Carl Honore: In praise of slowness

214,914 views ・ 2007-03-23

TED


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What I'd like to start off with is an observation,
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which is that if I've learned anything over the last year,
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it's that the supreme irony
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of publishing a book about slowness
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is that you have to go around promoting it really fast.
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I seem to spend most of my time these days
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zipping from city to city, studio to studio,
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interview to interview,
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serving up the book in really tiny bite-size chunks.
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Because everyone these days
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wants to know how to slow down,
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but they want to know how to slow down really quickly. So ...
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so I did a spot on CNN the other day
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where I actually spent more time in makeup than I did talking on air.
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And I think that -- that's not really surprising though, is it?
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Because that's kind of the world that we live in now,
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a world stuck in fast-forward.
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A world obsessed with speed,
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with doing everything faster, with cramming more and more
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into less and less time.
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Every moment of the day feels like
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a race against the clock.
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To borrow a phrase from Carrie Fisher, which is
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in my bio there; I'll just toss it out again --
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"These days even instant gratification takes too long." (Laughter)
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And
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if you think about how we to try to make things better, what do we do?
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No, we speed them up, don't we? So we used to dial; now we speed dial.
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We used to read; now we speed read. We used to walk; now we speed walk.
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And of course, we used to date and now we speed date.
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And even things that are by their very nature slow --
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we try and speed them up too.
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So I was in New York recently, and I walked past a gym
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that had an advertisement in the window for a new course, a new evening course.
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And it was for, you guessed it, speed yoga.
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So this -- the perfect solution for time-starved professionals
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who want to, you know, salute the sun,
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but only want to give over about 20 minutes to it.
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I mean, these are sort of the extreme examples,
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and they're amusing and good to laugh at.
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But there's a very serious point,
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and I think that in the headlong dash of daily life,
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we often lose sight of the damage
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that this roadrunner form of living does to us.
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We're so marinated in the culture of speed
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that we almost fail to notice the toll it takes
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on every aspect of our lives --
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on our health, our diet, our work,
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our relationships, the environment and our community.
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And sometimes it takes
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a wake-up call, doesn't it,
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to alert us to the fact that we're hurrying through our lives,
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instead of actually living them; that we're
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living the fast life, instead of the good life.
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And I think for many people, that wake-up call
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takes the form of an illness.
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You know, a burnout, or eventually the body says,
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"I can't take it anymore," and throws in the towel.
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Or maybe a relationship goes up in smoke
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because we haven't had the time, or the patience,
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or the tranquility,
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to be with the other person, to listen to them.
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And my wake-up call came when I started
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reading bedtime stories to my son,
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and I found that at the end of day,
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I would go into his room and I just couldn't slow down -- you know,
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I'd be speed reading "The Cat In The Hat."
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I'd be -- you know, I'd be skipping lines here,
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paragraphs there, sometimes a whole page,
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and of course, my little boy knew the book inside out, so we would quarrel.
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And what should have been the most relaxing, the most intimate,
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the most tender moment of the day,
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when a dad sits down to read to his son,
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became instead this kind of gladiatorial battle of wills,
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a clash between my speed
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and his slowness.
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And this went on for some time,
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until I caught myself scanning a newspaper article
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with timesaving tips for fast people.
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And one of them made reference to a series of books called
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"The One-Minute Bedtime Story."
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And I wince saying those words now,
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but my first reaction at the time was very different.
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My first reflex was to say,
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"Hallelujah -- what a great idea!
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This is exactly what I'm looking for to speed up bedtime even more."
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But thankfully,
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a light bulb went on over my head, and my next reaction was very different,
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and I took a step back, and I thought,
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"Whoa -- you know, has it really come to this?
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Am I really in such a hurry that I'm prepared
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to fob off my son with a sound byte at the end of the day?"
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And I put away the newspaper --
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and I was getting on a plane -- and I sat there,
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and I did something I hadn't done for a long time -- which is I did nothing.
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I just thought, and I thought long and hard.
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And by the time I got off that plane, I'd decided I wanted to do something about it.
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I wanted to investigate this whole roadrunner culture,
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and what it was doing to me and to everyone else.
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And I had two questions in my head.
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The first was, how did we get so fast?
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And the second is, is it possible,
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or even desirable, to slow down?
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Now, if you think about
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how our world got so accelerated, the usual suspects rear their heads.
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You think of, you know, urbanization,
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consumerism, the workplace, technology.
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But I think if you cut through
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those forces, you get to what might be the deeper
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driver, the nub of the question,
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which is how we think about time itself.
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In other cultures, time is cyclical.
