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An ode to living on Earth

  • 0:01 - 0:02
    [Oliver Jeffers]
  • 0:02 - 0:04
    [An ode to living on Earth]
  • 0:05 - 0:07
    Hello.
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    I'm sure by the time
    I get to end of this sentence,
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    given how I talk,
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    you'll all have figured out
    that I'm from a place called
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    planet Earth.
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    Earth is pretty great.
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    It's home to us.
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    And germs.
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    Those [blip] take a back seat
    for the time being,
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    because believe it or not,
    they're not the only thing going on.
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    This planet is also home
    to cars, Brussels sprouts;
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    those weird fish things
    that have their own headlights;
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    art, fire,
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    fire extinguishers,
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    laws, pigeons, bottles of beer,
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    lemons and light bulbs;
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    Pinot noir and paracetamol;
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    ghosts, mosquitoes, flamingos, flowers,
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    the ukulele, elevators and cats,
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    cat videos, the internet;
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    iron beams, buildings and batteries,
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    all ingenuity and bright ideas,
    all known life,
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    and a whole bunch of other stuff.
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    Pretty much everything we know
    and ever heard of.
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    It's my favorite place, actually.
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    This small orb,
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    floating in a cold and lonely
    part of the cosmos.
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    Oh, the accent is from Belfast,
    by the way, which is ...
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    here.
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    Roughly.
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    You may think you know this planet Earth,
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    as you're from here.
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    But chances are,
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    you probably haven't thought
    about the basics in a while.
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    I thought I knew it.
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    Thought I was an expert, even.
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    Until, that is, I had to explain
    the entire place,
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    and how it's supposed to work,
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    to someone who had never been here before.
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    Now what you might think,
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    although my dad always did say
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    the sure sign of intelligent
    life out there
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    is that they haven't bothered
    trying to contact us.
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    It was actually my newborn son
    I was trying to explain things to.
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    We'd never been parents before,
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    my wife and I,
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    and so treated him like most guests
    when he arrived home for the first time,
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    by giving him the tour.
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    This is where you live, son.
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    This room is where we make food at.
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    This is the room we keep
    our collection of chairs, and so on.
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    It's refreshing,
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    explaining how our planet works
    to a zero-year-old.
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    But after the laughs,
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    and once the magnitude that new humans
    know absolutely nothing
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    settles on you and how little
    you know either,
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    explaining the whole planet
    becomes quite intimidating.
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    But I tried anyway.
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    As I walked around those first few weeks,
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    narrating the world as I saw it,
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    I began to take notes
    of the ridiculous things I was saying.
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    The notes slowly morphed into a letter
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    intended for my son
    once he learned to read.
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    And that letter became a book
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    about the basic principles
    of what it is to be a human
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    living on Earth in the 21st century.
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    Some things are really obvious.
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    Like, the planet is made of two parts:
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    land and sea.
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    Some less obvious
    until you think about them.
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    Like, time.
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    Things can sometimes
    move slowly here on Earth.
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    But more often, they move quickly.
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    So use your time well,
    it will be gone before you know it.
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    Or people.
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    People come in all different
    shapes, sizes and colors.
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    We may all look different,
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    act different and sound different,
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    but don't be fooled.
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    We are all people.
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    It doesn't skip me that of all
    the places in the universe,
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    people only live on Earth,
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    can only live on Earth.
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    And even then,
    only on some of the dry bits.
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    There's only a very small
    part of the surface of our planet
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    that is actually habitable to human life,
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    and squeezed in here
    is where all of us live.
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    It's easy to forget
    when you're up close to the dirt,
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    the rocks, the foliage,
    the concrete of our lands,
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    just how limited the room
    for maneuvering is.
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    From a set of eyes close to the ground,
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    the horizon feels like it goes forever.
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    After all, it's not an every-day ritual
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    to consider where we are
    on the ball of our planet
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    and where that ball is in space.
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    I didn't want to tell my son
    the same story of countries
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    that we were told where I was growing up
    in Northern Ireland.
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    That we were from just a small parish,
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    which ignores life
    outside its immediate concerns.
