How changing your story can change your life | Lori Gottlieb | TED

3,010,064 views ・ 2019-11-22

TED


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

00:12
I'm going to start by telling you about an email
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that I saw in my inbox recently.
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Now, I have a pretty unusual inbox
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because I'm a therapist
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and I write an advice column called "Dear Therapist,"
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so you can imagine what's in there.
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I mean, I've read thousands of very personal letters
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from strangers all over the world.
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And these letters range from heartbreak and loss,
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to spats with parents or siblings.
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I keep them in a folder on my laptop,
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and I've named it "The Problems of Living."
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So, I get this email, I get lots of emails just like this,
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and I want to bring you into my world for a second
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and read you one of these letters.
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And here's how it goes.
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"Dear Therapist,
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I've been married for 10 years
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and things were good until a couple of years ago.
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That's when my husband stopped wanting to have sex as much,
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and now we barely have sex at all."
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I'm sure you guys were not expecting this.
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(Laughter)
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"Well, last night I discovered that for the past few months,
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he's been secretly having long, late-night phone calls
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with a woman at his office.
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I googled her, and she's gorgeous.
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I can't believe this is happening.
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My father had an affair with a coworker when I was young
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and it broke our family apart.
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Needless to say, I'm devastated.
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If I stay in this marriage,
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I'll never be able to trust my husband again.
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But I don't want to put our kids through a divorce,
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stepmom situation, etc.
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What should I do?"
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Well, what do you think she should do?
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If you got this letter,
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you might be thinking about how painful infidelity is.
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Or maybe about how especially painful it is here
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because of her experience growing up with her father.
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And like me, you'd probably have some empathy for this woman,
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and you might even have some,
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how should I put this nicely,
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let's just call them "not-so-positive" feelings for her husband.
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Now, those are the kinds of things that go through my mind too,
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when I'm reading these letters in my inbox.
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But I have to be really careful when I respond to these letters
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because I know that every letter I get is actually just a story
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written by a specific author.
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And that another version of this story also exists.
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It always does.
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And I know this
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because if I've learned anything as a therapist,
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it's that we are all unreliable narrators of our own lives.
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I am.
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You are.
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And so is everyone you know.
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Which I probably shouldn't have told you
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because now you're not going to believe my TED Talk.
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Look, I don't mean that we purposely mislead.
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Most of what people tell me is absolutely true,
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just from their current points of view.
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Depending on what they emphasize or minimize,
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what they leave in, what they leave out,
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what they see and want me to see,
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they tell their stories in a particular way.
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The psychologist Jerome Bruner described this beautifully -- he said,
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"To tell a story is, inescapably, to take a moral stance."
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All of us walk around with stories about our lives.
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Why choices were made, why things went wrong,
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why we treated someone a certain way --
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because obviously, they deserved it --
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why someone treated us a certain way --
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even though, obviously, we didn't.
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Stories are the way we make sense of our lives.
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But what happens when the stories we tell
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are misleading or incomplete or just wrong?
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Well, instead of providing clarity,
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these stories keep us stuck.
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We assume that our circumstances shape our stories.
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But what I found time and again in my work
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is that the exact opposite happens.
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The way we narrate our lives shapes what they become.
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That's the danger of our stories,
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because they can really mess us up,
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but it's also their power.
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Because what it means is that if we can change our stories,
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then we can change our lives.
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And today, I want to show you how.
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Now, I told you I'm a therapist,
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and I really am, I'm not being an unreliable narrator.
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But if I'm, let's say, on an airplane,
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and someone asks what I do,
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I usually say I'm an editor.
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And I say that partly because if I say I'm a therapist,
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I always get some awkward response, like,
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"Oh, a therapist.
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Are you going to psychoanalyze me?"
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And I'm thinking, "A : no,
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and B: why would I do that here?
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If I said I was a gynecologist,
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would you ask if I were about to give you a pelvic exam?"
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(Laughter)
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But the main reason I say I'm an editor
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is because it's true.
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Now, it's the job of all therapists to help people edit,
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but what's interesting about my specific role as Dear Therapist
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is that when I edit, I'm not just editing for one person.
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I'm trying to teach a whole group of readers how to edit,
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using one letter each week as the example.
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So I'm thinking about things like,
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"What material is extraneous?"
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"Is the protagonist moving forward or going in circles,
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are the supporting characters important or are they a distraction?"
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"Do the plot points reveal a theme?"
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And what I've noticed
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is that most people's stories tend to circle around two key themes.
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The first is freedom,
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and the second is change.
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And when I edit,
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those are the themes that I start with.
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So, let's take a look at freedom for a second.
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Our stories about freedom go like this:
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we believe, in general,
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that we have an enormous amount of freedom.
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Except when it comes to the problem at hand,
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in which case, suddenly, we feel like we have none.
