What fear can teach us | Karen Thompson Walker

435,704 views ・ 2013-01-02

TED


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

00:00
Translator: Morton Bast Reviewer: Thu-Huong Ha
0
0
7000
00:15
One day in 1819,
1
15679
2346
00:18
3,000 miles off the coast of Chile,
2
18025
2759
00:20
in one of the most remote regions of the Pacific Ocean,
3
20784
2930
00:23
20 American sailors watched their ship flood with seawater.
4
23714
4040
00:27
They'd been struck by a sperm whale, which had ripped
5
27754
2180
00:29
a catastrophic hole in the ship's hull.
6
29934
2901
00:32
As their ship began to sink beneath the swells,
7
32835
2329
00:35
the men huddled together in three small whaleboats.
8
35164
4313
00:39
These men were 10,000 miles from home,
9
39477
2263
00:41
more than 1,000 miles from the nearest scrap of land.
10
41740
3223
00:44
In their small boats, they carried only
11
44963
2204
00:47
rudimentary navigational equipment
12
47167
1566
00:48
and limited supplies of food and water.
13
48733
3648
00:52
These were the men of the whaleship Essex,
14
52381
2204
00:54
whose story would later inspire parts of "Moby Dick."
15
54585
2655
00:57
Even in today's world, their situation would be really dire,
16
57240
2949
01:00
but think about how much worse it would have been then.
17
60189
1926
01:02
No one on land had any idea that anything had gone wrong.
18
62115
3225
01:05
No search party was coming to look for these men.
19
65340
2912
01:08
So most of us have never experienced a situation
20
68252
2862
01:11
as frightening as the one in which these sailors found themselves,
21
71114
3503
01:14
but we all know what it's like to be afraid.
22
74617
1867
01:16
We know how fear feels,
23
76484
2294
01:18
but I'm not sure we spend enough time thinking about
24
78778
2104
01:20
what our fears mean.
25
80882
1645
01:22
As we grow up, we're often encouraged to think of fear
26
82527
2837
01:25
as a weakness, just another childish thing to discard
27
85364
2913
01:28
like baby teeth or roller skates.
28
88277
2818
01:31
And I think it's no accident that we think this way.
29
91095
2495
01:33
Neuroscientists have actually shown that human beings
30
93590
2607
01:36
are hard-wired to be optimists.
31
96197
2739
01:38
So maybe that's why we think of fear, sometimes,
32
98936
2783
01:41
as a danger in and of itself.
33
101719
1978
01:43
"Don't worry," we like to say to one another. "Don't panic."
34
103697
2997
01:46
In English, fear is something we conquer.
35
106694
2649
01:49
It's something we fight. It's something we overcome.
36
109343
3833
01:53
But what if we looked at fear in a fresh way?
37
113176
2205
01:55
What if we thought of fear as an amazing act of the imagination,
38
115381
4143
01:59
something that can be as profound and insightful
39
119524
2378
02:01
as storytelling itself?
40
121902
2654
02:04
It's easiest to see this link between fear and the imagination
41
124556
2593
02:07
in young children, whose fears are often extraordinarily vivid.
42
127149
3279
02:10
When I was a child, I lived in California,
43
130428
2281
02:12
which is, you know, mostly a very nice place to live,
44
132709
2689
02:15
but for me as a child, California could also be a little scary.
45
135398
4008
02:19
I remember how frightening it was to see the chandelier
46
139406
3041
02:22
that hung above our dining table swing back and forth
47
142447
2433
02:24
during every minor earthquake,
48
144880
2175
02:27
and I sometimes couldn't sleep at night, terrified
49
147055
2303
02:29
that the Big One might strike while we were sleeping.
50
149358
2521
02:31
And what we say about kids who have fears like that
51
151879
2872
02:34
is that they have a vivid imagination.
52
154751
3228
02:37
But at a certain point, most of us learn
53
157979
2390
02:40
to leave these kinds of visions behind and grow up.
54
160369
2886
02:43
We learn that there are no monsters hiding under the bed,
55
163255
2757
02:46
and not every earthquake brings buildings down.
