How to shift your mindset and choose your future | Tom Rivett-Carnac

137,735 views ・ 2020-05-13

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Transcriber: Joseph Geni Reviewer: Camille Martínez
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I never thought that I would be giving my TED Talk somewhere like this.
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But, like half of humanity,
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I've spent the last four weeks under lockdown
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due to the global pandemic created by COVID-19.
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I am extremely fortunate that during this time
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I've been able to come here to these woods near my home in southern England.
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These woods have always inspired me,
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and as humanity now tries to think about how we can find the inspiration
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to retake control of our actions
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so that terrible things don't come down the road
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without us taking action to avert them,
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I thought this is a good place for us to talk.
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And I'd like to begin that story six years ago,
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when I had first joined the United Nations.
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Now, I firmly believe that the UN is of unparalleled importance
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in the world right now
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to promote collaboration and cooperation.
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But what they don't tell you when you join
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is that this essential work is delivered
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mainly in the form of extremely boring meetings --
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extremely long, boring meetings.
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Now, you may feel that you have attended some long, boring meetings in your life,
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and I'm sure you have.
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But these UN meetings are next-level,
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and everyone who works there approaches them with a level of calm
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normally only achieved by Zen masters.
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But myself, I wasn't ready for that.
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I joined expecting drama and tension and breakthrough.
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What I wasn't ready for
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was a process that seemed to move at the speed of a glacier,
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at the speed that a glacier used to move at.
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Now, in the middle of one of these long meetings,
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I was handed a note.
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And it was handed to me by my friend and colleague and coauthor,
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Christiana Figueres.
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Christiana was the Executive Secretary
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of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change,
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and as such, had overall responsibility
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for the UN reaching what would become the Paris Agreement.
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I was running political strategy for her.
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So when she handed me this note,
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I assumed that it would contain detailed political instructions
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about how we were going to get out of this nightmare quagmire
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that we seemed to be trapped in.
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I took the note and looked at it.
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It said, "Painful.
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But let's approach with love!"
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Now, I love this note for lots of reasons.
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I love the way the little tendrils are coming out from the word "painful."
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It was a really good visual depiction of how I felt at that moment.
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But I particularly love it because as I looked at it,
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I realized that it was a political instruction,
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and that if we were going to be successful,
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this was how we were going to do it.
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So let me explain that.
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What I'd been feeling in those meetings was actually about control.
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I had moved my life from Brooklyn in New York to Bonn in Germany
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with the extremely reluctant support of my wife.
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My children were now in a school where they couldn't speak the language,
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and I thought the deal for all this disruption to my world
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was that I would have some degree of control over what was going to happen.
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I felt for years that the climate crisis is the defining challenge
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of our generation,
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and here I was, ready to play my part and do something for humanity.
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But I put my hands on the levers of control that I'd been given
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and pulled them,
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and nothing happened.
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I realized the things I could control were menial day-to-day things.
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"Do I ride my bike to work?" and "Where do I have lunch?",
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whereas the things that were going to determine
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whether we were going to be successful
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were issues like, "Will Russia wreck the negotiations?"
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"Will China take responsibility for their emissions?"
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"Will the US help poorer countries deal with their burden of climate change?"
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The differential felt so huge,
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I could see no way I could bridge the two.
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It felt futile.
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I began to feel that I'd made a mistake.
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I began to get depressed.
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But even in that moment,
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I realized that what I was feeling had a lot of similarities
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to what I'd felt when I first found out about the climate crisis years before.
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I'd spent many of my most formative years as a Buddhist monk
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in my early 20s,
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but I left the monastic life, because even then, 20 years ago,
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I felt that the climate crisis was already a quickly unfolding emergency
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and I wanted to do my part.
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But once I'd left and I rejoined the world,
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I looked at what I could control.
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It was the few tons of my own emissions and that of my immediate family,
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which political party I voted for every few years,
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whether I went on a march or two.
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And then I looked at the issues that would determine the outcome,
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and they were big geopolitical negotiations,
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massive infrastructure spending plans,
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what everybody else did.
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The differential again felt so huge
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that I couldn't see any way that I could bridge it.
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I kept trying to take action,
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but it didn't really stick.
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It felt futile.
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Now, we know that this can be a common experience for many people,
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and maybe you have had this experience.
