为了在演讲时不紧张,我们一定要提前写好并熟悉演讲稿的内容,提前撰写演讲稿有助于我们在演讲时内容连贯,条理更加清晰,下面是吾优心得网小编为您分享的知畏惧演讲稿7篇,感谢您的参阅。
知畏惧演讲稿篇1
he great people in history, such as conficius, qinshihuang, dr.sun yat-sen, and so on.
at last, i would like to say, we shouldn’t waste time, life is limited while knowledge is boundless. aha, there is so much to learn. maybe you like reading; maybe you like singing;… maybe you have a lot of other hobbies, it doesn’t matter, if you like it, just learn it. just do it. don’t hesitate. knowledge is power. there is no choice but to learn. what’s more, you are never too old to learn. am i right? my friends, open your eyes, can you see the flame of knowledge burning forever? yeah, i can see it. i can see it clearly. e on, boys and girls, ladies and gentlemen. let’s swim in the ocean of knowledge; let’s climb on the top of knowledge. at that time, you will be a learned person with much knowledge. you will be the happiest person in the world.
that’s all. thank you for you attention.
知畏惧演讲稿篇2
thesis: government officials should post their financial information to the public
do you know “wristwatches brother” and “smile director”? yes! it’s named by netizens. because there were many pictures of him wearing at least 11 expensive wristwatches, and later he said that he had bought the watches with his salary. his real name is yang dacai, a former senior work safety official in shaanxi province. on sept 1st, liu yanfeng, a student at china three gorges university in yichang, hubei province, filed an application with the shaanxi provincial department of finance and the shaanxi provincial administration for work safety, asking for yang dacai's annual salary information. on sept 21st,both departments declined to provide the information.
do you think it is legal for the two departments to reject liu’s application?
i don’t think so. and, government officials should post their financial information voluntarily.
argument, according to chinese government information publicity regulations, government officials should disclose their financial information. the regulations stipulate that all the government information, which relate to the immediate interest of citizen, corporation or other organization and need to make the public know and participate, should be disclosed. but why liu’s application is rejected? because the authorities said that such a disclosure was "beyond the scope of voluntary information disclosure." i don’t think so. all the state agency and state functionaries must depend on the support of citizens and should keep good relationship with them. they need to listen to the suggestions and receive the supervision from people so as to serve the people better. now their financial information disclosure is the officials’ obligation but not right. on the other hand, government officials are paid by the citizens; their salaries are a matter of public interest. so i think the government public information should include the official’s financial information.
argument , citizens’ rights of knowing and overseeing government affairs should be protected.because we are socialist country, people’s right to know and right to supervise are part of socialist democracy. if the public know the truth of the government affairs, they can know what should do and what can do with reasonable judgment and behavior. furthermore, it is hollow to talk of supervision without basic fact and truth.
argument, achievements have been obtained abroad by disclosing government officials’ financial information. government officials’ assets publicity system is named “sunshine law” or “terminal anti-corruption” abroad. at present, there are nearly one hundred countries and districts having legislated officials’ assets publicity system. since 1993, japan has executed congressman assets publicity law. the assets include real estate, savings, even golf membership card. in 1993, korean congress passed official assets publicity system. it stipulates that the officials must declare their assets in a given time, even their spouse’s and children’s. and now, assets publicity has become the daily routine of korean officials.
argument 4#, disclosing the government officials’ financial information will result in many positive effects, such as tackling corruption, building up the social credit system, and establishing a harmonious society. mr medvedev, the russian president, said, corruption is one of the most sharp-pointed and most actual problems. it used to be. the future is also. anti-corruption must begin with official’s assets publication. it can satisfy the public and maintain the solemnity of the law.
so, i hope our government could publish government officials’ assets publicity system and anti-corruption law immediately. furthermore, i hope our government officials could make their financial information public voluntarily. thanks for your attention!