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It's seen as moving in great,
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unhurried circles.
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It's always renewing and refreshing itself.
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Whereas in the West, time is linear.
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It's a finite resource;
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it's always draining away.
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You either use it, or lose it.
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"Time is money," as Benjamin Franklin said.
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And I think what that does to us psychologically
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is it creates an equation.
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Time is scarce, so what do we do?
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Well -- well, we speed up, don't we?
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We try and do more and more with less and less time.
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We turn every moment of every day
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into a race to the finish line --
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a finish line, incidentally, that we never reach,
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but a finish line nonetheless.
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And I guess that the question is,
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is it possible to break free from that mindset?
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And thankfully, the answer is yes, because
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what I discovered, when I began looking around, that there is
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a global backlash against this culture that
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tells us that faster is always better, and that busier is best.
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Right across the world, people are doing the unthinkable:
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they're slowing down, and finding that,
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although conventional wisdom tells you that if you slow down, you're road kill,
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the opposite turns out to be true:
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that by slowing down at the right moments,
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people find that they do everything better.
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They eat better; they make love better; they exercise better;
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they work better; they live better.
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And, in this kind of cauldron
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of moments and places and acts of deceleration,
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lie what a lot of people now refer to as
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the "International Slow Movement."
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Now if you'll permit me a small act of hypocrisy,
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I'll just give you a very quick overview of
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what's going on inside the Slow Movement. If you think of food,
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many of you will have heard of the Slow Food movement.
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Started in Italy, but has spread across the world,
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and now has 100,000 members
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in 50 countries.
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And it's driven by a very simple and sensible message,
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which is that we get more pleasure and more health
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from our food when we
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cultivate, cook and consume it at a reasonable pace.
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I think also the explosion of
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the organic farming movement, and the renaissance of farmers' markets,
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are other illustrations
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of the fact that people are desperate to get away from
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eating and cooking and cultivating their food
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on an industrial timetable.
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They want to get back to slower rhythms.
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And out of the Slow Food movement has grown something
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called the Slow Cities movement, which has started in Italy,
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but has spread right across Europe and beyond.
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And in this, towns
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begin to rethink how they organize the urban landscape,
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so that people are encouraged to slow down
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and smell the roses and connect with one another.
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So they might curb traffic,
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or put in a park bench, or some green space.
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And in some ways, these changes add up to more than the sum of their parts,
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because I think when a Slow City becomes officially a Slow City,
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it's kind of like a philosophical declaration.
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It's saying to the rest of world, and to the people in that town,
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that we believe that in the 21st century,
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In medicine, I think a lot of people are deeply disillusioned
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with the kind of quick-fix mentality
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you find in conventional medicine.
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And millions of them around the world are turning
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to complementary and alternative forms of medicine,
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which tend to tap into sort of
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slower, gentler, more holistic forms of healing.
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Now, obviously the jury is out on many of these complementary therapies,
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and I personally doubt that the coffee enema
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will ever, you know, gain mainstream approval.
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But other treatments
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such as acupuncture and massage, and even just relaxation,
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clearly have some kind of benefit.
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And blue-chip medical colleges everywhere
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are starting to study these things to find out how they work,
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and what we might learn from them.
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Sex. There's an awful lot of fast sex around, isn't there?
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I was coming to --
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well -- no pun intended there.
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I was making my way, let's say, slowly to Oxford,
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and I went through a news agent, and I saw a magazine,
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a men's magazine, and it said on the front,
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"How to bring your partner to orgasm in 30 seconds."
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So, you know, even sex
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is on a stopwatch these days.
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Now, you know,
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I like a quickie as much as the next person,
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but I think that there's an awful lot to be gained
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from slow sex -- from slowing down in the bedroom.
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You know, you tap into that -- those deeper,
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sort of, psychological, emotional, spiritual currents,
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and you get a better orgasm with the buildup.
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You can get more bang for your buck, let's say.
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I mean, the Pointer Sisters said it most eloquently, didn't they,
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when they sang the praises of "a lover with a slow hand."
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Now, we all laughed at Sting
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a few years ago when he went Tantric,
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but you fast-forward a few years, and now you find couples of all ages
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flocking to workshops, or maybe just
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on their own in their own bedrooms, finding ways
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to put on the brakes and have better sex.
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And of course, in Italy where -- I mean, Italians always seem to know
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where to find their pleasure --
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they've launched an official Slow Sex movement.
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The workplace.
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Right across much of the world --
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North America being a notable exception --
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working hours have been coming down.
