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

31,476 views

2024-03-13 ・ TED


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

31,476 views ・ 2024-03-13

TED


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

00:04
Susan Zimmerman: Welcome, Suleika.
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Suleika Jaouad: Hi, Susan.
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SZ: I'm going to dive right in with "American Symphony."
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I would love to first say thank you
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for sharing your story with us in this gorgeous documentary.
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Can you share a little bit more how this project came to be?
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SJ: So the director of “American Symphony,”
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Matt Heineman, who is an extraordinarily brilliant filmmaker
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and a dear friend of ours,
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says that if you end up with a project that you started with,
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you're not doing your job right
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because you weren't listening along the way.
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And that proved to be true in ways that we couldn't possibly imagine.
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I knew Matt through my own work.
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Jon had worked with him on his last film, "The First Wave,"
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that took place during the pandemic,
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and he and Jon started talking about the idea
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of a short process film
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that was going to follow Jon as he composed what he called
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“American Symphony,”
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which was his reimagination of what a symphony would look like
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if it were created in the 21st century.
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And Jon was committed to really upturning what we think of as a symphony.
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He wanted to travel all across the country to recruit jazz musicians
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and blues musicians and classical musicians
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and Indigenous musicians
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and musicians who don't know how to read music
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and to figure out how to bring them all together.
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So initially, that was the film,
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and about a week after we decided to move forward with that project,
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on the very same day I began chemo
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and the same week I learned that after a decade-long remission,
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my leukemia was back,
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Jon was also nominated
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for a record historical number of Grammys.
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And so right from the beginning of the filming process,
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the initial conceit changed.
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And it was the kind of project
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and really a testament to Matt's style,
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where we weren't too worried about figuring out what the story was.
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Matt specializes in cinema verité,
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and so he followed us from sun up until we went to sleep every single day
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for about seven months.
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And at the end of that process,
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we had 1,500 hours of footage,
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which, as you can imagine, is a lot of footage.
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But we knew that we wanted to document all of it,
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to document what it means to be living a life of contrasts,
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what is required of us when we're in the belly of the beast
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and how creativity and our individual
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and joint, sort of, creative language inform that project.
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SZ: For two people,
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who are very much the directors of their own creative projects and worlds,
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how did you negotiate creative control in your work with Matt Heineman,
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especially in such vulnerable and personal circumstances?
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SJ: You know, it wasn't easy for either of us
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because we are used to,
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you know, captaining our own creative ships.
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But I think, you know, surrendering to the process was really important.
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We didn't want to get in the way of the filming.
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But we were also very much creative partners with Matt.
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And I'm not sure that a film like this would have been possible
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without deep trust with the filmmaker
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and ongoing conversations about what we were comfortable with
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and what we weren't,
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and we had those conversations daily.
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We had them weekly and monthly.
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And the truth is
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that when I decided
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to participate in this film,
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I had no idea if I was going to survive long enough
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to actually see the finished product.
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And what Jon would always say is:
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if nothing else comes out of this,
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we'll have the world's most beautifully shot home videos
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to share with our families and loved ones.
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So it was really, you know,
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a process that required trust.
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It required a leap of faith,
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and it required surrendering the kind of creative control that we're used to.
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SZ: You also shared, in a recent “Isolation Journal”:
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"When the ceiling caves in, it's terrifying and disorienting.
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Yet those moments have also been the most fertile stretches of personal
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and creative growth for me.
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A couple of months after my second bone marrow transplant,
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I was rehospitalized due to complications,
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and I told one of my nurses that I get my best work done there,
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and I joked that it had become my favorite artist’s residency.”
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Can you share more about these creative periods
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during extremely challenging circumstances?
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SJ: Yeah, so I want to go on record and say that, you know,
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these moments when the ceiling caves in on you,
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when you can no longer assume structural stability ...
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don’t suddenly fill me with creative inspiration.
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It's the very opposite.
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I had so many plans,
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both professional and personal,
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before I learned of my relapse.
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I was getting ready to write a reported book
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that would require me to be on the road for long stretches of time.
