Jane Fonda: Life's third act

265,789 views ・ 2012-01-04

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There have been many revolutions over the last century,
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but perhaps none as significant as the longevity revolution.
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We are living on average today 34 years longer
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than our great-grandparents did -- think about that.
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That's an entire second adult lifetime
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that's been added to our lifespan.
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And yet, for the most part,
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our culture has not come to terms with what this means.
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We're still living with the old paradigm
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of age as an arch.
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That's the metaphor, the old metaphor.
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You're born, you peak at midlife
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and decline into decrepitude.
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(Laughter)
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Age as pathology.
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But many people today -- philosophers, artists, doctors, scientists --
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are taking a new look at what I call "the third act" --
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the last three decades of life.
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They realize that this is actually a developmental stage of life
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with its own significance,
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as different from midlife as adolescence is from childhood.
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And they are asking -- we should all be asking:
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How do we use this time?
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How do we live it successfully?
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What is the appropriate new metaphor for aging?
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I've spent the last year researching and writing about this subject.
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And I have come to find that a more appropriate metaphor for aging
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is a staircase --
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the upward ascension of the human spirit,
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bringing us into wisdom, wholeness, and authenticity.
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Age not at all as pathology.
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Age as potential.
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And guess what?
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This potential is not for the lucky few.
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It turns out, most people over 50
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feel better, are less stressed, less hostile, less anxious.
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We tend to see commonalities more than differences.
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Some of the studies even say we're happier.
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(Laughter)
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This is not what I expected, trust me.
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I come from a long line of depressives.
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As I was approaching my late 40s,
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when I would wake up in the morning,
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my first six thoughts would all be negative.
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And I got scared.
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I thought, "Oh my gosh. I'm going to become a crotchety old lady."
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But now that I am actually smack-dab in the middle of my own third act,
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I realize I've never been happier.
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I have such a powerful feeling of well-being.
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And I've discovered
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that when you're inside oldness,
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as opposed to looking at it from the outside,
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fear subsides.
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You realize you're still yourself --
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maybe even more so.
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Picasso once said, "It takes a long time to become young."
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(Laughter)
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I don't want to romanticize aging.
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Obviously, there's no guarantee
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that it can be a time of fruition and growth.
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Some of it is a matter of luck.
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Some of it, obviously, is genetic.
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One third of it, in fact, is genetic.
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And there isn't much we can do about that.
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But that means that two-thirds of how well we do in the third act,
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we can do something about.
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We're going to discuss what we can do
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to make these added years really successful,
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and use them to make a difference.
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Now, let me say something about the staircase,
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which may seem like an odd metaphor for seniors,
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given the fact that many seniors are challenged by stairs.
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(Laughter)
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Myself included.
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As you may know, the entire world operates on a universal law:
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entropy, the second law of thermodynamics.
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Entropy means that everything in the world -- everything --
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is in a state of decline and decay --
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the arch.
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There's only one exception to this universal law,
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and that is the human spirit,
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which can continue to evolve upwards, the staircase,
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bringing us into wholeness, authenticity, and wisdom.
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And here's an example of what I mean.
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This upward ascension
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can happen even in the face of extreme physical challenges.
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About three years ago, I read an article in the New York Times.
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It was about a man named Neil Selinger --
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57 years old, a retired lawyer,
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who had joined the writers' group at Sarah Lawrence,
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where he found his writer's voice.
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Two years later,
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he was diagnosed with ALS, commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease.
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It's a terrible disease. It's fatal.
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It wastes the body, but the mind remains intact.
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In this article, Mr. Selinger wrote the following
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to describe what was happening to him.
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And I quote:
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"As my muscles weakened,
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my writing became stronger.
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As I slowly lost my speech,
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I gained my voice.
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As I diminished, I grew.
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As I lost so much,
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I finally started to find myself."
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Neil Selinger, to me,
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is the embodiment of mounting the staircase
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in his third act.
