible for all of it?
179
658330
6000
11:04
That is the ambiguity in my life
180
664330
2000
11:06
that really disturbed me, and led me to write a book called
181
666330
4000
11:10
"Saving Fish From Drowning."
182
670330
2000
11:12
I saw examples of that. Once I identified this question, it was all over the place.
183
672330
7000
11:19
I got these hints everywhere.
184
679330
2000
11:21
And then, in a way, I knew that they had always been there.
185
681330
3000
11:24
And then writing, that's what happens. I get these hints, these clues,
186
684330
3000
11:27
and I realize that they've been obvious, and yet they have not been.
187
687330
7000
11:34
And what I need, in effect, is a focus.
188
694330
4000
11:38
And when I have the question, it is a focus.
189
698330
2000
11:40
And all these things that seem to be flotsam and jetsam in life actually go through
190
700330
5000
11:45
that question, and what happens is those particular things become relevant.
191
705330
5000
11:50
And it seems like it's happening all the time.
192
710330
2000
11:52
You think there's a sort of coincidence going on, a serendipity,
193
712330
3000
11:55
in which you're getting all this help from the universe.
194
715330
3000
11:58
And it may also be explained that now you have a focus.
195
718330
3000
12:01
And you are noticing it more often.
196
721330
4000
12:05
But you apply this.
197
725330
3000
12:08
You begin to look at things having to do with your tensions.
198
728330
3000
12:11
Your brother, who's fallen in trouble, do you take care of him?
199
731330
3000
12:14
Why or why not?
200
734330
2000
12:16
It may be something that is perhaps more serious
201
736330
4000
12:20
-- as I said, human rights in Burma.
202
740330
3000
12:23
I was thinking that I shouldn't go because somebody said, if I did, it would show
203
743330
4000
12:27
that I approved of the military regime there.
204
747330
3000
12:30
And then, after a while, I had to ask myself,
205
750330
3000
12:33
"Why do we take on knowledge, why do we take on assumptions
206
753330
2000
12:35
that other people have given us?"
207
755330
3000
12:38
And it was the same thing that I felt when I was growing up,
208
758330
3000
12:41
and was hearing these rules of moral conduct from my father,
209
761330
5000
12:46
who was a Baptist minister.
210
766330
2000
12:48
So I decided that I would go to Burma for my own intentions,
211
768330
5000
12:53
and still didn't know that if I went there,
212
773330
3000
12:56
what the result of that would be, if I wrote a book --
213
776330
3000
12:59
and I just would have to face that later, when the time came.
214
779330
4000
13:03
We are all concerned with things that we see in the world that we are aware of.
215
783330
5000
13:08
We come to this point and say, what do I as an individual do?
216
788330
5000
13:13
Not all of us can go to Africa, or work at hospitals,
217
793330
4000
13:17
so what do we do, if we have this moral response, this feeling?
218
797330
7000
13:24
Also, I think one of the biggest things we are all looking at,
219
804330
3000
13:27
and we talked about today, is genocide.
220
807330
3000
13:30
This leads to this question.
221
810330
3000
13:33
When I look at all these things that are morally ambiguous and uncomfortable,
222
813330
5000
13:38
and I consider what my intentions should be,
223
818330
2000
13:40
I realize it goes back to this identity question that I had when I was a child
224
820330
5000
13:45
-- and why am I here, and what is the meaning of my life,
225
825330
3000
13:48
and what is my place in the universe?
226
828330
2000
13:50
It seems so obvious, and yet it is not.
227
830330
3000
13:53
We all hate moral ambiguity in some sense,
228
833330
5000
13:58
and yet it is also absolutely necessary.
229
838330
4000
14:02
In writing a story, it is the place where I begin.
230
842330
4000
14:06
Sometimes I get help from the universe, it seems.
231
846330
4000
14:10
My mother would say it was the ghost of my grandmother from the very first book,
232
850330
3000
14:13
because it seemed I knew things I was not supposed to know.
233
853330
3000
14:16
Instead of writing that the grandmother died accidentally,
234
856330
3000
14:19
from an overdose of opium, while having too much of a good time,
235
859330
3000
14:22
I actually put down in the story that the woman killed herself,
236
862330
5000
14:27
and that actually was the way it happened.
237
867330
2000
14:29
And my mother decided that that information must have come from my grandmother.
238
869330
5000
14:34
There are also things, quite uncanny,
239
874330
3000
14:37
which bring me information that will help me in the writing of the book.
240
877330
4000
14:41
In this case, I was writing a story
241
881330
2000
14:43
that included some kind of detail, period of history, a certain location.
242
883330
4000
14:47
And I needed to find something historically that would match that.