56
166012
2980
02:48
But maybe it's no coincidence that some of our most creative minds
57
168992
3408
02:52
fail to leave these kinds of fears behind as adults.
58
172400
3111
02:55
The same incredible imaginations that produced "The Origin of Species,"
59
175511
3861
02:59
"Jane Eyre" and "The Remembrance of Things Past,"
60
179372
2857
03:02
also generated intense worries that haunted the adult lives
61
182229
3339
03:05
of Charles Darwin, Charlotte BrontĂŤ and Marcel Proust.
62
185568
4456
03:10
So the question is, what can the rest of us learn about fear
63
190024
2929
03:12
from visionaries and young children?
64
192953
3304
03:16
Well let's return to the year 1819 for a moment,
65
196257
2860
03:19
to the situation facing the crew of the whaleship Essex.
66
199117
3687
03:22
Let's take a look at the fears that their imaginations
67
202804
2119
03:24
were generating as they drifted in the middle of the Pacific.
68
204923
3756
03:28
Twenty-four hours had now passed since the capsizing of the ship.
69
208679
3549
03:32
The time had come for the men to make a plan,
70
212228
2703
03:34
but they had very few options.
71
214931
2726
03:37
In his fascinating account of the disaster,
72
217657
2431
03:40
Nathaniel Philbrick wrote that these men were just about
73
220088
2740
03:42
as far from land as it was possible to be anywhere on Earth.
74
222828
4400
03:47
The men knew that the nearest islands they could reach
75
227228
2300
03:49
were the Marquesas Islands, 1,200 miles away.
76
229528
3776
03:53
But they'd heard some frightening rumors.
77
233304
2522
03:55
They'd been told that these islands,
78
235826
1678
03:57
and several others nearby, were populated by cannibals.
79
237504
4244
04:01
So the men pictured coming ashore only to be murdered
80
241748
2376
04:04
and eaten for dinner.
81
244124
1641
04:05
Another possible destination was Hawaii,
82
245765
2752
04:08
but given the season, the captain was afraid
83
248517
1872
04:10
they'd be struck by severe storms.
84
250389
3221
04:13
Now the last option was the longest, and the most difficult:
85
253610
3792
04:17
to sail 1,500 miles due south in hopes of reaching
86
257402
3624
04:21
a certain band of winds that could eventually
87
261026
1889
04:22
push them toward the coast of South America.
88
262915
2264
04:25
But they knew that the sheer length of this journey
89
265179
2721
04:27
would stretch their supplies of food and water.
90
267900
3511
04:31
To be eaten by cannibals, to be battered by storms,
91
271411
3406
04:34
to starve to death before reaching land.
92
274817
3361
04:38
These were the fears that danced in the imaginations of these poor men,
93
278178
3392
04:41
and as it turned out, the fear they chose to listen to
94
281570
2899
04:44
would govern whether they lived or died.
95
284469
2654
04:47
Now we might just as easily call these fears by a different name.
96
287123
4210
04:51
What if instead of calling them fears,
97
291333
2278
04:53
we called them stories?
98
293611
1611
04:55
Because that's really what fear is, if you think about it.
99
295222
2233
04:57
It's a kind of unintentional storytelling
100
297455
3060
05:00
that we are all born knowing how to do.
101
300515
2930
05:03
And fears and storytelling have the same components.
102
303445
2763
05:06
They have the same architecture.
103
306208
1865
05:08
Like all stories, fears have characters.
104
308073
2677
05:10
In our fears, the characters are us.
105
310750
2423
05:13
Fears also have plots. They have beginnings and middles and ends.
106
313173
4302
05:17
You board the plane. The plane takes off. The engine fails.
107
317475
4116
05:21
Our fears also tend to contain imagery that can be
108
321591
2568
05:24
every bit as vivid as what you might find in the pages of a novel.
109
324159
3349
05:27
Picture a cannibal, human teeth
110
327508
2956
05:30
sinking into human skin,
111
330464
2207
05:32
human flesh roasting over a fire.
112
332671
3054
05:35
Fears also have suspense.