知畏惧演讲稿篇3
this is tim ferriss circa 1979 a.d. age two. you can tell by the power squat, i was a very confident boy -- and not without reason. i had a very charming routine at the time, which was to wait until late in the evening when my parents were decompressing from a hard day's work, doing their crossword puzzles, watching television. i would run into the living room, jump up on the couch, rip the cushions off, throw them on the floor, scream at the top of my lungs and run out because i was the incredible hulk. (laughter) obviously, you see the resemblance. and this routine went on for some time.
when i was seven i went to summer camp. my parents found it necessary for peace of mind. and at noon each day the campers would go to a pond, where they had floating docks. you could jump off the end into the deep end. i was born premature. i was always very small. my left lung had collapsed when i was born. and i've always had buoyancy problems. so water was something that scared me to begin with. but i would go in on occasion. and on one particular day, the campers were jumping through inner tubes, they were diving through inner tubes. and i thought this would be great fun. so i dove through the inner tube, and the bully of the camp grabbed my ankles. and i tried to come up for air, and my lower back hit the bottom of the inner tube. and i went wild eyed and thought i was going to die. a camp counselor fortunately came over and separated us. from that point onward i was terrified of swimming. that is something that i did not get over. my inability to swim has been one of my greatest humiliations and embarrassments. that is when i realized that i was not the incredible hulk.
but there is a happy ending to this story. at age 31 -- that's my age now -- in august i took two weeks to re-examine swimming, and question all the of the obvious aspects of swimming. and went from swimming one lap -- so 20 yards -- like a drowning monkey, at about 200 beats per minute heart rate -- i measured it -- to going to montauk on long island, close to where i grew up, and jumping into the ocean and swimming one kilometer in open water, getting out and feeling better than when i went in. and i came out, in my speedos, european style, feeling like the incredible hulk.
and that's what i want everyone in here to feel like, the incredible hulk, at the end of this presentation. more specifically, i want you to feel like you're capable of becoming an excellent long-distance swimmer, a world-class language learner, and a tango champion. and i would like to share my art. if i have an art, it's deconstructing things that really scare the living hell out of me. so, moving onward.
swimming, first principles. first principles, this is very important. i find that the best results in life are often held back by false constructs and untested assumptions. and the turnaround in swimming came when a friend of mine said, "i will go a year without any stimulants" -- this is a six-double-espresso-per-day type of guy -- "if you can complete a one kilometer open water race." so the clock started ticking. i started seeking out triathletes because i found that lifelong swimmers often couldn't teach what they did. i tried kickboards. my feet would slice through the water like razors, i wouldn't even move. i would leave demoralized, staring at my feet. hand paddles, everything. even did lessons with olympians -- nothing helped. and then chris sacca, who is now a dear friend mine, had completed an iron man with 103 degree temperature, said, "i have the answer to your prayers." and he introduced me to the work of a man named terry laughlin who is the founder of total immersion swimming. that set me on the road to examining biomechanics.
so here are the new rules of swimming, if any of you are afraid of swimming, or not good at it. the first is, forget about kicking. very counterintuitive. so it turns out that propulsion isn't really the problem. kicking harder doesn't solve the problem because the average swimmer only transfers about three percent of their energy expenditure into forward motion. the problem is hydrodynamics. so what you want to focus on instead is allowing your lower body to draft behind your upper body, much like a small car behind a big car on the highway. and you do that by maintaining a horizontal body position. the only way you can do that is to not swim on top of the water. the body is denser than water. 95 percent of it would be, at least, submerged naturally.
so you end up, number three, not swimming, in the case of freestyle, on your stomach, as many people think, reaching on top of the water. but actually rotating from streamlined right to streamlined left, maintaining that fuselage position as long as possible. so let's look at some examples. this is terry. and you can see that he's extending his right arm below his head and far in front. and so his entire body really is underwater. the arm is extended below the head. the head is held in line with the spine, so that you use strategic water pressure to raise your legs up -- very important, especially for people with lower body fat. here is an example of the stroke. so you don't kick. but you do use a small flick. you can see this is the left extension. then you see his left leg. small flick, and the only purpose of that is to rotate his hips so he can get to the opposite side. and the entry point for his right hand -- notice this, he's not reaching in front and catching the water. rather, he is entering the water at a 45-degree angle with his forearm, and then propelling himself by streamlining -- very important. incorrect, above, which is what almost every swimming coach will teach you. not their fault, honestly. and i'll get to implicit versus explicit in a moment. below is what most swimmers will find enables them to do what i did, which is going from 21 strokes per 20-yard length to 11 strokes in two workouts with no coach, no video monitoring. and now i love swimming. i can't wait to go swimming. i'll be doing a swimming lesson later, for myself, if anyone wants to join me.
