How to Find Creativity and Purpose in the Face of Adversity | Suleika Jaouad | TED

27,133 views ・ 2024-03-13

TED


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

00:04
Susan Zimmerman: Welcome, Suleika.
0
4220
1840
00:06
Suleika Jaouad: Hi, Susan.
1
6060
1440
00:07
SZ: I'm going to dive right in with "American Symphony."
2
7500
3240
00:10
I would love to first say thank you
3
10740
2520
00:13
for sharing your story with us in this gorgeous documentary.
4
13260
3960
00:17
Can you share a little bit more how this project came to be?
5
17220
3160
00:20
SJ: So the director of “American Symphony,”
6
20420
4120
00:24
Matt Heineman, who is an extraordinarily brilliant filmmaker
7
24540
4560
00:29
and a dear friend of ours,
8
29100
3320
00:32
says that if you end up with a project that you started with,
9
32460
5840
00:38
you're not doing your job right
10
38340
1480
00:39
because you weren't listening along the way.
11
39820
2280
00:42
And that proved to be true in ways that we couldn't possibly imagine.
12
42100
5760
00:47
I knew Matt through my own work.
13
47860
3560
00:51
Jon had worked with him on his last film, "The First Wave,"
14
51460
4040
00:55
that took place during the pandemic,
15
55540
2800
00:58
and he and Jon started talking about the idea
16
58340
3240
01:01
of a short process film
17
61620
1680
01:03
that was going to follow Jon as he composed what he called
18
63340
5120
01:08
“American Symphony,”
19
68500
1440
01:09
which was his reimagination of what a symphony would look like
20
69980
4280
01:14
if it were created in the 21st century.
21
74300
3280
01:17
And Jon was committed to really upturning what we think of as a symphony.
22
77580
6960
01:24
He wanted to travel all across the country to recruit jazz musicians
23
84540
4880
01:29
and blues musicians and classical musicians
24
89460
3120
01:32
and Indigenous musicians
25
92620
1840
01:34
and musicians who don't know how to read music
26
94500
2640
01:37
and to figure out how to bring them all together.
27
97180
2320
01:39
So initially, that was the film,
28
99500
1600
01:41
and about a week after we decided to move forward with that project,
29
101140
5120
01:46
on the very same day I began chemo
30
106300
4360
01:50
and the same week I learned that after a decade-long remission,
31
110700
4280
01:55
my leukemia was back,
32
115020
1760
01:56
Jon was also nominated
33
116820
2000
01:58
for a record historical number of Grammys.
34
118860
5520
02:04
And so right from the beginning of the filming process,
35
124380
5040
02:09
the initial conceit changed.
36
129460
2160
02:11
And it was the kind of project
37
131620
4360
02:16
and really a testament to Matt's style,
38
136020
4080
02:20
where we weren't too worried about figuring out what the story was.
39
140140
4560
02:24
Matt specializes in cinema verité,
40
144740
2800
02:27
and so he followed us from sun up until we went to sleep every single day
41
147580
6360
02:33
for about seven months.
42
153940
1320
02:35
And at the end of that process,
43
155260
2960
02:38
we had 1,500 hours of footage,
44
158220
3040
02:41
which, as you can imagine, is a lot of footage.
45
161300
4000
02:45
But we knew that we wanted to document all of it,
46
165340
3560
02:48
to document what it means to be living a life of contrasts,
47
168940
6920
02:55
what is required of us when we're in the belly of the beast
48
175900
4680
03:00
and how creativity and our individual
49
180580
5920
03:06
and joint, sort of, creative language inform that project.
50
186500
3800
03:10
SZ: For two people,
51
190300
1520
03:11
who are very much the directors of their own creative projects and worlds,
52
191820
6360
03:18
how did you negotiate creative control in your work with Matt Heineman,
53
198220
4680
03:22
especially in such vulnerable and personal circumstances?
54
202940
3960
03:26
SJ: You know, it wasn't easy for either of us
55
206900
3040
03:29
because we are used to,
56
209980
3680
03:33
you know, captaining our own creative ships.
57
213700
2960
03:37
But I think, you know, surrendering to the process was really important.
58
217780
5800
03:43
We didn't want to get in the way of the filming.
59
223620
3960
03:47
But we were also very much creative partners with Matt.
60
227620
3680
03:51
And I'm not sure that a film like this would have been possible
61
231340
4440
03:55
without deep trust with the filmmaker
62
235820
3280
03:59
and ongoing conversations about what we were comfortable with
63
239140
3440
04:02
and what we weren't,
64
242620
1160
04:03
and we had those conversations daily.
65
243820
2360
04:06
We had them weekly and monthly.
66
246220
2280
04:08
And the truth is
67
248540
1520
04:10
that when I decided
68
250060
3840
04:13
to participate in this film,
69
253900
3320
04:17
I had no idea if I was going to survive long enough
70
257260
4280
04:21
to actually see the finished product.
71
261540
3000
04:24
And what Jon would always say is:
72
264580
3000
04:27
if nothing else comes out of this,
73
267580
2040
04:29
we'll have the world's most beautifully shot home videos
74
269660
3960
04:33
to share with our families and loved ones.
75
273660
2680
04:36
So it was really, you know,
76
276380
2000
04:38
a process that required trust.
77
278420
1760
04:40
It required a leap of faith,
78
280220
2400
04:42
and it required surrendering the kind of creative control that we're used to.
