【每天看看TED】幸福是什么朴艰?

寒假過半了,決定每天看看TED址愿,整理一下英文演講稿该镣,記錄下感受,時間不長响谓,受益頗多损合。

隨想:幸福是什么?是農夫山泉有點田娘纷,還是贏取白富美走向人生巔峰嫁审?仁者見仁智者見智。平淡的往往能最持久赖晶,忽視的常常更重要律适,我們身處社會與周圍人的關系的好壞不經意間卻是衡量我們是否幸福的籌碼。Good relationships keep us happier and healthier.

附上鏈接:

視頻鏈接:幸福是什么嬉探?

英文鏈接:幸福是什么擦耀?英文演講稿

英文原文記錄:

00:11

What keeps us healthy and happy as we go through life? If you were going to invest now in your future best self, where would you put your time and your energy? There was a recent survey of millennials asking them what their most important life goals were, and over 80 percent said that a major life goal for them was to get rich. And another 50 percent of those same young adults said that another major life goal was to become famous.

00:49

(Laughter)

00:51

And we're constantly told to lean in to work, to push harder and achieve more. We're given the impression that these are the things that we need to go after in order to have a good life. Pictures of entire lives, of the choices that people make and how those choices work out for them, those pictures are almost impossible to get. Most of what we know about human life we know from asking people to remember the past, and as we know, hindsight is anything but 20/20. We forget vast amounts of what happens to us in life, and sometimes memory is downright creative.

01:35

But what if we could watch entire lives as they unfold through time? What if we could study people from the time that they were teenagers all the way into old age to see what really keeps people happy and healthy?

01:54

We did that. The Harvard Study of Adult Development may be the longest study of adult life that's ever been done. For 75 years, we've tracked the lives of 724 men, year after year, asking about their work, their home lives, their health, and of course asking all along the way without knowing how their life stories were going to turn out.

02:24

Studies like this are exceedingly rare. Almost all projects of this kind fall apart within a decade because too many people drop out of the study, or funding for the research dries up, or the researchers get distracted, or they die, and nobody moves the ball further down the field. But through a combination of luck and the persistence of several generations of researchers, this study has survived. About 60 of our original 724 men are still alive, still participating in the study, most of them in their 90s. And we are now beginning to study the more than 2,000 children of these men. And I'm the fourth director of the study.

03:14

Since 1938, we've tracked the lives of two groups of men. The first group started in the study when they were sophomores at Harvard College. They all finished college during World War II, and then most went off to serve in the war. And the second group that we've followed was a group of boys from Boston's poorest neighborhoods, boys who were chosen for the study specifically because they were from some of the most troubled and disadvantaged families in the Boston of the 1930s. Most lived in tenements, many without hot and cold running water.

03:53

When they entered the study, all of these teenagers were interviewed. They were given medical exams. We went to their homes and we interviewed their parents. And then these teenagers grew up into adults who entered all walks of life. They became factory workers and lawyers and bricklayers and doctors, one President of the United States. Some developed alcoholism. A few developed schizophrenia. Some climbed the social ladder from the bottom all the way to the very top, and some made that journey in the opposite direction.

04:34

The founders of this study would never in their wildest dreams have imagined that I would be standing here today, 75 years later, telling you that the study still continues. Every two years, our patient and dedicated research staff calls up our men and asks them if we can send them yet one more set of questions about their lives.

04:59

Many of the inner city Boston men ask us, "Why do you keep wanting to study me? My life just isn't that interesting." The Harvard men never ask that question.

05:10

(Laughter)

05:19

To get the clearest picture of these lives, we don't just send them questionnaires. We interview them in their living rooms. We get their medical records from their doctors. We draw their blood, we scan their brains, we talk to their children. We videotape them talking with their wives about their deepest concerns. And when, about a decade ago, we finally asked the wives if they would join us as members of the study, many of the women said, "You know, it's about time."

05:49

(Laughter)

05:50

So what have we learned? What are the lessons that come from the tens of thousands of pages of information that we've generated on these lives? Well, the lessons aren't about wealth or fame or working harder and harder. The clearest message that we get from this 75-year study is this: Good relationships keep us happier and healthier. Period.

06:22

We've learned three big lessons about relationships. The first is that social connections are really good for us, and that loneliness kills. It turns out that people who are more socially connected to family, to friends, to community, are happier, they're physically healthier, and they live longer than people who are less well connected. And the experience of loneliness turns out to be toxic. People who are more isolated than they want to be from others find that they are less happy, their health declines earlier in midlife, their brain functioning declines sooner and they live shorter lives than people who are not lonely. And the sad fact is that at any given time, more than one in five Americans will report that they're lonely.

07:18

And we know that you can be lonely in a crowd and you can be lonely in a marriage, so the second big lesson that we learned is that it's not just the number of friends you have, and it's not whether or not you're in a committed relationship, but it's the quality of your close relationships that matters. It turns out that living in the midst of conflict is really bad for our health. High-conflict marriages, for example, without much affection, turn out to be very bad for our health, perhaps worse than getting divorced. And living in the midst of good, warm relationships is protective.

07:56

Once we had followed our men all the way into their 80s, we wanted to look back at them at midlife and to see if we could predict who was going to grow into a happy, healthy octogenarian and who wasn't. And when we gathered together everything we knew about them at age 50, it wasn't their middle age cholesterol levels that predicted how they were going to grow old. It was how satisfied they were in their relationships. The people who were the most satisfied in their relationships at age 50 were the healthiest at age 80. And good, close relationships seem to buffer us from some of the slings and arrows of getting old. Our most happily partnered men and women reported, in their 80s, that on the days when they had more physical pain, their mood stayed just as happy. But the people who were in unhappy relationships, on the days when they reported more physical pain, it was magnified by more emotional pain.