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Jon and I were talking about getting married and starting a family,
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and I moved through my own version of the five stages of grief.
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And the first is shock,
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often mixed with fear.
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And then I get to a place of defeat.
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But something interesting happens
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when the possibility of productivity is taken away from you.
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And when I’m able to move past that grief and that fear,
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and to start to get curious about the isolation
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and the sense of solitude that comes with, you know,
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having been brought to your knees on the floor
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by some kind of life event.
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Even though it doesn't feel like I'm doing something,
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I'm in the chrysalis.
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I'm as larval and goopy and unformed as I ever feel.
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And what these periods of being extremely sick
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have done for me
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is that I've had to get good with my own company.
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I've had to get good with quiet, with having no plans.
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And of course, that's not a luxury
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that we're all able to carve out for ourselves.
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But when I'm able to surrender to that not knowing,
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interesting things emerge.
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And I had, you know, the misfortune and privilege
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of having been through this once before.
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And I knew that to go into this treatment,
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to enter the hospital for many weeks and months
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with expectations of what I was going to do from my bed
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or trying to hold on to whatever plans I'd made before,
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was going to be a recipe for frustration and defeat.
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And sure enough,
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pretty shortly after I entered the bone marrow transplant unit,
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I was on two medications that caused my vision to blur and double.
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And so the thing that I had always reached for in times of duress,
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which for me is writing, wasn't as easily accessible to me.
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It was frustrating, it was hard, it was halting.
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And instead of trying to keep doing that,
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I decided to be open to whatever felt good.
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And for the first time since I was a little kid,
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I picked up some watercolors and some brushes.
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I transformed the bedside table in my hospital room
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into my little palette of paints,
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and I began painting the nightmares I was having,
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the fever dreams I was having,
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and transcribing them onto the canvas
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without any expectation of doing anything with these paintings
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other than that they simply felt good.
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What I love about watercolor is that you don't have much control.
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Watercolor is all about the beautiful,
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happy accidents.
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And so that felt like an apt medium,
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given the fact that my circumstances
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were very much mirroring that lack of control.
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I've come to believe that survival is its own kind of creative act.
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When you can't speak
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because the chemo sores in your mouth make it too painful to speak,
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you have to find new ways to communicate.
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When you're confined to a bed for many weeks and months,
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you have to find new ways of traveling in your imagination.
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And really, it requires complete surrender
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and an openness to whatever may emerge,
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and also a curiosity about the changes that are happening
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and trust that something will come out of it,
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even if it's just in terms of my own personal growth
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and the reshuffling of the priorities.
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Though often, well, it doesn't feel that way in the moment,
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it's ended up being my most fertile creative stretches
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where I’m pushed to experiment and to create in new ways.
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Not in spite of my limitations, but because of them.
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And it becomes a process of finding purpose in that pain
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and trying to alchemize it into something interesting and thought-provoking,
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and maybe even useful and beautiful.
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SZ: This leads me to think about 22-year-old you,
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you know, with your first leukemia diagnosis
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and your “Life, Interrupted” column in The New York Times.
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How did that column come to be,
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because I feel like your journey now, you were pulling from these resources,
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but how then did you come to the conclusion of,
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"I need to write a column about this, and I need to share this with the world?"
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SJ: So I first got diagnosed with leukemia when I was 22,
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and overnight, I lost my job,
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I lost my apartment,
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I was working as a paralegal in Paris at the time,
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but hoping to become a foreign correspondent.
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And maybe worst of all, I lost my independence.
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And 22 is such a funny age
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where, you know, you're no longer a kid,
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yet, you're not a fully formed adult either.
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And so that sense of in-betweenness accompanied me
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from my very first day in the hospital.
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And I spent a really difficult first year of treatment,
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I spent about eight months, cumulatively,
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of that first year in isolation in the hospital
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where I wasn't able to leave my room.
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And when I went into this,
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not knowing anything about what it means to be sick,
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I remember packing a suitcase full of books like "War and Peace"
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and cheerfully announcing to my parents
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that I was going to use that first summer in the hospital
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to read through the rest of the Western canon.
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And let me tell you, naivete has a short shelf life.