79
282660
6160
04:48
SZ: You also shared, in a recent “Isolation Journal”:
80
288820
3960
04:52
"When the ceiling caves in, it's terrifying and disorienting.
81
292820
4360
04:57
Yet those moments have also been the most fertile stretches of personal
82
297220
4880
05:02
and creative growth for me.
83
302140
1720
05:03
A couple of months after my second bone marrow transplant,
84
303900
2720
05:06
I was rehospitalized due to complications,
85
306660
2520
05:09
and I told one of my nurses that I get my best work done there,
86
309180
3120
05:12
and I joked that it had become my favorite artist’s residency.”
87
312340
3960
05:16
Can you share more about these creative periods
88
316820
3680
05:20
during extremely challenging circumstances?
89
320500
3320
05:24
SJ: Yeah, so I want to go on record and say that, you know,
90
324500
5600
05:30
these moments when the ceiling caves in on you,
91
330140
3680
05:33
when you can no longer assume structural stability ...
92
333860
5000
05:41
don’t suddenly fill me with creative inspiration.
93
341340
4160
05:45
It's the very opposite.
94
345500
1680
05:48
I had so many plans,
95
348020
3720
05:51
both professional and personal,
96
351740
2520
05:54
before I learned of my relapse.
97
354300
2480
05:56
I was getting ready to write a reported book
98
356780
3480
06:00
that would require me to be on the road for long stretches of time.
99
360260
4320
06:04
Jon and I were talking about getting married and starting a family,
100
364580
4040
06:08
and I moved through my own version of the five stages of grief.
101
368660
4760
06:13
And the first is shock,
102
373420
2040
06:15
often mixed with fear.
103
375500
3600
06:19
And then I get to a place of defeat.
104
379140
3560
06:22
But something interesting happens
105
382740
3040
06:25
when the possibility of productivity is taken away from you.
106
385820
4840
06:30
And when I’m able to move past that grief and that fear,
107
390700
5160
06:35
and to start to get curious about the isolation
108
395860
5720
06:41
and the sense of solitude that comes with, you know,
109
401620
4480
06:46
having been brought to your knees on the floor
110
406140
3760
06:49
by some kind of life event.
111
409940
2840
06:52
Even though it doesn't feel like I'm doing something,
112
412820
2880
06:55
I'm in the chrysalis.
113
415700
2320
06:58
I'm as larval and goopy and unformed as I ever feel.
114
418060
6800
07:04
And what these periods of being extremely sick
115
424860
6000
07:10
have done for me
116
430900
1160
07:12
is that I've had to get good with my own company.
117
432060
3040
07:15
I've had to get good with quiet, with having no plans.
118
435140
5960
07:21
And of course, that's not a luxury
119
441140
2200
07:23
that we're all able to carve out for ourselves.
120
443340
3080
07:26
But when I'm able to surrender to that not knowing,
121
446460
4680
07:31
interesting things emerge.
122
451180
1520
07:32
And I had, you know, the misfortune and privilege
123
452700
4640
07:37
of having been through this once before.
124
457380
2440
07:39
And I knew that to go into this treatment,
125
459860
5120
07:45
to enter the hospital for many weeks and months
126
465020
3320
07:48
with expectations of what I was going to do from my bed
127
468340
4160
07:52
or trying to hold on to whatever plans I'd made before,
128
472540
3320
07:55
was going to be a recipe for frustration and defeat.
129
475900
3800
07:59
And sure enough,
130
479740
1160
08:00
pretty shortly after I entered the bone marrow transplant unit,
131
480900
4560
08:05
I was on two medications that caused my vision to blur and double.
132
485460
5160
08:10
And so the thing that I had always reached for in times of duress,
133
490660
5360
08:16
which for me is writing, wasn't as easily accessible to me.
134
496020
4480
08:20
It was frustrating, it was hard, it was halting.
135
500540
3440
08:24
And instead of trying to keep doing that,
136
504020
3480
08:27
I decided to be open to whatever felt good.
137
507500
4840
08:32
And for the first time since I was a little kid,
138
512380
3520
08:35
I picked up some watercolors and some brushes.
139
515940
3360
08:39
I transformed the bedside table in my hospital room
140
519340
3520
08:42
into my little palette of paints,
141
522860
2800
08:45
and I began painting the nightmares I was having,
142
525700
4640
08:50
the fever dreams I was having,
143
530380
2160
08:52
and transcribing them onto the canvas
144
532580
3360
08:55
without any expectation of doing anything with these paintings
145
535980
3480
08:59
other than that they simply felt good.
146
539500
2400
09:02
What I love about watercolor is that you don't have much control.
147
542300
5640
09:07
Watercolor is all about the beautiful,
148
547980
3000
09:11
happy accidents.
149
551020
1400
09:12
And so that felt like an apt medium,
150
552460
3200
09:15
given the fact that my circumstances
151
555700
2920
09:18
were very much mirroring that lack of control.
152
558660
3520
09:22
I've come to believe that survival is its own kind of creative act.
153
562180
6520
09:28
When you can't speak
154
568740
1800
09:30
because the chemo sores in your mouth make it too painful to speak,
155
570540
4200
09:34
you have to find new ways to communicate.
156
574780
3360
09:38
When you're confined to a bed for many weeks and months,
157
578140
3640
09:41
you have to find new ways of traveling in your imagination.