last thing, breathing. a problem a lot of us have, certainly, when you're swimming. in freestyle, easiest way to remedy this is to turn with body roll, and just to look at your recovery hand as it enters the water. and that will get you very far. that's it. that's really all you need to know.
languages. material versus method. i, like many people, came to the conclusion that i was terrible at languages. i suffered through spanish for junior high, first year of high school, and the sum total of my knowledge was pretty much, "donde esta el bano?" and i wouldn't even catch the response. a sad state of affairs. then i transferred to a different school sophomore year, and i had a choice of other languages. most of my friends were taking japanese. so i thought why not punish myself? i'll do japanese. six months later i had the chance to go to japan. my teachers assured me, they said, "don't worry. you'll have japanese language classes every day to help you cope. it will be an amazing experience." my first overseas experience in fact. so my parents encouraged me to do it. i left.
i arrived in tokyo. amazing. i couldn't believe i was on the other side of the world. i met my host family. things went quite well i think, all things considered. my first evening, before my first day of school, i said to my mother, very politely, "please wake me up at eight a.m." so, (japanese) but i didn't say (japanese). i said, (japanese). pretty close. but i said, "please rape me at eight a.m." (laughter) you've never seen a more confused japanese woman. (laughter)
i walked in to school. and a teacher came up to me and handed me a piece of paper. i couldn't read any of it -- hieroglyphics, it could have been -- because it was kanji, chinese characters adapted into the japanese language. asked him what this said. and he goes, "ahh, okay okay, eehto, world history, ehh, calculus, traditional japanese." and so on. and so it came to me in waves. there had been something lost in translation. the japanese classes were not japanese instruction classes, per se. they were the normal high school curriculum for japanese students -- the other 4,999 students in the school, who were japanese, besides the american. and that's pretty much my response. (laughter)
and that set me on this panic driven search for the perfect language method. i tried everything. i went to kinokuniya. i tried every possible book, every possible cd. nothing worked until i found this. this is the joyo kanji. this is a tablet rather, or a poster of the 1,945 common-use characters as determined by the ministry of education in 1981. many of the publications in japan limit themselves to these characters, to facilitate literacy -- some are required to. and this became my holy grail, my rosetta stone.
as soon as i focused on this material, i took off. i ended up being able to read asahi shinbu, asahi newspaper, about six months later -- so a total of 11 months later -- and went from japanese i to japanese vi. ended up doing translation work at age 16 when i returned to the u.s., and have continued to apply this material over method approach to close to a dozen languages now. someone who was terrible at languages, and at any given time, speak, read and write five or six. this brings us to the point, which is, it's oftentimes what you do, not how you do it, that is the determining factor. this is the difference between being effective -- doing the right things -- and being efficient -- doing things well whether or not they're important.
you can also do this with grammar. i came up with these six sentences after much experimentation. having a native speaker allow you to deconstruct their grammar, by translating these sentences into past, present, future, will show you subject, object, verb, placement of indirect, direct objects, gender and so forth. from that point, you can then, if you want to, acquire multiple languages, alternate them so there is no interference. we can talk about that if anyone in interested. and now i love languages.
so ballroom dancing, implicit versus explicit -- very important. you might look at me and say, "that guy must be a ballroom dancer." but no, you'd be wrong because my body is very poorly designed for most things -- pretty well designed for lifting heavy rocks perhaps. i used to be much bigger, much more muscular. and so i ended up walking like this. i looked a lot like an orangutan, our close cousins, or the incredible hulk. not very good for ballroom dancing.