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Many of our stories are about feeling trapped, right?
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We feel imprisoned by our families, our jobs,
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our relationships, our pasts.
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Sometimes, we even imprison ourselves with a narrative of self-flagellation --
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I know you guys all know these stories.
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The "everyone's life is better than mine" story,
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courtesy of social media.
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The "I'm an impostor" story, the "I'm unlovable" story,
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the "nothing will ever work out for me" story.
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The "when I say, 'Hey, Siri, ' and she doesn't answer,
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that means she hates me" story.
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I see you, see, I'm not the only one.
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The woman who wrote me that letter,
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she also feels trapped.
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If she stays with her husband, she'll never trust him again,
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but if she leaves, her children will suffer.
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Now, there's a cartoon that I think is a perfect example
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of what's really going on in these stories.
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The cartoon shows a prisoner shaking the bars,
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desperately trying to get out.
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But on the right and the left, it's open.
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No bars.
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The prisoner isn't in jail.
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That's most of us.
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We feel completely trapped,
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stuck in our emotional jail cells.
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But we don't walk around the bars to freedom
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because we know there's a catch.
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Freedom comes with responsibility.
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And if we take responsibility for our role in the story,
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we might just have to change.
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And that's the other common theme that I see in our stories: change.
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Those stories sound like this:
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a person says, "I want to change."
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But what they really mean is,
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"I want another character in the story to change."
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Therapists describe this dilemma as:
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"If the queen had balls, she'd be the king."
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I mean --
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(Laughter)
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It makes no sense, right?
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Why wouldn't we want the protagonist,
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who's the hero of the story, to change?
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Well, it might be because change,
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even really positive change,
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involves a surprising amount of loss.
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Loss of the familiar.
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Even if the familiar is unpleasant or utterly miserable,
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at least we know the characters and setting and plot,
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right down to the recurring dialogue in this story.
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"You never do the laundry!"
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"I did it last time!"
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"Oh, yeah? When?"
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There's something oddly comforting
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about knowing exactly how the story is going to go
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every single time.
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To write a new chapter is to venture into the unknown.
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It's to stare at a blank page.
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And as any writer will tell you,
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there's nothing more terrifying than a blank page.
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But here's the thing.
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Once we edit our story,
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the next chapter becomes much easier to write.
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We talk so much in our culture about getting to know ourselves.
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But part of getting to know yourself is to unknow yourself.
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To let go of the one version of the story you've been telling yourself
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so that you can live your life,
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and not the story that you've been telling yourself
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about your life.
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And that's how we walk around those bars.
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So I want to go back to the letter from the woman, about the affair.
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She asked me what she should do.
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Now, I have this word taped up in my office:
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ultracrepidarianism.
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The habit of giving advice or opinions outside of one's knowledge or competence.
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It's a great word, right?
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You can use it in all different contexts,
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I'm sure you will be using it after this TED Talk.
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I use it because it reminds me that as a therapist,
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I can help people to sort out what they want to do,
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but I can't make their life choices for them.
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Only you can write your story,
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and all you need are some tools.
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So what I want to do
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is I want to edit this woman's letter together, right here,
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as a way to show how we can all revise our stories.
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And I want to start by asking you
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to think of a story that you're telling yourself right now
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that might not be serving you well.
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It might be about a circumstance you're experiencing,
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it might be about a person in your life,
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it might even be about yourself.
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And I want you to look at the supporting characters.
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Who are the people who are helping you
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to uphold the wrong version of this story?
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For instance, if the woman who wrote me that letter
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told her friends what happened,
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they would probably offer her what's called "idiot compassion."
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Now, in idiot compassion, we go along with the story,
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we say, "You're right, that's so unfair,"
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when a friend tells us that he didn't get the promotion he wanted,
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even though we know this has happened several times before
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because he doesn't really put in the effort,
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and he probably also steals office supplies.
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(Laughter)
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We say, "Yeah, you're right, he's a jerk,"
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when a friend tells us that her boyfriend broke up with her,
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even though we know that there are certain ways
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she tends to behave in relationships,
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like the incessant texting or the going through his drawers,
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that tend to lead to this outcome.
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We see the problem, it's like,
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if a fight breaks out in every bar you're going to,
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it might be you.
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(Laughter)
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In order to be good editors, we need to offer wise compassion,
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not just to our friends, but to ourselves.
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This is what's called -- I think the technical term might be --
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"delivering compassionate truth bombs."
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And these truth bombs are compassionate,
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because they help us to see what we've left out of the story.
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The truth is,
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we don't know if this woman's husband is having an affair,
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or why their sex life changed two years ago,
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or what those late-night phone calls are really about.
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And it might be that because of her history,
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she's writing a singular story of betrayal,
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but there's probably something else
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that she's not willing to let me, in her letter,
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or maybe even herself, to see.