158
581820
5560
09:47
And really, it requires complete surrender
159
587420
5560
09:53
and an openness to whatever may emerge,
160
593020
5080
09:58
and also a curiosity about the changes that are happening
161
598140
4160
10:02
and trust that something will come out of it,
162
602300
3920
10:06
even if it's just in terms of my own personal growth
163
606260
4040
10:10
and the reshuffling of the priorities.
164
610340
2480
10:12
Though often, well, it doesn't feel that way in the moment,
165
612860
3840
10:16
it's ended up being my most fertile creative stretches
166
616740
4600
10:21
where I’m pushed to experiment and to create in new ways.
167
621380
5000
10:26
Not in spite of my limitations, but because of them.
168
626820
3720
10:30
And it becomes a process of finding purpose in that pain
169
630540
5160
10:35
and trying to alchemize it into something interesting and thought-provoking,
170
635740
5480
10:41
and maybe even useful and beautiful.
171
641260
3240
10:44
SZ: This leads me to think about 22-year-old you,
172
644540
5280
10:49
you know, with your first leukemia diagnosis
173
649820
4040
10:53
and your “Life, Interrupted” column in The New York Times.
174
653860
4680
10:58
How did that column come to be,
175
658540
2360
11:00
because I feel like your journey now, you were pulling from these resources,
176
660940
4320
11:05
but how then did you come to the conclusion of,
177
665300
5400
11:10
"I need to write a column about this, and I need to share this with the world?"
178
670700
3840
11:14
SJ: So I first got diagnosed with leukemia when I was 22,
179
674580
4720
11:19
and overnight, I lost my job,
180
679340
4240
11:23
I lost my apartment,
181
683580
1400
11:25
I was working as a paralegal in Paris at the time,
182
685020
4080
11:29
but hoping to become a foreign correspondent.
183
689140
3760
11:32
And maybe worst of all, I lost my independence.
184
692940
3680
11:36
And 22 is such a funny age
185
696980
3600
11:40
where, you know, you're no longer a kid,
186
700580
2520
11:43
yet, you're not a fully formed adult either.
187
703140
4320
11:47
And so that sense of in-betweenness accompanied me
188
707940
4440
11:52
from my very first day in the hospital.
189
712420
2800
11:55
And I spent a really difficult first year of treatment,
190
715220
4400
11:59
I spent about eight months, cumulatively,
191
719660
3280
12:02
of that first year in isolation in the hospital
192
722980
3400
12:06
where I wasn't able to leave my room.
193
726380
2480
12:08
And when I went into this,
194
728900
2040
12:10
not knowing anything about what it means to be sick,
195
730980
3640
12:14
I remember packing a suitcase full of books like "War and Peace"
196
734660
5480
12:20
and cheerfully announcing to my parents
197
740140
2360
12:22
that I was going to use that first summer in the hospital
198
742500
2800
12:25
to read through the rest of the Western canon.
199
745340
3000
12:28
And let me tell you, naivete has a short shelf life.
200
748340
5760
12:34
And that was true for me.
201
754140
1600
12:35
I didn't read a single one of those books.
202
755780
2480
12:38
And I felt really angry.
203
758780
2760
12:41
My treatments were not working,
204
761580
1960
12:43
my leukemia was becoming more aggressive.
205
763540
3880
12:48
I was enrolled in a phase 2 clinical trial
206
768460
3000
12:51
that hadn't yet been proven to be safe or effective.
207
771500
3440
12:54
And I was really struggling with a sense
208
774980
4440
12:59
that my life had been interrupted.
209
779460
2680
13:02
My life had been put on pause
210
782180
2520
13:04
at a time when I was watching my friends begin their lives,
211
784740
4280
13:09
you know, travel the world, start careers, get married
212
789060
3080
13:12
and all the other big and small milestones of early adulthood.
213
792140
4160
13:16
After I learned that the treatments weren't working for me,
214
796820
6040
13:22
that a friend of mine came up with the idea of a 100-day project,
215
802900
3520
13:26
and the premise was really simple.
216
806420
1880
13:28
We decided we were each going to do one creative act a day for 100 days.
217
808300
4840
13:33
And for my project, I decided to keep the bar very low,
218
813140
5000
13:38
knowing how unpredictable my energy was,
219
818180
4400
13:42
and I decided to recommit to the thing that had been my companion
220
822620
6000
13:48
from the time I could hold a pen, which was, keeping a journal.
221
828620
4080
13:52
And it didn't matter how much I wrote.
222
832700
2080
13:55
Sometimes it was many pages, sometimes it was a sentence.
223
835660
3960
13:59
Occasionally it was the F-word,
224
839660
3120
14:02
which felt apt for that particular moment.
225
842780
3640
14:06
But in the course of keeping that journal,
226
846460
2560
14:09
something interesting began to happen.
227
849060
2200
14:11
Prior to this project,
228
851300
2000
14:13
I, you know, of course, was not in a place
229
853340
3640
14:17
where I could become a foreign correspondent
230
857020
3480
14:20
in the way that I dreamed of.
231
860540
1800
14:22
But I realized, in keeping my journal,
232
862340
2480
14:24
that I was using it as a kind of reporter's notebook.
233
864860
3800
14:28
I was writing about all the things that felt impossible to talk about
234
868660
6040
14:34
with my loved ones.
235
874700
1520
14:36
I was writing about the sense of guilt
236
876220
4360
14:40
and being a burden,
237
880580
2840
14:43
that can come with being sick.