113
335725
2736
05:38
If I've done my job as a storyteller today,
114
338461
2290
05:40
you should be wondering what happened
115
340751
1508
05:42
to the men of the whaleship Essex.
116
342259
2101
05:44
Our fears provoke in us a very similar form of suspense.
117
344360
4245
05:48
Just like all great stories, our fears focus our attention
118
348605
3553
05:52
on a question that is as important in life as it is in literature:
119
352158
3939
05:56
What will happen next?
120
356097
2757
05:58
In other words, our fears make us think about the future.
121
358854
2704
06:01
And humans, by the way, are the only creatures capable
122
361558
2018
06:03
of thinking about the future in this way,
123
363576
1670
06:05
of projecting ourselves forward in time,
124
365246
2891
06:08
and this mental time travel is just one more thing
125
368137
2412
06:10
that fears have in common with storytelling.
126
370549
3622
06:14
As a writer, I can tell you that a big part of writing fiction
127
374171
2493
06:16
is learning to predict how one event in a story
128
376664
1883
06:18
will affect all the other events,
129
378547
1744
06:20
and fear works in that same way.
130
380291
2049
06:22
In fear, just like in fiction, one thing always leads to another.
131
382340
5177
06:27
When I was writing my first novel, "The Age Of Miracles,"
132
387517
2646
06:30
I spent months trying to figure out what would happen
133
390163
2961
06:33
if the rotation of the Earth suddenly began to slow down.
134
393124
3189
06:36
What would happen to our days? What would happen to our crops?
135
396313
2892
06:39
What would happen to our minds?
136
399205
2043
06:41
And then it was only later that I realized how very similar
137
401248
3106
06:44
these questions were to the ones I used to ask myself
138
404354
2121
06:46
as a child frightened in the night.
139
406475
2237
06:48
If an earthquake strikes tonight, I used to worry,
140
408712
2531
06:51
what will happen to our house? What will happen to my family?
141
411243
3866
06:55
And the answer to those questions always took the form of a story.
142
415109
4700
06:59
So if we think of our fears as more than just fears
143
419809
2503
07:02
but as stories, we should think of ourselves
144
422312
2927
07:05
as the authors of those stories.
145
425239
2231
07:07
But just as importantly, we need to think of ourselves
146
427470
1962
07:09
as the readers of our fears, and how we choose
147
429432
2504
07:11
to read our fears can have a profound effect on our lives.
148
431936
4335
07:16
Now, some of us naturally read our fears more closely than others.
149
436271
3001
07:19
I read about a study recently of successful entrepreneurs,
150
439272
2921
07:22
and the author found that these people shared a habit
151
442193
2626
07:24
that he called "productive paranoia," which meant that
152
444819
3359
07:28
these people, instead of dismissing their fears,
153
448178
2521
07:30
these people read them closely, they studied them,
154
450699
2663
07:33
and then they translated that fear into preparation and action.
155
453362
3600
07:36
So that way, if their worst fears came true,
156
456962
1917
07:38
their businesses were ready.
157
458879
2078
07:40
And sometimes, of course, our worst fears do come true.
158
460957
4351
07:45
That's one of the things that is so extraordinary about fear.
159
465308
3159
07:48
Once in a while, our fears can predict the future.
160
468467
4922
07:53
But we can't possibly prepare for all of the fears
161
473389
3395
07:56
that our imaginations concoct.
162
476784
2398
07:59
So how can we tell the difference between
163
479182
1984
08:01
the fears worth listening to and all the others?
164
481166
3820
08:04
I think the end of the story of the whaleship Essex
165
484986
2477
08:07
offers an illuminating, if tragic, example.
166
487463
4283
08:11
After much deliberation, the men finally made a decision.
167
491746
4727
08:16
Terrified of cannibals, they decided to forgo the closest islands
168
496473
3873
08:20
and instead embarked on the longer
169
500346
2327
08:22
and much more difficult route to South America.
170
502673
3127
08:25
After more than two months at sea, the men ran out of food
171
505800
3470
08:29
as they knew they might,
172
509270
1079
08:30
and they were still quite far from land.
