How to change the world

貢獻者:vinvinking 類別:英文 時間:2020-01-22 20:24:59 收藏數:20 評分:0
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My best friend recently had a baby. And when I met him, I was in awe of witnessing this tiny, beauti
ful being enter into our lives. I also had this realization that he wasn't just entering our lives,
he was entering the world -- this crazy world that, especially now, feels so incredibly challenging.
I spend a lot time in my work talking to people about who we are, who we must be and what our heali
ng looks like.
So the first time I held him, I had my pep talk ready. You know, I wanted him to know that the way w
e find our strength is through our challenges. I wanted him to know that we can all do something big
when we start small. I wanted him to know that each of us is more resilient than we could ever imag
ine. So here I am holding little Thelonious. I look down at him, and it hits me: he's a baby.
He's not going to understand a single word I say to him. So instead, I thought it would probably be
a better idea if I went home and wrote. So, this is for grownups, but it's also for Thelonious, when
he's old enough to read it:
The world will say to you, "Be a better person." Do not be afraid to say, "Yes." Start by being a be
tter listener. Start by being better at walking down the street. See people. Say, "Hello." Ask how t
hey are doing and listen to what they say. Start by being a better friend, a better parent, a better
child to your parents; a better sibling, a better lover, a better partner. Start by being a better
neighbor. Meet someone you do not know, and get to know them.
The world will say to you, "What are you going to do?" Do not be afraid to say, "I know I can't do e
verything, but I can do something." Walk into more rooms saying, "I'm here to help." Become intimate
with generosity. Give what you can give, and do what you can do. Give dollars, give cents, give you
r time, give your love, give your heart, give your spirit.
The world will say to you, "We need peace." Find your peace within, hold it sacred, bring it with yo
u everywhere you go. Peace cannot be shared or created with others if we cannot first generate it wi
thin.
The world will say to you, "They are the enemy." Love enough to know that just because someone disag
rees with you, it does not make them your enemy. You may not win an argument, you may not change a m
ind, but if you choose to, you can always achieve the triumph of radical empathy -- an understanding
of the heart.
The world will say to you, "We need justice." Investigate. Find truth beyond the stories you are tol
d. Find truth beyond the way things seem. Ask, "Why?" Ask, "Is this fair?" Ask, "How did we get here
?" Do this with compassion. Do this with forgiveness. Learn to forgive others. Start by truly learni
ng how to forgive yourself. We are all more than our mistakes. We are all more than who we were yest
erday. We are all deserving of our dignity. See yourself in others. Recognize that your justice is m
y justice, and mine is yours. There can be no liberation for one of us if the other is not free.
The world will say to you, "I am violent." Respond by saying, "I am not. Not with my words and not w
ith my actions."
The world will say to you, "We need to heal the planet." Start by saying, "No, thank you. I don't ne
ed a plastic bag." Recycle, reuse. Start by picking up one piece of trash on your block.
The world will say to you, "There are too many problems." Do not be afraid to be a part of the solut
ions. Start by discussing the issues. We cannot overcome what we ignore. The more we talk about thin
gs, the more we see that the issues are connected because we are connected.
The world will say to you, "We need to end racism." Start by healing it in your own family.
The world will say to you, "How do we speak to bias and bigotry?" Start by having the first conversa
tion at your own kitchen table.
The world will say to you, "There is so much hate." Devote yourself to love. Love yourself so much t
hat you can love others without barriers and without judgment. When the world asks us big questions
that require big answers, we have two options. One: to feel so overwhelmed or unqualified, we do not
hing. Two: to start with one small act and qualify ourselves. I am the director of national security
, and so are you. Maybe no one appointed us and there were no senate confirmations, but we can secur
e a nation. When you help just one person to be more secure, a nation is more secure. With just one
outstretched hand that says, "Are you OK? I am here for you," we can transform insecurity into secur
ity.
We find ourselves saying to the world, "What should I do?" "What should we do?" The better question
might be: "How am I showing up?" I ask the world for peace, but do I show up with peace when I see m
y family and friends? I ask the world to end hatred, but do I show up with love not only for those I
know, but those I don't know? Do I show up with love for those whose ideas conflict with my own? I
ask the world to end suffering, but do I show up for those who are suffering on my street corner? We
say to the world, "Please change; we need change." But how do we show up to change our own lives? H
ow do we show up to change the lives of the people in our communities?
James Baldwin said, "Everything now, we must assume is in our own hands; we have no right to assume
otherwise." This has always been true.
No one nominated Harriet Tubman to her purpose, to her mission, to her courage. She did not say, "I'
m not a congressman or the president of the United States, so how could I possibly participate in th
e fight to abolish a system as big as slavery?" She instead spent 10 years making 19 trips, freeing
300 people, one group of people at a time. Think about the children of those 300 people, the grandch
ildren, the great-grandchildren and beyond. Our righteous acts create immeasurable ripples in the en
dless river of justice.
Whether it's Hurricane Katrina, Harvey, Irma or Maria, people did not say, "There is so much damage.
What should I do?" They got to work on what they could do. Those with boats got in their boats and
started loading in every woman, man and child they came across. Near and far, people gave their doll
ars, they gave their cents, they gave their hearts, they gave their spirit.
We spend so much time thinking we don't have the power to change the world. We forget that the power
to change someone's life is always in our hands. Change-making does not belong to one group of peop
le; it belongs to all of us. You don't have to wait on anyone to tell you that you are in this. Begi
n. Start by doing what you can with what you've got, where you are and in your own way.
We don't have to be heroes, wear a uniform, call ourselves activists or get elected to participate.
We just have to be brave enough to care.
Now, around the time Thelonious was born, I went to the birthday party of a man named Gene Moretti.
It was his 100th birthday, which means he lived in the United States through the Depression, World W
ar II, the struggle for workers' rights, the achievement of a woman's right to vote, the Civil Right
s Movement, a man on the moon, the Vietnam War and the election of the first black president. I sat
with him, and I said, "Gene, you have lived in America for 100 years. Do you have any advice during
these current times?" He smiled and said to me simply, "Yes. Be good to as many people as possible."
And as he danced with my mother, who is, by the way, half his age, in a room full of generations of
his family and hundreds of people, many of whom traveled thousands of miles to be there to celebrat
e him, I realized that he had not just given me advice, he had given me the first step that every si
ngle one of us is capable of making if we want to create a real, wholehearted impact on the world ar
ound us, right now.
"Be good to as many people as possible."
Thank you.
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