238
883420
1600
14:45
I was writing about navigating our health care system.
239
885060
3400
14:48
I was writing about the patients I was befriending in the cancer unit.
240
888460
4680
14:53
I was writing about the nurses and the various characters
241
893140
4000
14:57
in my medical team.
242
897180
1600
14:58
I was writing about sexual health,
243
898820
1800
15:00
I was writing about shame,
244
900660
1320
15:02
I was writing about what it feels like to fall in love while you're falling sick.
245
902020
5600
15:07
And by the end of that project, I realized that, you know,
246
907940
5720
15:13
while I couldn't travel the world
247
913700
4320
15:18
and report on the stories of others,
248
918060
2640
15:20
I did have a story to tell,
249
920740
1880
15:22
and that I was reporting from a different kind of conflict zone.
250
922620
3400
15:26
I was reporting from the front lines of my hospital bed.
251
926020
3200
15:29
And so, like the good millennial that I am, I decided to start a blog.
252
929660
5680
15:35
It was in the weeks leading up to a bone marrow transplant,
253
935380
3680
15:39
and I knew that the odds were stacked against me.
254
939100
3400
15:42
My doctors told me point blank
255
942500
1880
15:44
I had a 35-percent chance of long-term survival,
256
944420
4840
15:49
and I think it lit a kind of fire under me.
257
949300
6120
15:56
Staring your mortality straight in the eye can be a great motivator.
258
956980
4960
16:01
There's no longer this illusion of endless time.
259
961980
4560
16:06
Time to eventually get to the things that you want to do,
260
966540
3720
16:10
time to figure out what you want to contribute in whatever, you know,
261
970300
5600
16:15
small or big way, to the world.
262
975940
1960
16:17
And so I kept this blog for a couple of weeks and I took it really seriously.
263
977940
4320
16:22
I would write every day,
264
982300
2040
16:24
and through an old journalism professor of mine,
265
984380
3040
16:27
it got sent to Tara Parker-Pope,
266
987420
4760
16:32
my wonderful editor at The New York Times,
267
992180
2680
16:34
and we had a couple of email exchanges,
268
994900
2480
16:37
and she called me and invited me to contribute an essay.
269
997420
4400
16:42
And I took a deep breath and I said,
270
1002500
2720
16:45
"Thank you, but I'm not interested in writing an essay.
271
1005260
4400
16:49
What I'm interested in writing is a weekly column,
272
1009700
3720
16:53
because so often illness stories are told from the vantage point
273
1013420
4000
16:57
of someone who survived.
274
1017420
1440
16:58
But I want to write from the trenches of that uncertainty."
275
1018860
4040
17:03
And I went on and on and on.
276
1023340
1960
17:05
And to my surprise, she said,
277
1025300
2080
17:07
"OK, we'll try it for a couple of installments and see how it goes."
278
1027420
4920
17:13
And I had never been published before,
279
1033300
2040
17:15
I'd never had a byline,
280
1035380
1880
17:17
and this pitch that I had just performed
281
1037300
3840
17:21
would have seemed wildly presumptuous to pre-diagnosis 22-year-old me.
282
1041140
6160
17:27
I would have been grateful for a fact-checking position.
283
1047340
4080
17:31
But that's the thing about confronting your mortality,
284
1051420
5880
17:37
is that ...
285
1057340
1160
17:40
it can make you brazen.
286
1060420
2200
17:42
And I knew that I didn't have time for internships
287
1062660
4160
17:46
and fact-checking positions.
288
1066860
2120
17:49
And so for the first time in my life,
289
1069020
3040
17:52
I said exactly what it was that I wanted to do
290
1072100
3280
17:55
without any expectation,
291
1075380
2120
17:57
but I knew I needed to try for it.
292
1077540
2240
18:00
SZ: The response to that column, "Life, Interrupted,"
293
1080100
2720
18:02
led to your subsequent road trip across the US
294
1082820
3440
18:06
to meet some of the people that wrote to you
295
1086260
2320
18:08
while you were in the hospital.
296
1088620
1560
18:10
You spoke about this journey in your 2019 TED Talk,
297
1090220
3360
18:13
and you wrote about it in your memoir, "Between Two Kingdoms,"
298
1093620
3360
18:17
your New York Times best selling book.
299
1097020
2160
18:19
Can you share first, a little bit more about the title of the book,
300
1099500
3240
18:22
and then how did the process of making this trip and writing it
301
1102740
4000
18:26
impact you and your readers?
302
1106780
2280
18:29
SJ: So I ended up spending four years in cancer treatment.
303
1109100
6400
18:37
And throughout those four years,
304
1117140
2280
18:39
the goal was always to eventually be cured.
305
1119420
5640
18:45
And I hadn’t given much thought to what would happen after that,
306
1125100
4640
18:50
in part because it felt like such a tenuous, flimsy hope.
307
1130060
5000
18:55
And to my great surprise,
308
1135100
1760
18:56
when I did get the all-clear from my doctors,
309
1136900
4400
19:01
when the port was removed from my chest
310
1141300
2680
19:04
and I was sort of released from the medical bubble,
311
1144020
4800
19:08
instead of feeling great excitement,
312
1148860
4360
19:13
and instead of quickly and organically
313
1153220
4160
19:17
folding back into the world of the living,
314
1157420
5400
19:22
I found myself deeply stuck.