173
510349
2695
08:33
When the last of the survivors were finally picked up
174
513044
2887
08:35
by two passing ships, less than half of the men were left alive,
175
515931
4486
08:40
and some of them had resorted to their own form of cannibalism.
176
520417
4903
08:45
Herman Melville, who used this story as research for "Moby Dick,"
177
525320
3363
08:48
wrote years later, and from dry land, quote,
178
528683
3880
08:52
"All the sufferings of these miserable men of the Essex
179
532563
2624
08:55
might in all human probability have been avoided
180
535187
2689
08:57
had they, immediately after leaving the wreck,
181
537876
2567
09:00
steered straight for Tahiti.
182
540443
1881
09:02
But," as Melville put it, "they dreaded cannibals."
183
542324
4565
09:06
So the question is, why did these men dread cannibals
184
546889
3046
09:09
so much more than the extreme likelihood of starvation?
185
549935
4189
09:14
Why were they swayed by one story
186
554124
1867
09:15
so much more than the other?
187
555991
2639
09:18
Looked at from this angle,
188
558630
1522
09:20
theirs becomes a story about reading.
189
560152
3299
09:23
The novelist Vladimir Nabokov said that the best reader
190
563451
2656
09:26
has a combination of two very different temperaments,
191
566107
2799
09:28
the artistic and the scientific.
192
568906
2850
09:31
A good reader has an artist's passion,
193
571756
2504
09:34
a willingness to get caught up in the story,
194
574260
2423
09:36
but just as importantly, the readers also needs
195
576683
2111
09:38
the coolness of judgment of a scientist,
196
578794
3211
09:42
which acts to temper and complicate
197
582005
1491
09:43
the reader's intuitive reactions to the story.
198
583496
3398
09:46
As we've seen, the men of the Essex had no trouble with the artistic part.
199
586894
3205
09:50
They dreamed up a variety of horrifying scenarios.
200
590099
3640
09:53
The problem was that they listened to the wrong story.
201
593739
3989
09:57
Of all the narratives their fears wrote,
202
597728
2124
09:59
they responded only to the most lurid, the most vivid,
203
599852
3651
10:03
the one that was easiest for their imaginations to picture:
204
603503
3219
10:06
cannibals.
205
606722
1951
10:08
But perhaps if they'd been able to read their fears
206
608673
2281
10:10
more like a scientist, with more coolness of judgment,
207
610954
3481
10:14
they would have listened instead to the less violent
208
614435
2760
10:17
but the more likely tale, the story of starvation,
209
617195
3288
10:20
and headed for Tahiti, just as Melville's sad commentary suggests.
210
620483
5580
10:26
And maybe if we all tried to read our fears,
211
626063
2868
10:28
we too would be less often swayed
212
628931
1977
10:30
by the most salacious among them.
213
630908
1876
10:32
Maybe then we'd spend less time worrying about
214
632784
1668
10:34
serial killers and plane crashes,
215
634452
2188
10:36
and more time concerned with the subtler
216
636640
1866
10:38
and slower disasters we face:
217
638506
2054
10:40
the silent buildup of plaque in our arteries,
218
640560
2748
10:43
the gradual changes in our climate.
219
643308
2543
10:45
Just as the most nuanced stories in literature are often the richest,
220
645851
3649
10:49
so too might our subtlest fears be the truest.
221
649500
4448
10:53
Read in the right way, our fears are an amazing gift
222
653948
2897
10:56
of the imagination, a kind of everyday clairvoyance,
223
656845
2932
10:59
a way of glimpsing what might be the future
224
659777
2235
11:02
when there's still time to influence how that future will play out.
225
662012
3435
11:05
Properly read, our fears can offer us something as precious
226
665447
3396
11:08
as our favorite works of literature:
227
668843
2157
11:11
a little wisdom, a bit of insight
228
671000
3045
11:14
and a version of that most elusive thing --
229
674045
2574
11:16
the truth.
230
676619
1251
11:17
Thank you. (Applause)
231
677870
5031
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