i found myself in argentina in 2005, decided to watch a tango class -- had no intention of participating. went in, paid my ten pesos, walked up -- 10 women two guys, usually a good ratio. the instructor says, "you are participating." immediately: death sweat. (laughter) fight-or-flight fear sweat, because i tried ballroom dancing in college -- stepped on the girl's foot with my heel. she screamed. i was so concerned with her perception of what i was doing, that it exploded in my face, never to return to the ballroom dancing club. she comes up, and this was her approach, the teacher. "okay, come on, grab me." gorgeous assistant instructor. she was very pissed off that i had pulled her from her advanced practice. so i did my best. i didn't know where to put my hands. and she pulled back, threw down her arms, put them on her hips, turned around and yelled across the room, "this guy is built like a god-damned mountain of muscle, and he's grabbing me like a frenchman," (laughter) which i found encouraging. (laughter) everyone burst into laughter. i was humiliated. she came back. she goes, "come on. i don't have all day." as someone who wrestled since age eight, i proceeded to crush her, "of mice and men" style. and she looked up and said, "now that's better." so i bought a month's worth of classes. (laughter)
and proceeded to look at -- i wanted to set competition so i'd have a deadline -- parkinson's law, the perceived complexity of a task will expand to fill the time you allot it. so i had a very short deadline for a competition. i got a female instructor first, to teach me the female role, the follow, because i wanted to understand the sensitivities and abilities that the follow needed to develop, so i wouldn't have a repeat of college. and then i took an inventory of the characteristics, along with her, of the of the capabilities and elements of different dancers who'd won championships. i interviewed these people because they all taught in buenos aires. i compared the two lists, and what you find is that there is explicitly, expertise they recommended, certain training methods. then there were implicit commonalities that none of them seemed to be practicing. now the protectionism of argentine dance teachers aside, i found this very interesting. so i decided to focus on three of those commonalities. long steps. so a lot of milongueros -- the tango dancers will use very short steps. i found that longer steps were much more elegant. so you can have -- and you can do it in a very small space in fact. secondly, different types of pivots. thirdly, variation in tempo. these seemed to be the three areas that i could exploit to compete if i wanted to comptete against people who'd been practicing for 20 to 30 years.
that photo is of the semi-finals of the buenos aires championships, four months later. then one month later, went to the world championships, made it to the semi-final. and then set a world record, following that, two weeks later. i want you to see part of what i practiced. i'm going to jump forward here. this is the instructor that alicia and i chose for the male lead. his name is gabriel misse. one of the most elegant dancers of his generation, known for his long steps, and his tempo changes and his pivots. alicia, in her own right, very famous. so i think you'll agree, they look quite good together. now what i like about this video is it's actually a video of the first time they ever danced together because of his lead. he had a strong lead. he didn't lead with his chest, which requires you lean forward. i couldn't develop the attributes in my toes, the strength in my feet, to do that. so he uses a lead that focuses on his shoulder girdle and his arm. so he can lift the woman to break her, for example. that's just one benefit of that. so then we broke it down. this would be an example of one pivot. this is a back step pivot. there are many different types. i have hundreds of hours of footage -- all categorized, much like george carlin categorized his comedy. so using my arch-nemesis, spanish, no less, to learn tango.
so fear is your friend. fear is an indicator. sometimes it shows you what you shouldn't do. more often than not it shows you exactly what you should do. and the best results that i've had in life, the most enjoyable times, have all been from asking a simple question: what's the worst that can happen? especially with fears you gained when you were a child. take the analytical frameworks, the capabilities you have, apply them to old fears. apply them to very big dreams.
and when i think of what i fear now, it's very simple. when i imagine my life, what my life would have been like without the educational opportunities that i had, it makes me wonder. i've spent the last two years trying to deconstruct the american public school system, to either fix it or replace it. and have done experiments with about 50,000 students thus far -- built, i'd say, about a half dozen schools, my readers, at this point. and if any of you are interested in that, i would love to speak with you. i know nothing. i'm a beginner. but i ask a lot of questions, and i would love your advice. thank you very much. (applause)
知畏惧演讲稿篇4
i can't even notice that the men's hands are still raised, and the women's hands are still raised, how good are we as managers of our companies and our organizations at seeing that the men are reaching for opportunitiesmore than women?" we've got to get women to sit at the table.message number two: make your partner a real partner. i've become convinced that we've made more progress in the workforce than we have in the home. the data shows this very clearly. if a woman and a man work full-time and have a child, the woman does twice the amount of housework the man does, and the woman does three times the amount of childcare the man does. so she's got three jobs or two jobs, and he's got one. who do you think drops out when someone needs to be home more? the causes of this are really complicated, and i don't have time to go into them. and i don't think sunday football-watching and general laziness is the cause.