243
887330
3000
14:50
And I took down this book, and I --
244
890330
2000
14:52
first page that I flipped it to was exactly the setting, and the time period,
245
892330
6000
14:58
and the kind of character I needed -- was the Taiping rebellion,
246
898330
3000
15:01
happening in the area near Guilin, outside of that,
247
901330
4000
15:05
and a character who thought he was the son of God.
248
905330
3000
15:08
You wonder, are these things random chance?
249
908330
3000
15:11
Well, what is random? What is chance? What is luck?
250
911330
4000
15:15
What are things that you get from the universe that you can't really explain?
251
915330
4000
15:19
And that goes into the story, too.
252
919330
2000
15:21
These are the things I constantly think about from day to day.
253
921330
3000
15:24
Especially when good things happen,
254
924330
2000
15:26
and, in particular, when bad things happen.
255
926330
4000
15:30
But I do think there's a kind of serendipity,
256
930330
2000
15:32
and I do want to know what those elements are,
257
932330
3000
15:35
so I can thank them, and also try to find them in my life.
258
935330
5000
15:40
Because, again, I think that when I am aware of them, more of them happen.
259
940330
4000
15:44
Another chance encounter is when I went to a place
260
944330
4000
15:48
-- I just was with some friends, and we drove randomly to a different place,
261
948330
4000
15:52
and we ended up in this non-tourist location,
262
952330
4000
15:56
a beautiful village, pristine.
263
956330
2000
15:58
And we walked three valleys beyond,
264
958330
2000
16:00
and the third valley, there was something quite mysterious and ominous,
265
960330
3000
16:03
a discomfort I felt. And then I knew that had to be [the] setting of my book.
266
963330
6000
16:09
And in writing one of the scenes, it happened in that third valley.
267
969330
3000
16:12
For some reason I wrote about cairns -- stacks of rocks -- that a man was building.
268
972330
7000
16:19
And I didn't know exactly why I had it, but it was so vivid.
269
979330
3000
16:22
I got stuck, and a friend, when she asked if I would go for a walk with her dogs,
270
982330
5000
16:27
that I said, sure. And about 45 minutes later,
271
987330
3000
16:30
walking along the beach, I came across this.
272
990330
4000
16:34
And it was a man, a Chinese man,
273
994330
2000
16:36
and he was stacking these things, not with glue, not with anything.
274
996330
3000
16:39
And I asked him, "How is it possible to do this?"
275
999330
3000
16:42
And he said, "Well, I guess with everything in life, there's a place of balance."
276
1002330
4000
16:46
And this was exactly the meaning of my story at that point.
277
1006330
5000
16:51
I had so many examples -- I have so many instances like this, when I'm writing a story,
278
1011330
5000
16:56
and I cannot explain it.
279
1016330
2000
16:58
Is it because I had the filter that I have such a strong coincidence
280
1018330
4000
17:02
in writing about these things?
281
1022330
3000
17:05
Or is it a kind of serendipity that we cannot explain, like the cosmological constant?
282
1025330
7000
17:12
A big thing that I also think about is accidents.
283
1032330
3000
17:15
And as I said, my mother did not believe in randomness.
284
1035330
3000
17:18
What is the nature of accidents?
285
1038330
2000
17:20
And how are we going to assign what the responsibility and the causes are,
286
1040330
4000
17:24
outside of a court of law?
287
1044330
3000
17:27
I was able to see that in a firsthand way,
288
1047330
3000
17:30
when I went to beautiful Dong village, in Guizhou, the poorest province of China.
289
1050330
6000
17:36
And I saw this beautiful place. I knew I wanted to come back.
290
1056330
2000
17:38
And I had a chance to do that, when National Geographic asked me
291
1058330
3000
17:41
if I wanted to write anything about China.
292
1061330
2000
17:43
And I said yes, about this village of singing people, singing minority.
293
1063330
5000
17:48
And they agreed, and between the time I saw this place and the next time I went,
294
1068330
5000
17:53
there was a terrible accident. A man, an old man, fell asleep,
295
1073330
4000
17:57
and his quilt dropped in a pan of fire that kept him warm.
296
1077330
3000
18:00
60 homes were destroyed, and 40 were damaged.
297
1080330
6000
18:06
Responsibility was assigned to the family.
298
1086330
2000
18:08
The man's sons were banished to live three kilometers away, in a cowshed.
299
1088330
4000
18:12
And, of course, as Westerners, we say, "Well, it was an accident. That's not fair.
300
1092330
4000
18:16
It's the son, not the father."
301
1096330
2000
18:18
When I go on a story, I have to let go of those kinds of beliefs.
302
1098330
6000
18:24
It takes a while, but I have to let go of them and just go there, and be there.