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    I wanted to try to feel
    what it was like to see our planet
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    as one system, as a single object,
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    hanging in space.
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    To do this,
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    I would need to switch
    from flat drawings for books
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    to 3D sculpture for the street,
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    and I'd need almost 200 feet,
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    a New York City block,
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    to build a large-scale model of the moon,
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    the Earth and us.
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    This project managed to take place
    on New York City's High Line park
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    last winter,
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    on the 50th anniversary
    of Apollo 11's mission around the Moon.
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    After its installation,
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    I was able to put on
    a space helmet with my son
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    and launch, like Apollo 11 did
    half a century ago,
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    towards the Moon.
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    We circled around,
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    and looked back at us.
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    What I felt was
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    how lonely it was there in the dark.
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    And I was just pretending.
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    The Moon is the only object
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    even remotely close to us.
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    And at the scale of this project,
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    where our planet was 10 feet in diameter,
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    Mars, the next planet,
    will be the size of a yoga ball
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    and a couple of miles away.
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    Although borders
    are not visible from space,
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    on my sculpture,
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    every single border was drawn in.
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    But rather than writing the country names
    on the carved-up land,
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    I wrote over and over again,
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    "people live here, people live here."
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    "People live here."
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    And off on the Moon, it was written,
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    "No one lives here."
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    Often, the obvious things
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    aren't all that obvious
    until you think about them.
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    Seeing anything
    from a vast enough distance
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    changes everything,
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    as many astronauts have experienced.
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    And human eyes
    have only ever seen our Earth
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    from as far as the Moon, really.
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    It's quite a ways further
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    before we get to the edges
    of our own Solar System.
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    And even out to other stars,
    to the constellations.
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    There is actually only one point
    in the entire cosmos
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    that is present in all
    constellations of stars,
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    and that presence is
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    here, planet Earth.
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    Those pictures we have made up
    for the clusters of stars
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    only make sense from
    this point of view down here.
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    Their stories only make sense
    here on Earth.
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    And only something to us.
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    To people.
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    We are creatures of stories.
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    We are the stories we tell,
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    we're the stories we're told.
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    Consider briefly the story
    of human civilization on Earth.
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    It tells of the ingenuity, elegance,
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    generous and nurturing nature of a species
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    that is also self-focused, vulnerable,
  • 6:11 - 6:13
    and defiantly protective.
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    We, the people shield
    the flame of our existence
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    from the raw, vast elements
    outside our control,
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    the great beyond.
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    Yet it is always to the flame we look.
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    "For all we know,"
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    when said as a statement,
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    it means the sum total of all knowledge.
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    But when said another way,
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    "for all we know,"
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    it means that we do not know at all.
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    This is the beautiful,
    fragile drama of civilization.
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    We are the actors and spectators
    of a cosmic play
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    that means the world to us here,
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    but means nothing anywhere else.
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    Possibly not even that much
    down here, either.
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    If we truly thought about
    our relationship with our boat,
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    with out Earth,
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    it might be more of a story
    of ignorance and greed.
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    As is the case with Fausto,
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    a man who believed he owned everything
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    and set out to survey what was his.
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    He easily claims ownership of a flower,
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    a sheep, a tree and a field.
  • 7:09 - 7:11
    The lake and the mountain
    prove harder to conquer,
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    but they, too, surrender.
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    It is in trying to own the open sea
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    where his greed proves his undoing,
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    when, in a fit of arrogance,
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    he climbs overboard
    to show that sea who is boss.
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    But he does not understand,
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    slips beneath the waves
    and sinks to the bottom.
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    The sea was sad for him,
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    but carried on being the sea.
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    As did all the other objects
    of his ownership.
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    But the fate of Fausto
    does not matter to them.
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    For all the importance in the cosmos
    we believe we hold,
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    we'd have nothing
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    if not for this Earth.
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    While it would keep happily spinning,
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    obliviously without us.
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    On this planet, there are people.
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    We have gone about our days,
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    sometimes we look up and out,
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    mostly we look down and in.