知畏惧演讲稿篇5
dear mr. li dear my schoolmates good morning!
entrusted by the first group of schoolmates the topic of my speech is necessity for lifelong learning.
about lifelong learning there is the famous proverb in chinese: never too old to learn. confucius the famous educator in ancient china also said: if i learn the classical literature "yi" from the age of 50 i would never make so many mistakes.
to sum up necessity of lifelong learning is mainly based on the following reasons: first of all the knowledge of modern society changes so quickly if not to learn new knowledge in time you will soon fall behind the times. for example using the mobile internet technology we can using a mobile phone to book a taxi pay various fees buy all kinds of goods etc. if a person may not grasp the knowledge especially senior people they will not use the convenience brought by internet.
secondly diligent in thinking can effectively prevent the occurrence of alzheimer's disease. this conclusion has been verified in medicine. finally a person who maintains the habit of lifelong learning can have a stronger advantage in occupation choice. this is not only good for the person but also for the country and the society. some people complain that they have too much work and have no time to read a book usually. but in fact lifelong learning is not only reading or having a class we can browse the web read e-books receiving distance courses through the internet conveniently. we can learn not only knowledge but also skills.
age cannot be a barrier to our lifelong learning. chu shijian once the king of china's tobacco industry had suffered a great setback before retirement. he was even put into prison. but at the age of 75 he began to study orange planting technology seriously and finally have a huge success in this area ten years late. harland sandoz of america began learning the fast-food lethal at his age of 83. when he was 88 years old his fast food chain often kentucky had distributed each corner of the world.
therefore lifelong learning is never too late to start let's start our plan today. thank you.
知畏惧演讲稿篇6
i'd like to share with you a discovery that i made a few months ago while writing an article for italian wired. i always keep my thesaurus handy whenever i'm writing anything, but i'd already finished editing the piece, and i realized that i had never once in my life looked up the word "disabled" to see what i'd find.
let me read you the entry. "disabled, adjective: crippled, helpless, useless, wrecked, stalled, maimed, wounded, mangled, lame, mutilated, run-down, worn-out, weakened, impotent, castrated, paralyzed, handicapped, senile, decrepit, laid-up, done-up, done-for, done-in cracked-up, counted-out; see also hurt, useless and weak. antonyms, healthy, strong, capable." i was reading this list out loud to a friend and at first was laughing, it was so ludicrous, but i'd just gotten past "mangled," and my voice broke, and i had to stop and collect myself from the emotional shock and impact that the assault from these words unleashed.
you know, of course, this is my raggedy old thesaurus so i'm thinking this must be an ancient print date, right? but, in fact, the print date was the early 1980s, when i would have been starting primary school and forming an understanding of myself outside the family unit and as related to the other kids and the world around me. and, needless to say, thank god i wasn't using a thesaurus back then. i mean, from this entry, it would seem that i was born into a world that perceived someone like me to have nothing positive whatsoever going for them, when in fact, today i'm celebrated for the opportunities and adventures my life has procured.
so, i immediately went to look up the online edition, epecting to find a revision worth noting. here's the updated version of this entry. unfortunately, it's not much better. i find the last two words under "near antonyms," particularly unsettling: "whole" and "wholesome."
so, it's not just about the words. it's what we believe about people when we name them with these words. it's about the values behind the words, and how we construct those values. our language affects our thinking and how we view the world and how we view other people. in fact, many ancient societies, including the greeks and the romans, believed that to utter a curse verbally was so powerful, because to say the thing out loud brought it into eistence. so, what reality do we want to call into eistence: a person who is limited, or a person who's empowered? by casually doing something as simple as naming a person, a child, we might be putting lids and casting shadows on their power. wouldn't we want to open doors for them instead?