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And that was true for me.
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I didn't read a single one of those books.
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And I felt really angry.
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My treatments were not working,
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my leukemia was becoming more aggressive.
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I was enrolled in a phase 2 clinical trial
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that hadn't yet been proven to be safe or effective.
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And I was really struggling with a sense
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that my life had been interrupted.
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My life had been put on pause
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at a time when I was watching my friends begin their lives,
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you know, travel the world, start careers, get married
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and all the other big and small milestones of early adulthood.
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After I learned that the treatments weren't working for me,
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that a friend of mine came up with the idea of a 100-day project,
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and the premise was really simple.
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We decided we were each going to do one creative act a day for 100 days.
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And for my project, I decided to keep the bar very low,
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knowing how unpredictable my energy was,
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and I decided to recommit to the thing that had been my companion
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from the time I could hold a pen, which was, keeping a journal.
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And it didn't matter how much I wrote.
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Sometimes it was many pages, sometimes it was a sentence.
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Occasionally it was the F-word,
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which felt apt for that particular moment.
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But in the course of keeping that journal,
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something interesting began to happen.
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Prior to this project,
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I, you know, of course, was not in a place
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where I could become a foreign correspondent
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in the way that I dreamed of.
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But I realized, in keeping my journal,
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that I was using it as a kind of reporter's notebook.
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I was writing about all the things that felt impossible to talk about
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with my loved ones.
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I was writing about the sense of guilt
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and being a burden,
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that can come with being sick.
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I was writing about navigating our health care system.
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I was writing about the patients I was befriending in the cancer unit.
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I was writing about the nurses and the various characters
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in my medical team.
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I was writing about sexual health,
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I was writing about shame,
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I was writing about what it feels like to fall in love while you're falling sick.
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And by the end of that project, I realized that, you know,
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while I couldn't travel the world
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and report on the stories of others,
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I did have a story to tell,
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and that I was reporting from a different kind of conflict zone.
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I was reporting from the front lines of my hospital bed.
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And so, like the good millennial that I am, I decided to start a blog.
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It was in the weeks leading up to a bone marrow transplant,
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and I knew that the odds were stacked against me.
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My doctors told me point blank
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I had a 35-percent chance of long-term survival,
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and I think it lit a kind of fire under me.
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Staring your mortality straight in the eye can be a great motivator.
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There's no longer this illusion of endless time.
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Time to eventually get to the things that you want to do,
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time to figure out what you want to contribute in whatever, you know,
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small or big way, to the world.
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And so I kept this blog for a couple of weeks and I took it really seriously.
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I would write every day,
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and through an old journalism professor of mine,
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it got sent to Tara Parker-Pope,
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my wonderful editor at The New York Times,
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and we had a couple of email exchanges,
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and she called me and invited me to contribute an essay.
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And I took a deep breath and I said,
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"Thank you, but I'm not interested in writing an essay.
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What I'm interested in writing is a weekly column,
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because so often illness stories are told from the vantage point
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of someone who survived.
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But I want to write from the trenches of that uncertainty."
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And I went on and on and on.
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And to my surprise, she said,
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"OK, we'll try it for a couple of installments and see how it goes."
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And I had never been published before,
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I'd never had a byline,
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and this pitch that I had just performed
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would have seemed wildly presumptuous to pre-diagnosis 22-year-old me.
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I would have been grateful for a fact-checking position.
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But that's the thing about confronting your mortality,
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is that ...
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it can make you brazen.
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And I knew that I didn't have time for internships
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and fact-checking positions.
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And so for the first time in my life,
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I said exactly what it was that I wanted to do
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without any expectation,
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but I knew I needed to try for it.
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SZ: The response to that column, "Life, Interrupted,"
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led to your subsequent road trip across the US
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to meet some of the people that wrote to you
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while you were in the hospital.
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You spoke about this journey in your 2019 TED Talk,
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and you wrote about it in your memoir, "Between Two Kingdoms,"
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your New York Times best selling book.
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Can you share first, a little bit more about the title of the book,
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and then how did the process of making this trip and writing it
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impact you and your readers?