315
1162860
3240
19:26
And to my great surprise,
316
1166140
3520
19:29
the hardest part of my cancer experience,
317
1169700
4880
19:34
on a personal level,
318
1174620
1480
19:36
began once the cancer was gone.
319
1176100
3160
19:39
I very quickly realized,
320
1179260
2440
19:41
you know, of course, that I was no longer a patient,
321
1181740
2480
19:44
but that I couldn't go back to the person I'd been pre-diagnosis.
322
1184260
5040
19:49
And I had no idea who I was
323
1189340
3480
19:52
and how to find my footing among the living.
324
1192860
4320
19:57
And I was struggling to figure out
325
1197780
3840
20:01
how to carry the imprints of this experience.
326
1201660
3200
20:04
Out of my group of 10 cancer comrades,
327
1204860
3360
20:08
as we called each other --
328
1208260
2120
20:10
young people who I’d befriended during those years in treatment --
329
1210420
3200
20:13
only two of us were still alive.
330
1213660
2160
20:15
So I knew how lucky I was to be alive,
331
1215860
4200
20:20
I knew that ...
332
1220100
1920
20:23
I didn't just want to be someone who was surviving
333
1223060
3840
20:26
but living, because after all,
334
1226940
2240
20:29
you know, what was the point of having endured all that I'd endured
335
1229220
4840
20:34
if not to live a good life, a meaningful life,
336
1234100
3560
20:37
a beautiful one?
337
1237700
1240
20:38
But I didn't have the tools to do that.
338
1238940
2520
20:41
And without, you know, a cavalry of doctors and nurses
339
1241460
5200
20:46
and friends checking up on me,
340
1246700
3320
20:50
I realized, you know, there was no road map for the way forward
341
1250060
6160
20:56
and that I was going to have to create one for myself.
342
1256220
3360
21:00
And so I spent this lost year trying and failing
343
1260660
4920
21:05
and trying and failing to move on,
344
1265620
3000
21:08
only to realize, you know,
345
1268620
2760
21:11
that we don't get to move on from the painful parts of our past.
346
1271420
5200
21:16
As much as we want to,
347
1276660
2080
21:18
you know, we can't compartmentalize them
348
1278780
2440
21:21
and stow them away
349
1281220
1400
21:22
because they always bob back up to the surface and often with a vengeance,
350
1282620
5240
21:27
and that instead I was going to have to figure out how to move forward
351
1287860
4880
21:32
with the imprints of my illness,
352
1292780
3560
21:36
both on my body and on my mind.
353
1296380
3320
21:39
And so one of the very first things I did,
354
1299740
4160
21:43
because I was still in a place of feeling afraid,
355
1303900
4840
21:48
feeling, you know, ironically,
356
1308740
4640
21:53
afraid of the outside world.
357
1313420
1640
21:55
I was comfortable in the hospital ecosystem
358
1315100
3640
21:58
to really, first of all,
359
1318780
3440
22:02
give myself the time to properly heal from that experience,
360
1322220
6920
22:09
but also to figure out what was on the other side of that fear.
361
1329180
3520
22:12
And so I learned how to drive,
362
1332700
2240
22:14
and I ended up returning to some of the letters
363
1334980
5360
22:20
I'd received from readers of "Life, Interrupted,"
364
1340380
3720
22:24
who had shared with me their own experiences of aftermath,
365
1344140
5160
22:29
of figuring out how to do the hard work of recovery
366
1349340
6240
22:35
and figuring out how to do that hard work of moving forward,
367
1355580
6040
22:41
with whatever had happened.
368
1361620
2720
22:44
And so I decided to sublet my apartment.
369
1364380
4040
22:49
I borrowed a friend's car.
370
1369020
1960
22:51
I got a bunch of camping gear,
371
1371020
1640
22:52
and I embarked on a different kind of 100-day project.
372
1372660
3760
22:56
A 100-day, 15,000-mile solo road trip with my dog Oscar as my co-pilot,
373
1376460
6160
23:02
and to visit some of these strangers who had been lifelines
374
1382660
5200
23:07
when I was at my sickest,
375
1387900
1680
23:09
and to talk to them
376
1389580
1160
23:10
about that experience of in-betweenness.
377
1390780
2440
23:13
So to wrap this up,
378
1393260
1840
23:15
the title of the book, "Between Two Kingdoms,"
379
1395100
3000
23:18
is a reference to Susan Sontag's essay "Illness as Metaphor,"
380
1398100
5480
23:23
where she describes how we all have dual citizenship
381
1403620
3880
23:27
in the kingdom of the sick
382
1407540
1800
23:29
and in the kingdom of the well,
383
1409380
1760
23:31
and that it's only a matter of time until we use that other passport.
384
1411180
5200
23:36
But what she didn't talk about was that liminal space between the two,
385
1416380
5840
23:42
where maybe you're not either sick or well.
386
1422220
4520
23:46
And that became the premise of that book.
387
1426780
2640
23:50
It's figuring out how to exist in the messy middle.
388
1430340
4600
23:54
SZ: That book launched during COVID.
389
1434980
2960
23:57
Something else that was beginning at that time was the "Isolation Journals"
390
1437980
5360
24:03
in April of 2020.
391
1443340
2080
24:05
Can you share what was the inspiration for this project,
392
1445420
3680
24:09
especially at such a unique moment in time?
393
1449140
4720
24:13
SJ: In the early days of lockdown,
394
1453900
3720
24:17
as the world was shutting down,
395
1457620
2760
24:20
as we were all having to pivot and to put our plans on hold
396
1460380
4680
24:25
and to figure out how to live our lives
397
1465100
6400
24:31
within very, you know, major constraints.