one such person who opened doors for me was my childhood doctor at the a.i. dupont institute in wilmington, delaware. his name was dr. pizzutillo, an italian american, whose name, apparently, was too difficult for most americans to pronounce, so he went by dr. p. and dr. p always wore really colorful bow ties and had the very perfect disposition to work with children.
i loved almost everything about my time spent at this hospital, with the eception of my physical therapy sessions. i had to do what seemed like innumerable repetitions of eercises with these thick, elastic bands -- different colors, you know -- to help build up my leg muscles, and i hated these bands more than anything -- i hated them, had names for them. i hated them. and, you know, i was already bargaining, as a five year-old child, with dr. p to try to get out of doing these eercises, unsuccessfully, of course. and, one day, he came in to my session -- ehaustive and unforgiving, these sessions -- and he said to me, "wow. aimee, you are such a strong and powerful little girl, i think you're going to break one of those bands. when you do break it, i'm going to give you a hundred bucks."
now, of course, this was a simple ploy on dr. p's part to get me to do the eercises i didn't want to do before the prospect of being the richest five-year-old in the second floor ward, but what he effectively did for me was reshape an awful daily occurrence into a new and promising eperience for me. and i have to wonder today to what etent his vision and his declaration of me as a strong and powerful little girl shaped my own view of myself as an inherently strong, powerful and athletic person well into the future.
this is an eample of how adults in positions of power can ignite the power of a child. but, in the previous instances of those thesaurus entries, our language isn't allowing us to evolve into the reality that we would all want, the possibility of an individual to see themselves as capable. our language hasn't caught up with the changes in our society, many of which have been brought about by technology. certainly, from a medical standpoint, my legs, laser surgery for vision impairment, titanium knees and hip replacements for aging bodies that are allowing people to more fully engage with their abilities, and move beyond the limits that nature has imposed on them -- not to mention social networking platforms allow people to self-identify, to claim their own descriptions of themselves, so they can go align with global groups of their own choosing. so, perhaps technology is revealing more clearly to us now what has always been a truth: that everyone has something rare and powerful to offer our society, and that the human ability to adapt is our greatest asset.
the human ability to adapt, it's an interesting thing, because people have continually wanted to talk to me about overcoming adversity, and i'm going to make an admission: this phrase never sat right with me, and i always felt uneasy trying to answer people's questions about it, and i think i'm starting to figure out why. implicit in this phrase of "overcoming adversity" is the idea that success, or happiness, is about emerging on the other side of a challenging eperience unscathed or unmarked by the eperience, as if my successes in life have come about from an ability to sidestep or circumnavigate the presumed pitfalls of a life with prosthetics, or what other people perceive as my disability. but, in fact, we are changed. we are marked, of course, by a challenge, whether physically, emotionally or both. and i'm going to suggest that this is a good thing. adversity isn't an obstacle that we need to get around in order to resume living our life. it's part of our life. and i tend to think of it like my shadow. sometimes i see a lot of it, sometimes there's very little, but it's always with me. and, certainly, i'm not trying to diminish the impact, the weight, of a person's struggle.
there is adversity and challenge in life, and it's all very real and relative to every single person, but the question isn't whether or not you're going to meet adversity, but how you're going to meet it. so, our responsibility is not simply shielding those we care for from adversity, but preparing them to meet it well. and we do a disservice to our kids when we make them feel that they're not equipped to adapt. there's an important difference and distinction between the objective medical fact of my being an amputee and the subjective societal opinion of whether or not i'm disabled. and, truthfully, the only real and consistent disability i've had to confront is the world ever thinking that i could be described by those definitions.
in our desire to protect those we care about by giving them the cold, hard truth about their medical prognosis, or, indeed, a prognosis on the epected quality of their life, we have to make sure that we don't put the first brick in a wall that will actually disable someone. perhaps the eisting model of only looking at what is broken in you and how do we fi it, serves to be more disabling to the individual than the pathology itself.