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SJ: So I ended up spending four years in cancer treatment.
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And throughout those four years,
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the goal was always to eventually be cured.
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18:45
And I hadn’t given much thought to what would happen after that,
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in part because it felt like such a tenuous, flimsy hope.
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18:55
And to my great surprise,
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when I did get the all-clear from my doctors,
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when the port was removed from my chest
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and I was sort of released from the medical bubble,
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instead of feeling great excitement,
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and instead of quickly and organically
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folding back into the world of the living,
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I found myself deeply stuck.
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And to my great surprise,
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the hardest part of my cancer experience,
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on a personal level,
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began once the cancer was gone.
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I very quickly realized,
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you know, of course, that I was no longer a patient,
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but that I couldn't go back to the person I'd been pre-diagnosis.
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And I had no idea who I was
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and how to find my footing among the living.
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19:57
And I was struggling to figure out
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how to carry the imprints of this experience.
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Out of my group of 10 cancer comrades,
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as we called each other --
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young people who I’d befriended during those years in treatment --
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only two of us were still alive.
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20:15
So I knew how lucky I was to be alive,
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I knew that ...
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I didn't just want to be someone who was surviving
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but living, because after all,
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you know, what was the point of having endured all that I'd endured
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if not to live a good life, a meaningful life,
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a beautiful one?
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20:38
But I didn't have the tools to do that.
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And without, you know, a cavalry of doctors and nurses
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20:46
and friends checking up on me,
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20:50
I realized, you know, there was no road map for the way forward
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20:56
and that I was going to have to create one for myself.
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21:00
And so I spent this lost year trying and failing
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and trying and failing to move on,
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21:08
only to realize, you know,
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that we don't get to move on from the painful parts of our past.
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21:16
As much as we want to,
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you know, we can't compartmentalize them
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21:21
and stow them away
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21:22
because they always bob back up to the surface and often with a vengeance,
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21:27
and that instead I was going to have to figure out how to move forward
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21:32
with the imprints of my illness,
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21:36
both on my body and on my mind.
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21:39
And so one of the very first things I did,
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21:43
because I was still in a place of feeling afraid,
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21:48
feeling, you know, ironically,
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21:53
afraid of the outside world.
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21:55
I was comfortable in the hospital ecosystem
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21:58
to really, first of all,
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22:02
give myself the time to properly heal from that experience,
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22:09
but also to figure out what was on the other side of that fear.
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22:12
And so I learned how to drive,
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22:14
and I ended up returning to some of the letters
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22:20
I'd received from readers of "Life, Interrupted,"
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22:24
who had shared with me their own experiences of aftermath,
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22:29
of figuring out how to do the hard work of recovery
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22:35
and figuring out how to do that hard work of moving forward,
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22:41
with whatever had happened.
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22:44
And so I decided to sublet my apartment.
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22:49
I borrowed a friend's car.
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22:51
I got a bunch of camping gear,
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22:52
and I embarked on a different kind of 100-day project.
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22:56
A 100-day, 15,000-mile solo road trip with my dog Oscar as my co-pilot,
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23:02
and to visit some of these strangers who had been lifelines
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23:07
when I was at my sickest,
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23:09
and to talk to them
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23:10
about that experience of in-betweenness.
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23:13
So to wrap this up,
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23:15
the title of the book, "Between Two Kingdoms,"
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23:18
is a reference to Susan Sontag's essay "Illness as Metaphor,"
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23:23
where she describes how we all have dual citizenship
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23:27
in the kingdom of the sick
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23:29
and in the kingdom of the well,
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23:31
and that it's only a matter of time until we use that other passport.
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23:36
But what she didn't talk about was that liminal space between the two,
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23:42
where maybe you're not either sick or well.
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23:46
And that became the premise of that book.
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23:50
It's figuring out how to exist in the messy middle.
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23:54
SZ: That book launched during COVID.
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23:57
Something else that was beginning at that time was the "Isolation Journals"
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24:03
in April of 2020.
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24:05
Can you share what was the inspiration for this project,
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24:09
especially at such a unique moment in time?