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And Europe is an example of that,
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and people finding that their quality of life improves
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as they're working less, and also
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that their hourly productivity goes up.
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Now, clearly there are problems with
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the 35-hour workweek in France --
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too much, too soon, too rigid.
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But other countries in Europe, notably the Nordic countries,
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are showing that it's possible
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to have a kick-ass economy
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without being a workaholic.
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And Norway, Sweden,
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Denmark and Finland now rank
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among the top six most competitive nations on Earth,
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and they work the kind of hours that would make the average American
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weep with envy.
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And if you go beyond sort of the country level,
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down at the micro-company level,
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more and more companies now are realizing
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that they need to allow their staff
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either to work fewer hours or just to unplug --
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to take a lunch break, or to go sit in a quiet room,
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to switch off their Blackberrys and laptops -- you at the back --
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mobile phones,
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during the work day or on the weekend, so that they have time to recharge
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and for the brain to slide into that
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kind of creative mode of thought.
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It's not just, though, these days,
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adults who overwork, though, is it? It's children, too.
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I'm 37, and my childhood ended in the mid-'80s,
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and I look at kids now, and I'm just amazed by the way they
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race around with more homework,
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more tutoring, more extracurriculars
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than we would ever have conceived of a generation ago.
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And some of the most heartrending emails
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that I get on my website
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are actually from adolescents
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hovering on the edge of burnout, pleading with me
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to write to their parents,
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to help them slow down, to help them get off this
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full-throttle treadmill.
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But thankfully, there is a backlash there in parenting as well,
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and you're finding that, you know, towns in the United States
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are now banding together and banning extracurriculars
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on a particular day of the month, so that people can,
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you know, decompress and have some family time, and slow down.
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Homework is another thing. There are homework bans
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springing up all over the developed world
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in schools which had been piling on the homework for years,
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and now they're discovering that less can be more.
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So there was a case up in Scotland recently
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where a fee-paying, high-achieving private school
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banned homework
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for everyone under the age of 13,
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and the high-achieving parents freaked out and said,
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"What are you -- you know, our kids will fall" -- the headmaster said,
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"No, no, your children need to slow down at the end of the day."
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And just this last month, the exam results came in,
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and in math, science, marks went up 20 percent
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on average last year.
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And I think what's very revealing is that
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the elite universities, who are often cited as the reason
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that people drive their kids and hothouse them so much,
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are starting to notice the caliber of students
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coming to them is falling. These kids have wonderful marks;
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they have CVs jammed with extracurriculars,
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to the point that would make your eyes water.
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But they lack spark; they lack
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the ability to think creatively and think outside --
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they don't know how to dream. And so what these Ivy League schools,
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and Oxford and Cambridge and so on, are starting to send a message
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to parents and students that they need to put on the brakes a little bit.
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And in Harvard, for instance, they send out
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a letter to undergraduates -- freshmen --
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telling them that they'll get more out of life, and more out of Harvard,
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if they put on the brakes, if they do less,
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but give time to things, the time that things need,
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to enjoy them, to savor them.
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And even if they sometimes do nothing at all.
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And that letter is called -- very revealing, I think --
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"Slow Down!" -- with an exclamation mark on the end.
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So wherever you look, the message, it seems to me, is the same:
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that less is very often more,
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that slower is very often
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better. But that said, of course,
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it's not that easy to slow down, is it?
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I mean, you heard that I got a speeding ticket
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while I was researching my book on the benefits of slowness,
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and that's true, but that's not all of it.
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I was actually en route to a dinner
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held by Slow Food at the time.
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And if that's not shaming enough, I got that ticket in Italy.
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And if any of you have ever driven on an Italian highway,
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you'll have a pretty good idea of how fast I was going.
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(Laughter)
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But why is it so hard to slow down?
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I think there are various reasons.
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One is that speed is fun, you know, speed is sexy.
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It's all that adrenaline rush. It's hard to give it up.
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I think there's a kind of metaphysical dimension --
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that speed becomes a way of walling ourselves off
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from the bigger, deeper questions.
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We fill our head with distraction, with busyness,
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so that we don't have to ask,
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am I well? Am I happy? Are my children growing up right?
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Are politicians making good decisions on my behalf?
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Another reason -- although I think, perhaps, the most powerful reason --
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why we find it hard to slow down is the cultural taboo
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that we've erected against slowing down.
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"Slow" is a dirty word in our culture.
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It's a byword for "lazy," "slacker,"
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for being somebody who gives up.
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You know, "he's a bit slow." It's actually synonymous
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with being stupid.