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When faced with an enormous challenge
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that we don't feel we have any agency or control over,
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our mind can do a little trick to protect us.
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We don't like to feel like we're out of control
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facing big forces,
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so our mind will tell us, "Maybe it's not that important.
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Maybe it's not happening in the way that people say, anyway."
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Or, it plays down our own role.
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"There's nothing that you individually can do, so why try?"
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But there's something odd going on here.
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Is it really true that humans will only take sustained and dedicated action
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on an issue of paramount importance
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when they feel they have a high degree of control?
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Look at these pictures.
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These people are caregivers and nurses
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who have been helping humanity face the coronavirus COVID-19
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as it has swept around the world as a pandemic in the last few months.
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Are these people able to prevent the spread of the disease?
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No.
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Are they able to prevent their patients from dying?
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Some, they will have been able to prevent,
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but others, it will have been beyond their control.
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Does that make their contribution futile and meaningless?
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Actually, it's offensive even to suggest that.
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What they are doing is caring for their fellow human beings
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at their moment of greatest vulnerability.
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And that work has huge meaning,
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to the point where I only have to show you those pictures
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for it to become evident
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that the courage and humanity those people are demonstrating
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makes their work some of the most meaningful things
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that can be done as human beings,
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even though they can't control the outcome.
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Now, that's interesting,
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because it shows us that humans are capable
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of taking dedicated and sustained action,
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even when they can't control the outcome.
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But it leaves us with another challenge.
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With the climate crisis,
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the action that we take is separated from the impact of it,
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whereas what is happening with these images
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is these nurses are being sustained not by the lofty goal of changing the world
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but by the day-to-day satisfaction of caring for another human being
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through their moments of weakness.
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With the climate crisis, we have this huge separation.
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It used to be that we were separated by time.
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The impacts of the climate crisis were supposed to be way off in the future.
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But right now, the future has come to meet us.
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Continents are on fire.
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Cities are going underwater.
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Countries are going underwater.
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Hundreds of thousands of people are on the move as a result of climate change.
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But even if those impacts are no longer separated from us by time,
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they're still separated from us in a way that makes it difficult to feel
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that direct connection.
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They happen somewhere else to somebody else
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or to us in a different way than we're used to experiencing it.
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So even though that story of the nurse demonstrates something to us
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about human nature,
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we're going to have find a different way
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of dealing with the climate crisis in a sustained manner.
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There is a way that we can do this,
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a powerful combination of a deep and supporting attitude
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that when combined with consistent action
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can enable whole societies to take dedicated action in a sustained way
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towards a shared goal.
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It's been used to great effect throughout history.
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So let me give you a historical story to explain it.
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Right now, I am standing in the woods near my home in southern England.
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And these particular woods are not far from London.
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Eighty years ago, that city was under attack.
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In the late 1930s,
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the people of Britain would do anything to avoid facing the reality
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that Hitler would stop at nothing to conquer Europe.
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Fresh with memories from the First World War,
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they were terrified of Nazi aggression
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and would do anything to avoid facing that reality.
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In the end, the reality broke through.
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Churchill is remembered for many things, and not all of them positive,
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but what he did in those early days of the war
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was he changed the story the people of Britain told themselves
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about what they were doing and what was to come.
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Where previously there had been trepidation and nervousness and fear,
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there came a calm resolve,
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an island alone,
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a greatest hour,
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a greatest generation,
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a country that would fight them on the beaches and in the hills
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and in the streets,
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a country that would never surrender.
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That change from fear and trepidation
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to facing the reality, whatever it was and however dark it was,
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had nothing to do with the likelihood of winning the war.
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There was no news from the front that battles were going better
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or even at that point that a powerful new ally had joined the fight
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and changed the odds in their favor.
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It was simply a choice.
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A deep, determined, stubborn form of optimism emerged,
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not avoiding or denying the darkness that was pressing in
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but refusing to be cowed by it.
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That stubborn optimism is powerful.
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It is not dependent on assuming that the outcome is going to be good
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or having a form of wishful thinking about the future.
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However, what it does is it animates action
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and infuses it with meaning.
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We know that from that time,
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despite the risk and despite the challenge,
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it was a meaningful time full of purpose,
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and multiple accounts have confirmed
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that actions that ranged from pilots in the Battle of Britain
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to the simple act of pulling potatoes from the soil
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became infused with meaning.