398
1471540
5000
24:36
So much of that experience felt bizarrely familiar to me.
399
1476580
3880
24:40
Everything from wearing a face mask and, you know,
400
1480460
3360
24:43
walking around with gallons of hand sanitizer
401
1483820
3280
24:47
to being isolated at home.
402
1487140
3080
24:50
And, you know,
403
1490260
1760
24:52
isolation is its own epidemic,
404
1492060
4000
24:56
one that predated the pandemic
405
1496060
3800
24:59
and one that continues now.
406
1499900
3080
25:03
And I decided, on April 1, 2020,
407
1503020
6760
25:10
to share what has always helped me
408
1510540
4680
25:15
transform that sense of isolation into creative solitude and connection
409
1515220
6160
25:21
and even community.
410
1521420
1720
25:23
And I launched a newsletter
411
1523180
4880
25:28
called "The Isolation Journals."
412
1528060
2200
25:30
It's a free newsletter,
413
1530300
1600
25:31
and we invited our larger community to do their own 100-day project.
414
1531900
6040
25:37
And so every single day, for 100 days,
415
1537940
4000
25:41
we had a different guest contributor write an essay in a journaling prompt.
416
1541980
6680
25:48
We had artists and writers and musicians and community leaders.
417
1548700
5120
25:53
One of my very favorite essays and prompts came from Lou Sullivan,
418
1553820
4200
25:58
a seven-year-old, two-time brain cancer survivor
419
1558020
4680
26:02
who shared this game that he played in the hospital
420
1562740
2920
26:05
called “Inside Seeing,”
421
1565700
1720
26:07
which was essentially his take on meditation.
422
1567460
3680
26:11
And within 48 hours, we had over 40,000 people who'd signed up.
423
1571740
5960
26:17
And it was extraordinary to see what can happen
424
1577740
3920
26:21
when we dare to share our most vulnerable,
425
1581700
4960
26:26
unvarnished stories.
426
1586660
2120
26:28
And the reverberation that that creates.
427
1588820
2680
26:31
And so that newsletter continues on to this day.
428
1591540
3240
26:34
We have over 150,000 community members.
429
1594820
4240
26:39
And every Sunday we send out a newsletter
430
1599100
4040
26:43
with thoughts from me
431
1603180
1720
26:44
and then a new essay and journaling prompt.
432
1604900
4560
26:49
But what's surprised me so much
433
1609500
2240
26:51
is that people interpret journaling in all kinds of ways.
434
1611780
3600
26:55
Some people use the prompts as conversation prompts,
435
1615420
3000
26:58
others use them as thought prompts.
436
1618420
2640
27:01
Some people reinterpret the idea of journaling,
437
1621100
3280
27:04
not as old fashioned, you know, pen and paper,
438
1624380
3920
27:08
but they'll paint to the prompts, they'll do modern dances.
439
1628340
3760
27:12
And so it's really been such a nourishing,
440
1632140
5600
27:17
tender, life-giving space.
441
1637780
3240
27:22
And I'm so proud of this thing we built.
442
1642420
3840
27:26
I know what it's like to feel alone,
443
1646260
4440
27:30
to feel like you're the only person suffering in a particular way.
444
1650700
4840
27:35
But we have so many extraordinary artists throughout time,
445
1655580
3680
27:39
from Frida Kahlo to Virginia Woolf
446
1659260
3880
27:43
to Audre Lorde,
447
1663180
2240
27:45
who have taken that space of confinement,
448
1665420
5160
27:50
who have reimagined their limitations as creative grist.
449
1670620
6000
27:56
SZ: We have a question from Celia.
450
1676660
2080
27:59
“Our world tries to avoid having feelings, but in ‘American Symphony,’
451
1679540
5160
28:04
you said that you didn't want to develop a thick skin.
452
1684740
3040
28:07
You wanted to feel it all.
453
1687820
1920
28:09
Can you say more about how that approach impacts your spirit
454
1689740
3720
28:13
and how you experience life feeling it all
455
1693500
2600
28:16
and how others can do the same?"
456
1696140
2160
28:20
SJ: You know, as a culture, we resist discomfort.
457
1700020
6000
28:26
We resist
458
1706020
4240
28:30
confronting the fact
459
1710300
3040
28:33
that all of us are here on this Earth for a very short period of time.
460
1713380
5080
28:38
I'm not special, I live a little closer to the veil,
461
1718500
5000
28:43
because of the nature of my illness.
462
1723500
3200
28:46
And as tempting as it can be, you know, to compartmentalize that discomfort,
463
1726740
6840
28:53
to plaster over it, to numb it,
464
1733620
2760
28:56
I think there's also so much
465
1736380
5680
29:02
to be gained when you unguard your heart.
466
1742100
4360
29:07
And it's the hardest thing in the world to do.
467
1747260
3280
29:10
I knew going into this that it wasn't going to be easy.
468
1750580
6000
29:16
I had no illusions,
469
1756620
2320
29:18
not only about the toll it would take on me
470
1758980
3400
29:22
and on my loved ones,
471
1762380
3760
29:26
but I also knew that there was a lot to be gained
472
1766180
4280
29:30
if I could resist that urge ...
473
1770500
3160
29:35
to look away from the things that scared me most.
474
1775340
6400
29:41
And rather to engage in them directly.