by not treating the wholeness of a person, by not acknowledging their potency, we are creating another ill on top of whatever natural struggle they might have. we are effectively grading someone's worth to our community. so we need to see through the pathology and into the range of human capability. and, most importantly, there's a partnership between those perceived deficiencies and our greatest creative ability. so it's not about devaluing, or negating, these more trying times as something we want to avoid or sweep under the rug, but instead to find those opportunities wrapped in the adversity. so maybe the idea i want to put out there is not so much overcoming adversity as it is opening ourselves up to it, embracing it, grappling with it, to use a wrestling term, maybe even dancing with it. and, perhaps, if we see adversity as natural, consistent and useful, we're less burdened by the presence of it.
this year we celebrate the 200th birthday of charles darwin, and it was 150 years ago, when writing about evolution, that darwin illustrated, i think, a truth about the human character. to paraphrase: it's not the strongest of the species that survives, nor is it the most intelligent that survives; it is the one that is most adaptable to change. conflict is the genesis of creation. from darwin's work, amongst others, we can recognize that the human ability to survive and flourish is driven by the struggle of the human spirit through conflict into transformation. so, again, transformation, adaptation, is our greatest human skill. and, perhaps, until we're tested, we don't know what we're made of. maybe that's what adversity gives us: a sense of self, a sense of our own power. so, we can give ourselves a gift. we can re-imagine adversity as something more than just tough times. maybe we can see it as change. adversity is just change that we haven't adapted ourselves to yet.
i think the greatest adversity that we've created for ourselves is this idea of normalcy. now, who's normal? there's no normal. there's common, there's typical. there's no normal, and would you want to meet that poor, beige person if they eisted? (laughter) i don't think so. if we can change this paradigm from one of achieving normalcy to one of possibility or potency, to be even a little bit more dangerous -- we can release the power of so many more children, and invite them to engage their rare and valuable abilities with the community.
anthropologists tell us that the one thing we as humans have always required of our community members is to be of use, to be able to contribute. there's evidence that neanderthals, 60,000 years ago, carried their elderly and those with serious physical injury, and perhaps it's because the life eperience of survival of these people proved of value to the community. they didn't view these people as broken and useless; they were seen as rare and valuable.
a few years ago, i was in a food market in the town where i grew up in that red zone in northeastern pennsylvania, and i was standing over a bushel of tomatoes. it was summertime: i had shorts on. i hear this guy, his voice behind me say, "well, if it isn't aimee mullins." and i turn around, and it's this older man. i have no idea who he is.
and i said, "i'm sorry, sir, have we met? i don't remember meeting you."
he said, "well, you wouldn't remember meeting me. i mean, when we met i was delivering you from your mother's womb." (laughter) oh, that guy. and, but of course, actually, it did click.
this man was dr. kean, a man that i had only known about through my mother's stories of that day, because, of course, typical fashion, i arrived late for my birthday by two weeks. and so my mother's prenatal physician had gone on vacation, so the man who delivered me was a complete stranger to my parents. and, because i was born without the fibula bones, and had feet turned in, and a few toes in this foot and a few toes in that, he had to be the bearer -- this stranger had to be the bearer of bad news.
he said to me, "i had to give this prognosis to your parents that you would never walk, and you would never have the kind of mobility that other kids have or any kind of life of independence, and you've been making liar out of me ever since." (laughter) (applause)
the etraordinary thing is that he said he had saved newspaper clippings throughout my whole childhood, whether winning a second grade spelling bee, marching with the girl scouts, you know, the halloween parade, winning my college scholarship, or any of my sports victories, and he was using it, and integrating it into teaching resident students, med students from hahnemann medical school and hershey medical school. and he called this part of the course the factor, the potential of the human will. no prognosis can account for how powerful this could be as a determinant in the quality of someone's life. and dr. kean went on to tell me, he said, "in my eperience, unless repeatedly told otherwise, and even if given a modicum of support, if left to their own devices, a child will achieve."
see, dr. kean made that shift in thinking. he understood that there's a difference between the medical condition and what someone might do with it. and there's been a shift in my thinking over time, in that, if you had asked me at 15 years old, if i would have traded prosthetics for flesh-and-bone legs, i wouldn't have hesitated for a second. i aspired to that kind of normalcy back then. but if you ask me today, i'm not so sure. and it's because of the eperiences i've had with them, not in spite of the eperiences i've had with them. and perhaps this shift in me has happened because i've been eposed to more people who have opened doors for me than those who have put lids and cast shadows on me.
