How to Find Laughter Anywhere | Chris Duffy | TED

47,577 views ・ 2024-09-11

TED


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00:03
My favorite part about working in an elementary school
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is that I could never predict what was going to happen next.
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Every day was a new, incredible day.
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There was never a boring moment.
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Sometimes, you think that you're handing out a worksheet
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just reviewing the names of shapes.
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But then instead of getting back hexagon and octagon,
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you get back this.
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["Amy" "Gabriella"]
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(Laughter)
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And I think we can agree that is just correct.
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(Laughter)
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That’s right, that is Gabriella.
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(Laughter)
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Or, another time I was teaching a class
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on human biology to my fifth-grade students
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when one of them afterwards handed in this anonymous question card.
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[What are balls for.]
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(Laughter)
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And you know what really gets me about this, what kills me,
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is we had spent so long studying punctuation.
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And he still used a period instead of a question mark.
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“What are balls for.” Period.
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(Laughter)
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At the same time that I was teaching elementary school students,
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I was also teaching adults improv comedy at a local theater on the weekends.
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This was a group of retired folks,
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graduate students and semi-successful business people
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who were paying money to spend their Saturday mornings
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in an unventilated basement with me.
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And most of the exercises that we were doing together
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were to get them to let go of the self-critical part of their brain,
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to release the idea that there was a "right" answer to find,
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and to instead be more comfortable with their honest, creative,
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idiosyncratic thoughts.
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Now any elementary school teacher can tell you
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that getting kids to share their honest, unexpected thoughts,
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that's not something you have to cultivate.
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They will do that whether you want them to or not.
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I mean, here are some real questions that kids asked me out of the blue
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with no context,
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during what was supposed to be a silent work time.
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(Laughter)
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"Is it possible to make myself live longer so that I can see the Sun explode?"
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(Laughter)
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"Are pigs actually prejudiced against women,
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or is that just an expression?"
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(Laughter)
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"If your brother isn't married yet,
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why doesn't he just marry your mom?"
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(Laughter)
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And actually, that brings up a really important point,
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which is that kids' ideas are not always good.
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Sometimes they're very bad.
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I'm personally very grateful that my mom and my brother are not married.
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(Laughter)
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There's some research that suggests that for many of us,
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fifth grade is close to the peak of this kind of wildly free,
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uninhibited, creative thinking.
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But that does not have to be the case.
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In my experience, the difference between people with an amazing sense of humor
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and those without is often just whether they are willing to accept
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and notice their honest reactions,
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or whether they try their hardest to fit them into a box.
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And that can shift over time.
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I saw that shift with my adult improv students.
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At first, when we would do an exercise
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where they were asked to name seven things in a given category
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as quickly and creatively as possible,
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many of them would get stuck.
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One guy, Rick, a corporate tax lawyer,
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answered the prompt,
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"Seven weird types of shoes"
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by saying, "Brown shoes, white shoes,
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black shoes, gray shoes."
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I'm not going to name all the shoes,
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it was all a lot of boring shoes, you get it.
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But then, after we practiced celebrating our more bizarre thoughts
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instead of repressing them,
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Rick eventually came up with a list a list that included things like,
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"Shoes covered in mud, shoes covered in gold,
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shoes covered in the blood of my enemies.”
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Which is like, that’s a lot, Rick,
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actually, that's a lot, it's really a lot.
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But it's also definitely more interesting.
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And I think that's the point.
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When we turn off our self-judgment
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and we just notice the things that stand out to us,
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or that we think,
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we can surprise ourselves in ways that are hilarious and delightful.
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Every comedian that I know has a notebook or some sort of document
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where they keep track of all the little odd things
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that they notice or think throughout the day.
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And what you find, when you start keeping track,
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is that there is no shortage of material out there.
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There [is] so much to laugh at.
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And if you have a little bit of courage to allow yourself to be laughed at
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and to laugh at yourself,
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you can make discoveries
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that you never would have otherwise, right?
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If you want to know what balls are for, sometimes you've got to ask.
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I have found that you can find laughter in even the driest places
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if you bring some of that mischievous fifth-grade energy
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to the instructions and to what you're "supposed" to be doing, right?
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It doesn't have to be geometry class.
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It can be an opportunity for you
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to hang out with your good friend Gabriella.
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Now I have had the most fun when I applied these lessons
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that I got from my fifth graders to self-serious adult spaces.
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To places where I maybe feel intimidated or like I don't necessarily belong.
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So, for example, for me personally, LinkedIn.
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Terrifying.
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I've never had a professional resume,
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I've never been comfortable with business networking,
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but I've also always been kind of fascinated by LinkedIn.
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Like, they let you make a profile,
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and they don't verify that you work at the place you say you work.
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So I decided I was going to test this out and have some fun.
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I made a profile on LinkedIn
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where I said that I was the CEO of LinkedIn.
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(Laughter)
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And I didn't think they would even let me do that.
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But not only did they, after I made the profile,
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one of the most incredible things
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that has ever happened in my entire life happened.
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Which is that LinkedIn sent this email to everyone in my contact list.
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They sent that email.
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(Laughter)
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"Congratulate Chris on the new job.
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Chris Duffy is now CEO of LinkedIn."
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(Laughter)
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That's a better joke than anything I could ever write in my entire life.
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(Laughter)
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I was the CEO of LinkedIn on LinkedIn for one year.
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(Laughter)
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And at that one-year mark,
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LinkedIn sent yet another email to everyone in my contact list
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asking them to congratulate me on my work anniversary.
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(Laughter)
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And at that point,
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I received a message from a woman named Faith
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who worked on LinkedIn's Trust and Security team.
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(Laughter)
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She said my account was being locked due to concerns about its inaccuracy.
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So I sent her back a photo of my license,
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front and back,
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to prove that my name was, in fact, Chris Duffy.
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(Laughter)
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Faith responded.
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"The thing that we are concerned about is not that your name is not Chris Duffy.
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It's that you are claiming to be the CEO of LinkedIn."
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So I responded,
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"Faith, you are taking a pretty disrespectful tone
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for someone who works for me."
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(Laughter)
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10 seconds later, she permanently deactivated my account.
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(Laughter)
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It was a short but glorious stint, running my own personal social network.
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(Laughter)
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And now, what am I up to these days?
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I'm so glad you asked.
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I'm more than just a fifth-grade graduate.
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I'm actually,
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I'm the founder and owner of TED.
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(Laughter)
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Congratulate me, you know you want to.
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Thanks for coming to my conference.
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(Applause and cheers)
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