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I guess what the Slow Movement -- the purpose of the Slow Movement,
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or its main goal, really, is to tackle that taboo,
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and to say that yes,
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sometimes slow is not the answer,
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that there is such a thing as "bad slow."
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You know, I got stuck on the M25,
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which is a ring road around London, recently,
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and spent three-and-a-half hours there. And I can tell you,
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that's really bad slow.
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But the new idea,
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the sort of revolutionary idea, of the Slow Movement,
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is that there is such a thing as "good slow," too.
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And good slow is, you know, taking the time
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to eat a meal with your family, with the TV switched off.
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Or taking the time to look at a problem from all angles
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in the office to make the best decision
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at work.
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Or even simply just taking the time
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to slow down
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and savor your life.
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Now, one of the things that I found most uplifting
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about all of this stuff that's happened around the book
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since it came out, is the reaction to it.
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And I knew that when my book on slowness came out,
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it would be welcomed by the New Age brigade,
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but it's also been taken up, with great gusto,
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by the corporate world -- you know,
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business press, but also
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big companies and leadership organizations.
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Because people at the top of the chain, people like you, I think,
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are starting to realize that there's too much
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speed in the system,
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there's too much busyness, and it's time to find,
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or get back to that lost art of shifting gears.
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Another encouraging sign, I think,
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is that it's not just in the developed world
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that this idea's been taken up. In the developing world,
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in countries that are on the verge of making that leap
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into first world status -- China, Brazil,
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Thailand, Poland, and so on --
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these countries have embraced the idea of the Slow Movement,
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many people in them, and there's a debate going on
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in their media, on the streets.
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Because I think they're looking at the West, and they're saying,
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"Well, we like that aspect of what you've got,
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but we're not so sure about that."
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So all of that said, is it,
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I guess, is it possible?
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That's really the main question before us today. Is it possible
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to slow down? And
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I'm happy to be able to say to you
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that the answer is a resounding yes.
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And I present myself as Exhibit A,
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a kind of reformed and rehabilitated
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speed-aholic.
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I still love speed. You know, I live in London,
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and I work as a journalist,
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and I enjoy the buzz and the busyness,
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and the adrenaline rush that comes from both of those things.
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I play squash and ice hockey,
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two very fast sports, and I wouldn't give them up for the world.
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But I've also, over the last year or so,
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got in touch with my inner tortoise.
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(Laughter)
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And what that means is that
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I no longer
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overload myself gratuitously.
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My default mode is no longer
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to be a rush-aholic.
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I no longer hear
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time's winged chariot drawing near,
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or at least not as much as I did before.
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I can actually hear it now, because I see my time is ticking off.
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And the upshot of all of that is that
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I actually feel a lot happier, healthier,
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more productive than I ever have.
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I feel like I'm living
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my life rather than actually just racing through it.
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And perhaps, the most important
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measure of the success of this
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is that I feel that my relationships are a lot deeper,
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richer, stronger.
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And for me, I guess, the litmus test
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for whether this would work, and what it would mean,
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was always going to be bedtime stories, because that's sort of where
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the journey began. And there too the news is
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rosy. You know,
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at the end of the day, I go into my son's room.
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I don't wear a watch. I switch off my computer,
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so I can't hear the email pinging into the basket,
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and I just slow down to his pace and we read.
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And because children have their own tempo and internal clock,
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they don't do quality time,
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where you schedule 10 minutes for them to open up to you.
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They need you to move at their rhythm.
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I find that 10 minutes into a story, you know,
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my son will suddenly say, "You know,
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something happened in the playground today that really bothered me."
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And we'll go off and have a conversation on that.
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And I now find that bedtime stories
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used to be
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a box on my to-do list, something that I dreaded,
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because it was so slow and I had to get through it quickly.
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It's become my reward at the end of the day,
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something I really cherish.
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And I have a kind of Hollywood ending
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to my talk this afternoon,
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which goes a little bit like this:
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a few months ago, I was getting ready to go on
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another book tour, and I had my bags packed.
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I was downstairs by the front door, and I was waiting for a taxi,
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and my son came down the stairs and
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he'd made a card for me. And he was carrying it.
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He'd gone and stapled two cards, very like these, together,
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and put a sticker of his favorite
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character, Tintin, on the front.
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And he said to me,
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or he handed this to me, and I read it,
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and it said, "To Daddy, love Benjamin."
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And I thought, "Aw, that's really sweet.
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Is that a good luck on the book tour card?"
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And he said, "No, no, no, Daddy -- this is a card
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for being the best story reader in the world."
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And I thought, "Yeah, you know, this slowing down thing really does work."
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Thank you very much.
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About this website

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