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    Looking up and by drawing lines
    between the lights in the sky,
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    we've attempted to make
    sense out of chaos.
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    Looking down, we've drawn lines
    across the land to know where we belong
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    and where we don't.
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    We do mostly forget that these lines
    that connect the stars
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    and those lines that divide the land
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    live only in our heads.
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    They, too, are stories.
  • 8:21 - 8:23
    We carry out our everyday
    routines and rituals
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    according to the stories
    we most believe in,
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    and these days, the story
    is changing as we write it.
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    There is a lot of fear
    in this current story,
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    and until recently,
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    the stories that seemed
    to have the most power
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    are those of bitterness,
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    of how it had all gone wrong for us
    individually and collectively.
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    It has been inspiring to watch
    how the best comes from the worst.
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    How people are waking up
    in this time of global reckoning
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    to the realization that our
    connections with each other
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    are some of the most
    important things we have.
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    But stepping back.
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    For all we've had to lament,
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    we spend very little time relishing
    the single biggest thing
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    that has ever gone right for us.
  • 8:58 - 8:59
    That we are here in the first place,
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    that we are alive at all.
  • 9:01 - 9:02
    That we are still alive.
  • 9:02 - 9:05
    A million and a half years
    after finding a box of matches,
  • 9:05 - 9:08
    we haven't totally burned the house down.
  • 9:08 - 9:09
    Yet.
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    The chances of being here
    are infinitesimal.
  • 9:12 - 9:13
    Yet here we are.
  • 9:13 - 9:14
    Perils and all.
  • 9:14 - 9:17
    There have never been
    more people living on Earth.
  • 9:17 - 9:18
    Using more stuff.
  • 9:18 - 9:21
    And it's become obvious
    that many of the old systems
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    we invented for ourselves
  • 9:23 - 9:24
    are obsolete.
  • 9:24 - 9:26
    And we have to build new ones.
  • 9:26 - 9:27
    If it wasn't germs,
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    our collective fire
    might suffocate us before long.
  • 9:31 - 9:34
    As we watch the wheels
    of industry grind to a halt,
  • 9:34 - 9:36
    the machinery of progress become silent,
  • 9:36 - 9:38
    we have the wildest of opportunities
  • 9:38 - 9:40
    to hit the reset button.
  • 9:40 - 9:42
    To take a different path.
  • 9:42 - 9:44
    Here we are on Earth.
  • 9:44 - 9:47
    And life on Earth is a wonderful thing.
  • 9:47 - 9:48
    It looks big, this Earth,
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    but there are lots of us on here.
  • 9:50 - 9:53
    Seven and a half billion at last count,
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    with more showing up every day.
  • 9:56 - 9:57
    Even so,
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    there is still enough for everyone,
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    if we all share a little.
  • 10:01 - 10:03
    So please,
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    be kind.
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    When you think of it another way,
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    if Earth is the only place
    where people live,
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    it's actually the least
    lonely place in the universe.
  • 10:13 - 10:16
    There are plenty of people to be loved by,
  • 10:16 - 10:18
    and plenty of people to love.
  • 10:18 - 10:20
    We need each other.
  • 10:20 - 10:22
    We know that now, more than ever.
  • 10:23 - 10:24
    Good night.
Title:
An ode to living on Earth
Speaker:
Oliver Jeffers
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:46
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for An ode to living on Earth Apr 27, 2020, 3:23 PM
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for An ode to living on Earth Apr 22, 2020, 6:27 PM
marialadias edited English subtitles for An ode to living on Earth Apr 22, 2020, 5:06 PM
Erin Gregory approved English subtitles for An ode to living on Earth Apr 22, 2020, 3:34 PM
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for An ode to living on Earth Apr 22, 2020, 3:34 PM
Joanna Pietrulewicz accepted English subtitles for An ode to living on Earth Apr 22, 2020, 3:12 PM
Joanna Pietrulewicz edited English subtitles for An ode to living on Earth Apr 22, 2020, 3:12 PM
Joanna Pietrulewicz edited English subtitles for An ode to living on Earth Apr 22, 2020, 3:05 PM
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