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24:13
SJ: In the early days of lockdown,
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24:17
as the world was shutting down,
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24:20
as we were all having to pivot and to put our plans on hold
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24:25
and to figure out how to live our lives
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24:31
within very, you know, major constraints.
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24:36
So much of that experience felt bizarrely familiar to me.
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24:40
Everything from wearing a face mask and, you know,
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24:43
walking around with gallons of hand sanitizer
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24:47
to being isolated at home.
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24:50
And, you know,
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24:52
isolation is its own epidemic,
404
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24:56
one that predated the pandemic
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24:59
and one that continues now.
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25:03
And I decided, on April 1, 2020,
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25:10
to share what has always helped me
408
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4680
25:15
transform that sense of isolation into creative solitude and connection
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25:21
and even community.
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1720
25:23
And I launched a newsletter
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25:28
called "The Isolation Journals."
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2200
25:30
It's a free newsletter,
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1600
25:31
and we invited our larger community to do their own 100-day project.
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6040
25:37
And so every single day, for 100 days,
415
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4000
25:41
we had a different guest contributor write an essay in a journaling prompt.
416
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6680
25:48
We had artists and writers and musicians and community leaders.
417
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5120
25:53
One of my very favorite essays and prompts came from Lou Sullivan,
418
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4200
25:58
a seven-year-old, two-time brain cancer survivor
419
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4680
26:02
who shared this game that he played in the hospital
420
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2920
26:05
called “Inside Seeing,”
421
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1720
26:07
which was essentially his take on meditation.
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26:11
And within 48 hours, we had over 40,000 people who'd signed up.
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5960
26:17
And it was extraordinary to see what can happen
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26:21
when we dare to share our most vulnerable,
425
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4960
26:26
unvarnished stories.
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26:28
And the reverberation that that creates.
427
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26:31
And so that newsletter continues on to this day.
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3240
26:34
We have over 150,000 community members.
429
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26:39
And every Sunday we send out a newsletter
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26:43
with thoughts from me
431
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1720
26:44
and then a new essay and journaling prompt.
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26:49
But what's surprised me so much
433
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2240
26:51
is that people interpret journaling in all kinds of ways.
434
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3600
26:55
Some people use the prompts as conversation prompts,
435
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3000
26:58
others use them as thought prompts.
436
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2640
27:01
Some people reinterpret the idea of journaling,
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3280
27:04
not as old fashioned, you know, pen and paper,
438
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27:08
but they'll paint to the prompts, they'll do modern dances.
439
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27:12
And so it's really been such a nourishing,
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27:17
tender, life-giving space.
441
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27:22
And I'm so proud of this thing we built.
442
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27:26
I know what it's like to feel alone,
443
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27:30
to feel like you're the only person suffering in a particular way.
444
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27:35
But we have so many extraordinary artists throughout time,
445
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27:39
from Frida Kahlo to Virginia Woolf
446
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27:43
to Audre Lorde,
447
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27:45
who have taken that space of confinement,
448
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27:50
who have reimagined their limitations as creative grist.
449
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6000
27:56
SZ: We have a question from Celia.
450
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2080
27:59
“Our world tries to avoid having feelings, but in ‘American Symphony,’
451
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5160
28:04
you said that you didn't want to develop a thick skin.
452
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3040
28:07
You wanted to feel it all.
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1920
28:09
Can you say more about how that approach impacts your spirit
454
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3720
28:13
and how you experience life feeling it all
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2600
28:16
and how others can do the same?"
456
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28:20
SJ: You know, as a culture, we resist discomfort.
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28:26
We resist
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28:30
confronting the fact
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28:33
that all of us are here on this Earth for a very short period of time.
460
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5080
28:38
I'm not special, I live a little closer to the veil,
461
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5000
28:43
because of the nature of my illness.
462
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28:46
And as tempting as it can be, you know, to compartmentalize that discomfort,
463
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6840
28:53
to plaster over it, to numb it,
464
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28:56
I think there's also so much
465
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29:02
to be gained when you unguard your heart.
466
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4360
29:07
And it's the hardest thing in the world to do.