see, all you really need is one person to show you the epiphany of your own power, and you're off. if you can hand somebody the key to their own power -- the human spirit is so receptive -- if you can do that and open a door for someone at a crucial moment, you are educating them in the best sense. you're teaching them to open doors for themselves. in fact, the eact meaning of the word "educate" comes from the root word "educe." it means "to bring forth what is within, to bring out potential." so again, which potential do we want to bring out?
there was a case study done in 1960s britain, when they were moving from grammar schools to comprehensive schools. it's called the streaming trials. we call it "tracking" here in the states. it's separating students from a, b, c, d and so on. and the "a students" get the tougher curriculum, the best teachers, etc. well, they took, over a three-month period, d-level students, gave them a's, told them they were "a's," told them they were bright, and at the end of this three-month period, they were performing at a-level.
and, of course, the heartbreaking, flip side of this study, is that they took the "a students" and told them they were "d's." and that's what happened at the end of that three-month period. those who were still around in school, besides the people who had dropped out. a crucial part of this case study was that the teachers were duped too. the teachers didn't know a switch had been made. they were simply told, "these are the 'a-students,' these are the 'd-students.'" and that's how they went about teaching them and treating them.
so, i think that the only true disability is a crushed spirit, a spirit that's been crushed doesn't have hope, it doesn't see beauty, it no longer has our natural, childlike curiosity and our innate ability to imagine. if instead, we can bolster a human spirit to keep hope, to see beauty in themselves and others, to be curious and imaginative, then we are truly using our power well. when a spirit has those qualities, we are able to create new realities and new ways of being.
i'd like to leave you with a poem by a fourteenth-century persian poet named hafiz that my friend, jacques dembois told me about, and the poem is called "the god who only knows four words": "every child has known god, not the god of names, not the god of don'ts, but the god who only knows four words and keeps repeating them, saying, 'come dance with me. come, dance with me. come, dance with me.'"
thank you. (applause)
知畏惧演讲稿篇7
hi, everyone! my name is xxx. today my topic is: “i love english”.
english is now used everywhere in the world, it has become the most important language on internet. learning english make me confident and brings me great pleasure.
when i was eight , my father sent me to an english school. at there, i played games and sang english song with other children. then i discovered the beauty of the language, and began my colorful dream in the english world.
every day, i read english following the tapes. sometimes, i like watching english movies for children, such as finding nemo, harry potter and so on. these movies not only improved my english, but also gave me a lot of fun. outlook english also help me a lot in my english studies, i have been watching this program for nearly two years.
i hope i can travel around the world someday. i want to go to america, because america is one of the most developed countries in the world. i also want to go to england, because english originated in england.
i love english, english has become part of my life. do you like english, my friends? if you do, come with me. let’s enjoy the fun of learning english built in a day.”
that’s all, thank you!
2. as everyone knows,english is very important today. it has been used everywhere in the world. it has become the most common language on internet and for international trade. if we can speak english well,we will have more chance to succeed.because more and more people have taken notice of it,the number of the people who go to learn english has increased at a high speed.
but for myself,i learn english not only because of its importance and its usefulness,but also because of my love for it. when i learn english, i can feel a different way of thinking which gives me more room to touch the world. when i read english novels,i can feel the pleasure from the book which is different from reading the translation. when i speak english, i can feel the confident from my words.when i write english,i can see the beauty which is not the same as our chinese...
i love english,it gives me a colorful dream. i hope i can travel around the world one day. with my good english, i can make friends with many people from different countries.i can see many places of great interests. i dream that i can go to london,because it is the birth place of english.
i also want to use my good english to introduce our great places to the english spoken people,i hope that they can love our country like us.
i know, rome was not built in a day.i believe that after continuous hard study, one day i can speak english very well.
if you want to be loved, you should learn to love and be lovable. so i believe as i love english everyday , it will love me too.as everyone knows,english is very important today. it has been used everywhere in the world.it has become the most common language on internet and for international trade. if we can speak english well,we will have more chance to succeed.because more and more people have taken notice of it,the number of the people who go to learn english has increased at a high speed.
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