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Now we're all born with spirit, all of us,
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but sometimes it gets tamped down beneath the challenges of life,
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violence, abuse, neglect.
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Perhaps our parents suffered from depression.
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Perhaps they weren't able to love us beyond how we performed in the world.
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Perhaps we still suffer from a psychic pain, a wound.
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Perhaps we feel that many of our relationships
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have not had closure.
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And so we can feel unfinished.
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Perhaps the task of the third act
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is to finish up the task of finishing ourselves.
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For me, it began as I was approaching my third act, my 60th birthday.
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How was I supposed to live it?
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What was I supposed to accomplish in this final act?
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And I realized that, in order to know where I was going,
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I had to know where I'd been.
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And so I went back and I studied my first two acts,
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trying to see who I was then,
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who I really was, not who my parents or other people told me I was,
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or treated me like I was.
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But who was I?
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Who were my parents -- not as parents, but as people?
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Who were my grandparents?
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How did they treat my parents?
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These kinds of things.
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I discovered, a couple of years later,
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that this process that I had gone through
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is called by psychologists "doing a life review."
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And they say it can give new significance and clarity and meaning
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to a person's life.
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You may discover, as I did,
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that a lot of things that you used to think were your fault,
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a lot of things you used to think about yourself,
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really had nothing to do with you.
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It wasn't your fault; you're just fine.
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And you're able to go back and forgive them.
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And forgive yourself.
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You're able to free yourself
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from your past.
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You can work to change your relationship to your past.
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Now while I was writing about this,
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I came upon a book called "Man's Search for Meaning"
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by Viktor Frankl.
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Viktor Frankl was a German psychiatrist
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who'd spent five years in a Nazi concentration camp.
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And he wrote that, while he was in the camp,
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he could tell, should they ever be released,
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which of the people would be OK, and which would not.
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And he wrote this:
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"Everything you have in life can be taken from you
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except one thing:
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your freedom to choose how you will respond to the situation.
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This is what determines the quality of the life we've lived --
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not whether we've been rich or poor,
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famous or unknown,
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healthy or suffering.
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What determines our quality of life is how we relate to these realities,
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what kind of meaning we assign them,
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what kind of attitude we cling to about them,
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what state of mind we allow them to trigger."
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Perhaps the central purpose of the third act
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is to go back and to try, if appropriate,
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to change our relationship to the past.
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It turns out that cognitive research shows
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when we are able to do this,
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it manifests neurologically --
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neural pathways are created in the brain.
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You see, if you have, over time,
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reacted negatively to past events and people,
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neural pathways are laid down
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by chemical and electrical signals that are sent through the brain.
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And over time, these neural pathways become hardwired.
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They become the norm -- even if it's bad for us,
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because it causes us stress and anxiety.
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If, however,
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we can go back and alter our relationship,
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re-vision our relationship to past people and events,
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neural pathways can change.
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And if we can maintain the more positive feelings
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about the past,
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that becomes the new norm.
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It's like resetting a thermostat.
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It's not having experiences
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that makes us wise.
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It's reflecting on the experiences that we've had that makes us wise
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and that helps us become whole,
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brings wisdom and authenticity.
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It helps us become what we might have been.
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Women start off whole, don't we?
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I mean, as girls, we're feisty -- "Yeah? Who says?"
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(Laughter)
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We have agency.
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We are the subjects of our own lives.
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But very often,
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many, if not most of us, when we hit puberty,
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we start worrying about fitting in and being popular.
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And we become the subjects and objects of other people's lives.
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But now, in our third acts,
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it may be possible for us to circle back to where we started,
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and know it for the first time.
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And if we can do that,
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it will not just be for ourselves.
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Older women are the largest demographic in the world.
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If we can go back and redefine ourselves
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and become whole,
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this will create a cultural shift in the world,
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and it will give an example to younger generations
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so that they can reconceive their own lifespan.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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