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It's like that guy who's taking a Rorschach test.
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You all know what Rorschach tests are?
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A psychologist shows you some ink blots, they look like that,
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and asks, "What do you see?"
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So the guy looks at his ink blot and he says,
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"Well, I definitely don't see blood."
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And the examiner says,
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"Alright, tell me what else you definitely don't see."
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In writing, this is called point of view.
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What is the narrator not willing to see?
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So, I want to read you one more letter.
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And it goes like this.
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"Dear Therapist,
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I need help with my wife.
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Lately, everything I do irritates her,
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even small things, like the noise I make when I chew.
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At breakfast,
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I noticed that she even tries to secretly put extra milk in my granola
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so it won't be as crunchy."
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(Laughter)
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"I feel like she became critical of me after my father died two years ago.
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I was very close with him,
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and her father left when she was young,
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so she couldn't relate to what I was going through.
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There's a friend at work whose father died a few months ago,
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and who understands my grief.
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I wish I could talk to my wife like I talk to my friend,
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but I feel like she barely tolerates me now.
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How can I get my wife back?"
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OK.
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So, what you probably picked up on
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is that this is the same story I read you earlier,
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just told from another narrator's point of view.
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Her story was about a husband who's cheating,
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his story is about a wife who can't understand his grief.
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But what's remarkable, is that for all of their differences,
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what both of these stories are about is a longing for connection.
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And if we can get out of the first-person narration
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and write the story from another character's perspective,
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suddenly that other character becomes much more sympathetic,
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and the plot opens up.
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That's the hardest step in the editing process,
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but it's also where change begins.
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What would happen if you looked at your story
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and wrote it from another person's point of view?
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What would you see now from this wider perspective?
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That's why, when I see people who are depressed,
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I sometimes say,
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"You are not the best person to talk to you about you right now,"
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because depression distorts our stories in a very particular way.
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It narrows our perspectives.
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The same is true when we feel lonely or hurt or rejected.
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We create all kinds of stories,
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distorted through a very narrow lens
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that we don't even know we're looking through.
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And then, we've effectively become our own fake-news broadcasters.
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I have a confession to make.
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I wrote the husband's version of the letter I read you.
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You have no idea how much time I spent
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debating between granola and pita chips, by the way.
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I wrote it based on all of the alternative narratives
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that I've seen over the years,
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not just in my therapy practice, but also in my column.
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When it's happened
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that two people involved in the same situation
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have written to me, unbeknownst to the other,
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and I have two versions of the same story
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sitting in my inbox.
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That really has happened.
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I don't know what the other version of this woman's letter is,
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but I do know this:
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she has to write it.
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Because with a courageous edit,
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she'll write a much more nuanced version of her letter that she wrote to me.
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Even if her husband is having an affair of any kind --
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and maybe he is --
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she doesn't need to know what the plot is yet.
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Because just by virtue of doing an edit,
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she'll have so many more possibilities for what the plot can become.
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14:11
Now, sometimes it happens that I see people who are really stuck,
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and they're really invested in their stuckness.
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14:18
We call them help-rejecting complainers.
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I'm sure you know people like this.
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They're the people who, when you try to offer them a suggestion,
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they reject it with, "Yeah, no, that will never work, because ..."
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"Yeah, no, that's impossible, because I can't do that."
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"Yeah, I really want more friends, but people are just so annoying."
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(Laughter)
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What they're really rejecting
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is an edit to their story of misery and stuckness.
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And so, with these people, I usually take a different approach.
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And what I do is I say something else.
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I say to them,
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"We're all going to die."
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I bet you're really glad I'm not your therapist right now.
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Because they look back at me
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the way you're looking back at me right now,
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15:03
with this look of utter confusion.
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But then I explain that there's a story
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that gets written about all of us, eventually.
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It's called an obituary.
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And I say that instead of being authors of our own unhappiness,
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we get to shape these stories while we're still alive.
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We get to be the hero and not the victim in our stories,
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we get to choose what goes on the page that lives in our minds
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and shapes our realities.
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I tell them that life is about deciding which stories to listen to
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and which ones need an edit.
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And that it's worth the effort to go through a revision
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because there's nothing more important to the quality of our lives
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than the stories we tell ourselves about them.
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I say that when it comes to the stories of our lives,
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we should be aiming for our own personal Pulitzer Prize.
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Now, most of us aren't help-rejecting complainers,
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15:53
or at least we don't believe we are.
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15:55
But it's a role that is so easy to slip into
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when we feel anxious or angry or vulnerable.
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So the next time you're struggling with something,
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remember,
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we're all going to die.
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(Laughter)
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And then pull out your editing tools
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and ask yourself:
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what do I want my story to be?
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And then, go write your masterpiece.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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