303
1104330
4000
18:28
And so I was there on three occasions, different seasons.
304
1108330
3000
18:31
And I began to sense something different about the history,
305
1111330
4000
18:35
and what had happened before, and the nature of life in a very poor village,
306
1115330
4000
18:39
and what you find as your joys, and your rituals, your traditions, your links
307
1119330
3000
18:42
with other families. And I saw how this had a kind of justice, in its responsibility.
308
1122330
10000
18:52
I was able to find out also about the ceremony that they were using,
309
1132330
5000
18:57
a ceremony they hadn't used in about 29 years. And it was to send some men
310
1137330
8000
19:05
-- a Feng Shui master sent men down to the underworld on ghost horses.
311
1145330
4000
19:09
Now you, as Westerners, and I, as Westerners,
312
1149330
3000
19:12
would say well, that's superstition. But after being there for a while,
313
1152330
3000
19:15
and seeing the amazing things that happened,
314
1155330
3000
19:18
you begin to wonder whose beliefs are those that are in operation in the world,
315
1158330
5000
19:23
determining how things happen.
316
1163330
3000
19:26
So I remained with them, and the more I wrote that story,
317
1166330
3000
19:29
the more I got into those beliefs, and I think that's important for me
318
1169330
4000
19:33
-- to take on the beliefs, because that is where the story is real,
319
1173330
3000
19:36
and that is where I'm gonna find the answers
320
1176330
2000
19:38
to how I feel about certain questions that I have in life.
321
1178330
5000
19:43
Years go by, of course, and the writing, it doesn't happen instantly,
322
1183330
3000
19:46
as I'm trying to convey it to you here at TED.
323
1186330
4000
19:50
The book comes and it goes. When it arrives, it is no longer my book.
324
1190330
5000
19:55
It is in the hands of readers, and they interpret it differently.
325
1195330
4000
19:59
But I go back to this question of, how do I create something out of nothing?
326
1199330
6000
20:05
And how do I create my own life?
327
1205330
3000
20:08
And I think it is by questioning,
328
1208330
2000
20:10
and saying to myself that there are no absolute truths.
329
1210330
5000
20:15
I believe in specifics, the specifics of story,
330
1215330
4000
20:19
and the past, the specifics of that past,
331
1219330
3000
20:22
and what is happening in the story at that point.
332
1222330
4000
20:26
I also believe that in thinking about things --
333
1226330
3000
20:29
my thinking about luck, and fate, and coincidences and accidents,
334
1229330
4000
20:33
God's will, and the synchrony of mysterious forces --
335
1233330
4000
20:37
I will come to some notion of what that is, how we create.
336
1237330
6000
20:43
I have to think of my role. Where I am in the universe,
337
1243330
4000
20:47
and did somebody intend for me to be that way, or is it just something I came up with?
338
1247330
5000
20:52
And I also can find that by imagining fully, and becoming what is imagined --
339
1252330
8000
21:00
and yet is in that real world, the fictional world.
340
1260330
3000
21:03
And that is how I find particles of truth, not the absolute truth, or the whole truth.
341
1263330
8000
21:11
And they have to be in all possibilities,
342
1271330
2000
21:13
including those I never considered before.
343
1273330
3000
21:16
So, there are never complete answers.
344
1276330
3000
21:19
Or rather, if there is an answer, it is to remind
345
1279330
5000
21:24
myself that there is uncertainty in everything,
346
1284330
4000
21:28
and that is good, because then I will discover something new.
347
1288330
5000
21:33
And if there is a partial answer, a more complete answer from me,
348
1293330
4000
21:37
it is to simply imagine.
349
1297330
3000
21:40
And to imagine is to put myself in that story,
350
1300330
4000
21:44
until there was only -- there is a transparency between me and the story that I am creating.
351
1304330
6000
21:50
And that's how I've discovered that if I feel what is in the story
352
1310330
6000
21:56
-- in one story -- then I come the closest, I think,
353
1316330
6000
22:02
to knowing what compassion is, to feeling that compassion.
354
1322330
4000
22:06
Because for everything,
355
1326330
2000
22:08
in that question of how things happen, it has to do with the feeling.
356
1328330
4000
22:12
I have to become the story in order to understand a lot of that.
357
1332330
6000
22:18
We've come to the end of the talk,
358
1338330
2000
22:20
and I will reveal what is in the bag, and it is the muse,
359
1340330
4000
22:24
and it is the things that transform in our lives,
360
1344330
3000
22:27
that are wonderful and stay with us.
361
1347330
10000
22:37
There she is.
362
1357330
1000
22:38
Thank you very much!
363
1358330
2000
22:40
(Applause)
364
1360330
6000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7