475
1781740
3360
29:49
I wanted to be open to all of it.
476
1789100
2520
29:51
I wanted to be open
477
1791660
2280
29:53
to the beautiful things and to the painful things,
478
1793940
4080
29:58
and to really learn how to hold both of them in the same palm.
479
1798060
5400
30:04
Because in varying ways and for varying reasons,
480
1804500
3960
30:08
that's the work that we all have to do.
481
1808460
2520
30:11
There is no binary.
482
1811380
1360
30:12
Life isn't either good or bad.
483
1812780
3040
30:15
We're not either happy or sad or healthy or unhealthy.
484
1815860
5720
30:21
Most of us, you know, exist somewhere in the middle,
485
1821620
3960
30:25
and depending on the hour or depending on the day,
486
1825620
2720
30:28
we might shift from one to the other.
487
1828380
2640
30:31
Trying to do the opposite of having tough skin,
488
1831020
3800
30:34
trying to have tender skin,
489
1834860
3080
30:37
is not something that comes easily to me.
490
1837980
2440
30:40
It's something I have to work at every single day.
491
1840460
4400
30:44
But I know that for me,
492
1844900
4080
30:49
it's the only way I can shift out of that survival mode
493
1849020
5000
30:54
and in to fully living and feeling alive.
494
1854060
3600
30:57
SZ: We have a question here from Lauren.
495
1857660
2640
31:00
"In your book, you shared how cancer impacted your relationship
496
1860340
3360
31:03
with your previous boyfriend.
497
1863700
1880
31:05
Have you carried these lessons and experienced
498
1865580
3000
31:08
with this return of your leukemia?
499
1868620
2440
31:11
Were you able to strike a better balance as a caregiver/patient?
500
1871100
4200
31:15
And how did art making and his music making
501
1875340
3240
31:18
affect your relationship this time around?"
502
1878620
2520
31:21
SJ: The most surprising toll isn't what happens to the body,
503
1881140
4520
31:25
it's what often happens to your relationships.
504
1885700
4360
31:30
And so at 22, I was pretty isolated.
505
1890060
4000
31:34
The friends that I had played beer pong with in college
506
1894060
3720
31:37
were not necessarily the ones who showed up
507
1897820
2720
31:40
to sit at my hospital bedside
508
1900580
2280
31:42
as my hair was falling out in clumps.
509
1902860
2760
31:46
But more important
510
1906060
2080
31:48
than realizing who my real friends were and weren't,
511
1908140
5360
31:53
I was so astounded by the people who came out of the woodwork
512
1913540
6520
32:00
and who showed up with such generosity
513
1920060
3400
32:03
and support
514
1923500
1640
32:05
and really made me understand the value
515
1925180
3440
32:08
of cultivating community and prioritizing that
516
1928660
4320
32:12
and investing your time and energy in that.
517
1932980
3560
32:16
And so luckily, by the time that I did have my recurrence,
518
1936580
5000
32:21
I had spent that decade building a community,
519
1941580
4080
32:25
because as much of a cliche as it sounds like,
520
1945700
3480
32:29
we all need a village
521
1949180
1960
32:31
and we especially need a village when the ceiling caves in.
522
1951180
5600
32:36
And so, when I learned of my recurrence,
523
1956780
4120
32:40
Jon was in the midst
524
1960900
2920
32:43
of perhaps his busiest professional season of life.
525
1963860
5000
32:48
And I’ve known Jon from the time I was 13 years old.
526
1968900
3760
32:52
I have watched him work so hard
527
1972700
3160
32:55
to get to a place where he was getting the kind of recognition
528
1975860
3520
32:59
and invitations that he had,
529
1979380
2160
33:01
and it felt really important to me that he not put his life on pause.
530
1981540
4840
33:06
And so we had to get creative about how to stay connected to each other
531
1986420
6160
33:12
at this time where it felt like we were living on polar opposite planets.
532
1992620
6800
33:19
And so Jon came up with a beautiful idea of composing lullabies.
533
1999460
5840
33:25
He would compose a lullaby for me every single day,
534
2005340
3200
33:28
and send it off to me as a kind of counterpoint
535
2008540
3440
33:31
to the hospital's many noises, the beeping of monitors,
536
2011980
3520
33:35
the wheezing of respirators,
537
2015500
1440
33:36
the alarms that go off.
538
2016980
1760
33:38
And it was his way of enveloping me with his presence,
539
2018780
5120
33:43
even when he couldn't physically be there.
540
2023940
2120
33:46
And I, in turn, would text him photos of the little paintings that I would make.
541
2026500
4280
33:50
And so what that meant was that when we spoke on the phone,
542
2030780
4000
33:54
the conversation wasn't just centered around the latest biopsy results
543
2034820
5680
34:00
and blood tests and whatever else was happening.
544
2040540
3280
34:03
It was centered in our love language, which is a shared creative language,
545
2043860
6160
34:10
and gave us a way of expressing what we couldn't express.
546
2050060
4680
34:15
SZ: Joey writes,
547
2055140
1880
34:17
"What do you recommend to someone
548
2057060
1720
34:18
who is trying to get started with journaling
549
2058820
2080
34:20
but feeling a little overwhelmed by the blank page?
550
2060940
3560
34:24
Do you have any rituals or any starting places you can recommend?"