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They were animated towards a shared purpose and a shared outcome.
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We have seen that throughout history.
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This coupling of a deep and determined stubborn optimism with action,
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when the optimism leads to a determined action,
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then they can become self-sustaining:
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without the stubborn optimism, the action doesn't sustain itself;
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without the action, the stubborn optimism is just an attitude.
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The two together can transform an entire issue and change the world.
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We saw this at multiple other times.
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We saw it when Rosa Parks refused to get up from the bus.
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We saw it in Gandhi's long salt marches to the beach.
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We saw it when the suffragettes said that "Courage calls to courage everywhere."
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And we saw it when Kennedy said that within 10 years,
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he would put a man on the moon.
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That electrified a generation and focused them on a shared goal
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against a dark and frightening adversary,
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even though they didn't know how they would achieve it.
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In each of these cases,
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a realistic and gritty but determined, stubborn optimism
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was not the result of success.
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It was the cause of it.
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That is also how the transformation happened
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on the road to the Paris Agreement.
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Those challenging, difficult, pessimistic meetings transformed
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as more and more people decided that this was our moment to dig in
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and determine that we would not drop the ball on our watch,
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and we would deliver the outcome that we knew was possible.
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More and more people transformed themselves to that perspective
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and began to work,
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and in the end, that worked its way up into a wave of momentum
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that crashed over us
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and delivered many of those challenging issues
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with a better outcome than we could possibly have imagined.
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And even now, years later and with a climate denier in the White House,
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much that was put in motion in those days is still unfolding,
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and we have everything to play for in the coming months and years
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on dealing with the climate crisis.
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So right now, we are coming through one of the most challenging periods
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in the lives of most of us.
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The global pandemic has been frightening,
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whether personal tragedy has been involved or not.
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But it has also shaken our belief that we are powerless
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in the face of great change.
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In the space of a few weeks,
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we mobilized to the point where half of humanity took drastic action
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to protect the most vulnerable.
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If we're capable of that,
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maybe we have not yet tested the limits of what humanity can do
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when it rises to meet a shared challenge.
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We now need to move beyond this narrative of powerlessness,
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because make no mistake --
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the climate crisis will be orders of magnitude worse than the pandemic
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if we do not take the action that we can still take
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to avert the tragedy that we see coming towards us.
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We can no longer afford the luxury of feeling powerless.
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The truth is that future generations
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will look back at this precise moment with awe
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as we stand at the crossroads between a regenerative future
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and one where we have thrown it all away.
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And the truth is that a lot is going pretty well for us in this transition.
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Costs for clean energy are coming down.
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Cities are transforming. Land is being regenerated.
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People are on the streets calling for change
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with a verve and tenacity
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we have not seen for a generation.
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Genuine success is possible in this transition,
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and genuine failure is possible, too,
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which makes this the most exciting time to be alive.
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We can take a decision right now that we will approach this challenge
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with a stubborn form of gritty, realistic and determined optimism
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and do everything within our power to ensure that we shape the path
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as we come out of this pandemic towards a regenerative future.
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We can all decide that we will be hopeful beacons for humanity
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even if there are dark days ahead,
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and we can decide that we will be responsible,
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we will reduce our own emissions by at least 50 percent
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in the next 10 years,
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and we will take action to engage with governments and corporations
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to ensure they do what is necessary coming out of the pandemic
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to rebuild the world that we want them to.
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Right now, all of these things are possible.
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So let's go back to that boring meeting room
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where I'm looking at that note from Christiana.
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And looking at it took me back
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to some of the most transformative experiences of my life.
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One of the many things I learned as a monk
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is that a bright mind and a joyful heart is both the path and the goal in life.
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This stubborn optimism is a form of applied love.
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It is both the world we want to create
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and the way in which we can create that world.
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And it is a choice for all of us.
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Choosing to face this moment with stubborn optimism
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can fill our lives with meaning and purpose,
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and in doing so, we can put a hand on the arc of history
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and bend it towards the future that we choose.
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Yes, living now feels out of control.
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It feels frightening and scary and new.
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But let's not falter at this most crucial of transitions
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that is coming at us right now.
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Let's face it with stubborn and determined optimism.
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Yes, seeing the changes in the world right now
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can be painful.
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But let's approach it with love.
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Thank you.
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About this website

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