467
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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
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2320
29:18
not only about the toll it would take on me
470
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3400
29:22
and on my loved ones,
471
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3760
29:26
but I also knew that there was a lot to be gained
472
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4280
29:30
if I could resist that urge ...
473
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3160
29:35
to look away from the things that scared me most.
474
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6400
29:41
And rather to engage in them directly.
475
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3360
29:49
I wanted to be open to all of it.
476
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2520
29:51
I wanted to be open
477
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2280
29:53
to the beautiful things and to the painful things,
478
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4080
29:58
and to really learn how to hold both of them in the same palm.
479
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5400
30:04
Because in varying ways and for varying reasons,
480
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3960
30:08
that's the work that we all have to do.
481
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2520
30:11
There is no binary.
482
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1360
30:12
Life isn't either good or bad.
483
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30:15
We're not either happy or sad or healthy or unhealthy.
484
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5720
30:21
Most of us, you know, exist somewhere in the middle,
485
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3960
30:25
and depending on the hour or depending on the day,
486
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2720
30:28
we might shift from one to the other.
487
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2640
30:31
Trying to do the opposite of having tough skin,
488
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3800
30:34
trying to have tender skin,
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30:37
is not something that comes easily to me.
490
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2440
30:40
It's something I have to work at every single day.
491
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4400
30:44
But I know that for me,
492
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4080
30:49
it's the only way I can shift out of that survival mode
493
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5000
30:54
and in to fully living and feeling alive.
494
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3600
30:57
SZ: We have a question here from Lauren.
495
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2640
31:00
"In your book, you shared how cancer impacted your relationship
496
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31:03
with your previous boyfriend.
497
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1880
31:05
Have you carried these lessons and experienced
498
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3000
31:08
with this return of your leukemia?
499
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2440
31:11
Were you able to strike a better balance as a caregiver/patient?
500
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31:15
And how did art making and his music making
501
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31:18
affect your relationship this time around?"
502
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2520
31:21
SJ: The most surprising toll isn't what happens to the body,
503
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4520
31:25
it's what often happens to your relationships.
504
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4360
31:30
And so at 22, I was pretty isolated.
505
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4000
31:34
The friends that I had played beer pong with in college
506
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3720
31:37
were not necessarily the ones who showed up
507
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2720
31:40
to sit at my hospital bedside
508
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31:42
as my hair was falling out in clumps.
509
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2760
31:46
But more important
510
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31:48
than realizing who my real friends were and weren't,
511
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31:53
I was so astounded by the people who came out of the woodwork
512
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6520
32:00
and who showed up with such generosity
513
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3400
32:03
and support
514
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32:05
and really made me understand the value
515
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32:08
of cultivating community and prioritizing that
516
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32:12
and investing your time and energy in that.
517
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32:16
And so luckily, by the time that I did have my recurrence,
518
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5000
32:21
I had spent that decade building a community,
519
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32:25
because as much of a cliche as it sounds like,
520
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32:29
we all need a village
521
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32:31
and we especially need a village when the ceiling caves in.
522
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32:36
And so, when I learned of my recurrence,
523
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32:40
Jon was in the midst
524
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2920
32:43
of perhaps his busiest professional season of life.
525
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5000
32:48
And I’ve known Jon from the time I was 13 years old.
526
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3760
32:52
I have watched him work so hard
527
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32:55
to get to a place where he was getting the kind of recognition
528
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3520
32:59
and invitations that he had,
529
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33:01
and it felt really important to me that he not put his life on pause.
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4840
33:06
And so we had to get creative about how to stay connected to each other
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6160
33:12
at this time where it felt like we were living on polar opposite planets.
532
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6800
33:19
And so Jon came up with a beautiful idea of composing lullabies.
533
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5840
33:25
He would compose a lullaby for me every single day,
534
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3200
33:28
and send it off to me as a kind of counterpoint
535
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3440
33:31
to the hospital's many noises, the beeping of monitors,
536
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3520
33:35
the wheezing of respirators,
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1440
33:36
the alarms that go off.
538
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1760
33:38
And it was his way of enveloping me with his presence,
539
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33:43
even when he couldn't physically be there.