551
2064500
5240
34:29
SJ: Yes, in spite of the fact that I've been a lifelong journaler,
552
2069780
4320
34:34
I go through many moments where I feel daunted by the blank page,
553
2074100
3960
34:38
and that was kind of the original premise of starting the "Isolation Journals."
554
2078100
4760
34:42
Sometimes we need to read something.
555
2082900
1720
34:44
Sometimes we need to prompt ourselves to get out of, you know,
556
2084660
5280
34:49
to twist our mind out of its usual rut.
557
2089980
3120
34:55
Come join us at "The Isolation Journals."
558
2095140
2000
34:57
We have an archive of hundreds of essays and prompts and journaling challenges.
559
2097140
4600
35:01
Or don't.
560
2101780
1600
35:03
But I'll offer you what helps me
561
2103420
4000
35:07
when I'm feeling daunted by the blank page.
562
2107420
2760
35:10
And it's actually something I borrowed from my friend,
563
2110180
3640
35:13
the poet Marie Howe,
564
2113860
1680
35:15
and she told me that when she's feeling stuck,
565
2115540
3440
35:18
she writes with her non-dominant hand and a big scrawl across the page.
566
2118980
6560
35:25
"I don't want to write about ..."
567
2125580
3280
35:28
And then she writes into that.
568
2128860
1760
35:30
Another one of my favorite journaling prompts
569
2130660
2960
35:33
from "The Isolation Journals" is by the photographer Ash Parsons.
570
2133660
4600
35:38
During a period of time where she was in the NICU
571
2138300
3360
35:41
with a recently adopted baby who was having major health issues,
572
2141700
5400
35:47
she began what she calls “just 10 images,”
573
2147140
3520
35:50
which is listing just 10 snapshots from the last 24 hours,
574
2150660
4360
35:55
stream of consciousness, whatever comes to mind.
575
2155060
2680
35:57
And I love that prompt
576
2157780
1520
35:59
because it's in list form and it's so simple.
577
2159300
3200
36:02
But more than just recounting what happens in the last 24 hours,
578
2162540
5240
36:07
it's a prompt that's trained me to look and to look again
579
2167780
5400
36:13
and to notice my day differently.
580
2173180
2840
36:16
But the beautiful thing about journaling,
581
2176060
2760
36:18
and the thing that makes it so generative and inspiring for me
582
2178860
4520
36:23
is how low the barrier to entry is.
583
2183420
3160
36:26
You know, journaling is not beautiful writing.
584
2186580
3720
36:30
It doesn't have to be grammatically correct.
585
2190340
2640
36:33
It doesn’t have to be in full sentences.
586
2193020
2560
36:35
It can be whatever it is that you want.
587
2195580
2280
36:37
It's such an expansive form that you can interpret
588
2197900
3400
36:41
and reinterpret however it best serves you.
589
2201340
3080
36:44
SZ: I have one last question from York.
590
2204420
2240
36:46
York says, "Thank you for sharing your experience and insights.
591
2206660
4680
36:51
One of the parts that resonated with me was your experience of using creativity
592
2211340
4320
36:55
while you were struggling with finding purpose.
593
2215660
3000
36:58
Were you always able to focus on creativity and if not,
594
2218700
3320
37:02
what helped you make that shift?"
595
2222060
2240
37:04
SJ: Liz Gilbert speaks so beautifully
596
2224340
3520
37:07
about the pressure of finding
597
2227860
5520
37:13
your “capital P” Purpose.
598
2233380
2560
37:15
And so, what she's always said
599
2235940
2320
37:18
is you have to be one percent more curious than afraid.
600
2238300
6000
37:24
Any time I come up with some big, ambitious creative project,
601
2244340
6320
37:30
I immediately get frozen in my fear and daunted by whatever it is.
602
2250700
5080
37:35
And so I think curiosity is such a gentler way in and such ...
603
2255780
5520
37:41
And it's a more honest way into the creative process,
604
2261820
3120
37:44
where you don't hold to an expectation
605
2264940
3960
37:48
of how something should look
606
2268940
3040
37:52
or how something will come together.
607
2272020
2720
37:55
But you really give yourself the time and space
608
2275100
5000
38:00
to explore the threads of that curiosity.
609
2280100
3720
38:03
The work I'm most proud of,
610
2283860
3080
38:06
the work that has surprised me
611
2286980
4200
38:11
and changed me as an artist, as a writer,
612
2291180
3880
38:15
are the projects I started without that sense of output
613
2295060
4360
38:19
or expectation, be it, you know,
614
2299460
2160
38:21
that 100-day project and keeping that journal
615
2301660
3080
38:24
or even the paintings that I started doing in the hospital.
616
2304740
5080
38:29
They were pure play
617
2309860
2120
38:31
and tapping into that sort of child space,
618
2311980
5800
38:37
of creating simply for the joy of creating
619
2317820
3920
38:41
without any regard for if it's good or bad,
620
2321740
5400
38:47
but simply to explore.
621
2327180
1640
38:49
And so I try to trick myself back into that space all the time.
622
2329180
4240
38:53
SZ: Thank you for sharing so openly and vulnerably with us,
623
2333460
3560
38:57
as you frequently do.
624
2337020
1880
38:58
Bye for now.
625
2338940
1200
39:00
SJ: Thank you everyone, thank you Susan.
626
2340140
2640
39:02
[Want to support TED?]
627
2342820
2440
39:05
[Become a TED Member!]
628
2345300
1680
39:07
[Learn more at ted.com/membership]
629
2347020
2280
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