540
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33:46
And I, in turn, would text him photos of the little paintings that I would make.
541
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4280
33:50
And so what that meant was that when we spoke on the phone,
542
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4000
33:54
the conversation wasn't just centered around the latest biopsy results
543
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5680
34:00
and blood tests and whatever else was happening.
544
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3280
34:03
It was centered in our love language, which is a shared creative language,
545
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6160
34:10
and gave us a way of expressing what we couldn't express.
546
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4680
34:15
SZ: Joey writes,
547
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34:17
"What do you recommend to someone
548
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34:18
who is trying to get started with journaling
549
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34:20
but feeling a little overwhelmed by the blank page?
550
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3560
34:24
Do you have any rituals or any starting places you can recommend?"
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34:29
SJ: Yes, in spite of the fact that I've been a lifelong journaler,
552
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34:34
I go through many moments where I feel daunted by the blank page,
553
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34:38
and that was kind of the original premise of starting the "Isolation Journals."
554
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34:42
Sometimes we need to read something.
555
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1720
34:44
Sometimes we need to prompt ourselves to get out of, you know,
556
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34:49
to twist our mind out of its usual rut.
557
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34:55
Come join us at "The Isolation Journals."
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34:57
We have an archive of hundreds of essays and prompts and journaling challenges.
559
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4600
35:01
Or don't.
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35:03
But I'll offer you what helps me
561
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4000
35:07
when I'm feeling daunted by the blank page.
562
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35:10
And it's actually something I borrowed from my friend,
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the poet Marie Howe,
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and she told me that when she's feeling stuck,
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she writes with her non-dominant hand and a big scrawl across the page.
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"I don't want to write about ..."
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And then she writes into that.
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Another one of my favorite journaling prompts
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from "The Isolation Journals" is by the photographer Ash Parsons.
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During a period of time where she was in the NICU
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with a recently adopted baby who was having major health issues,
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she began what she calls “just 10 images,”
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which is listing just 10 snapshots from the last 24 hours,
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stream of consciousness, whatever comes to mind.
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And I love that prompt
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because it's in list form and it's so simple.
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But more than just recounting what happens in the last 24 hours,
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it's a prompt that's trained me to look and to look again
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and to notice my day differently.
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But the beautiful thing about journaling,
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and the thing that makes it so generative and inspiring for me
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is how low the barrier to entry is.
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You know, journaling is not beautiful writing.
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It doesn't have to be grammatically correct.
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It doesn’t have to be in full sentences.
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It can be whatever it is that you want.
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It's such an expansive form that you can interpret
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and reinterpret however it best serves you.
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SZ: I have one last question from York.
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York says, "Thank you for sharing your experience and insights.
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One of the parts that resonated with me was your experience of using creativity
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while you were struggling with finding purpose.
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Were you always able to focus on creativity and if not,
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what helped you make that shift?"
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SJ: Liz Gilbert speaks so beautifully
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about the pressure of finding
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your “capital P” Purpose.
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And so, what she's always said
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is you have to be one percent more curious than afraid.
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Any time I come up with some big, ambitious creative project,
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I immediately get frozen in my fear and daunted by whatever it is.
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And so I think curiosity is such a gentler way in and such ...
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And it's a more honest way into the creative process,
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where you don't hold to an expectation
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of how something should look
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or how something will come together.
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But you really give yourself the time and space
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to explore the threads of that curiosity.
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The work I'm most proud of,
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the work that has surprised me
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and changed me as an artist, as a writer,
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are the projects I started without that sense of output
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or expectation, be it, you know,
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that 100-day project and keeping that journal
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or even the paintings that I started doing in the hospital.
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They were pure play
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and tapping into that sort of child space,
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of creating simply for the joy of creating
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without any regard for if it's good or bad,
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but simply to explore.
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And so I try to trick myself back into that space all the time.
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SZ: Thank you for sharing so openly and vulnerably with us,
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as you frequently do.
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Bye for now.
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SJ: Thank you everyone, thank you Susan.
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[Want to support TED?]
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[Become a TED Member!]
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[Learn more at ted.com/membership]
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