09:03

And the third big lesson that we learned about relationships and our health is that good relationships don't just protect our bodies, they protect our brains. It turns out that being in a securely attached relationship to another person in your 80s is protective, that the people who are in relationships where they really feel they can count on the other person in times of need, those people's memories stay sharper longer. And the people in relationships where they feel they really can't count on the other one, those are the people who experience earlier memory decline. And those good relationships, they don't have to be smooth all the time. Some of our octogenarian couples could bicker with each other day in and day out, but as long as they felt that they could really count on the other when the going got tough, those arguments didn't take a toll on their memories.

10:00

So this message, that good, close relationships are good for our health and well-being, this is wisdom that's as old as the hills. Why is this so hard to get and so easy to ignore? Well, we're human. What we'd really like is a quick fix, something we can get that'll make our lives good and keep them that way. Relationships are messy and they're complicated and the hard work of tending to family and friends, it's not sexy or glamorous. It's also lifelong. It never ends. The people in our 75-year study who were the happiest in retirement were the people who had actively worked to replace workmates with new playmates. Just like the millennials in that recent survey, many of our men when they were starting out as young adults really believed that fame and wealth and high achievement were what they needed to go after to have a good life. But over and over, over these 75 years, our study has shown that the people who fared the best were the people who leaned in to relationships, with family, with friends, with community.

11:20

So what about you? Let's say you're 25, or you're 40, or you're 60. What might leaning in to relationships even look like?

11:30

Well, the possibilities are practically endless. It might be something as simple as replacing screen time with people time or livening up a stale relationship by doing something new together, long walks or date nights, or reaching out to that family member who you haven't spoken to in years, because those all-too-common family feuds take a terrible toll on the people who hold the grudges.

12:03

I'd like to close with a quote from Mark Twain. More than a century ago, he was looking back on his life, and he wrote this: "There isn't time, so brief is life, for bickerings, apologies, heartburnings, callings to account. There is only time for loving, and but an instant, so to speak, for that."

12:33

The good life is built with good relationships.

12:38

Thank you.

12:39

(Applause)

最后編輯于
?著作權歸作者所有,轉載或內容合作請聯系作者
  • 序言:七十年代末,一起剝皮案震驚了整個濱河市涩堤,隨后出現的幾起案子眷蜓,更是在濱河造成了極大的恐慌,老刑警劉巖胎围,帶你破解...
    沈念sama閱讀 222,865評論 6 518
  • 序言:濱河連續(xù)發(fā)生了三起死亡事件吁系,死亡現場離奇詭異德召,居然都是意外死亡,警方通過查閱死者的電腦和手機汽纤,發(fā)現死者居然都...
    沈念sama閱讀 95,296評論 3 399
  • 文/潘曉璐 我一進店門上岗,熙熙樓的掌柜王于貴愁眉苦臉地迎上來,“玉大人蕴坪,你說我怎么就攤上這事肴掷。” “怎么了背传?”我有些...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 169,631評論 0 364
  • 文/不壞的土叔 我叫張陵呆瞻,是天一觀的道長。 經常有香客問我径玖,道長痴脾,這世上最難降的妖魔是什么? 我笑而不...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 60,199評論 1 300
  • 正文 為了忘掉前任梳星,我火速辦了婚禮赞赖,結果婚禮上,老公的妹妹穿的比我還像新娘冤灾。我一直安慰自己前域,他們只是感情好,可當我...
    茶點故事閱讀 69,196評論 6 398
  • 文/花漫 我一把揭開白布瞳购。 她就那樣靜靜地躺著话侄,像睡著了一般亏推。 火紅的嫁衣襯著肌膚如雪学赛。 梳的紋絲不亂的頭發(fā)上,一...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 52,793評論 1 314
  • 那天吞杭,我揣著相機與錄音盏浇,去河邊找鬼。 笑死芽狗,一個胖子當著我的面吹牛绢掰,可吹牛的內容都是我干的。 我是一名探鬼主播童擎,決...
    沈念sama閱讀 41,221評論 3 423
  • 文/蒼蘭香墨 我猛地睜開眼滴劲,長吁一口氣:“原來是場噩夢啊……” “哼!你這毒婦竟也來了顾复?” 一聲冷哼從身側響起班挖,我...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 40,174評論 0 277
  • 序言:老撾萬榮一對情侶失蹤,失蹤者是張志新(化名)和其女友劉穎芯砸,沒想到半個月后萧芙,有當地人在樹林里發(fā)現了一具尸體给梅,經...
    沈念sama閱讀 46,699評論 1 320
  • 正文 獨居荒郊野嶺守林人離奇死亡,尸身上長有42處帶血的膿包…… 初始之章·張勛 以下內容為張勛視角 年9月15日...
    茶點故事閱讀 38,770評論 3 343
  • 正文 我和宋清朗相戀三年双揪,在試婚紗的時候發(fā)現自己被綠了动羽。 大學時的朋友給我發(fā)了我未婚夫和他白月光在一起吃飯的照片。...
    茶點故事閱讀 40,918評論 1 353
  • 序言:一個原本活蹦亂跳的男人離奇死亡渔期,死狀恐怖运吓,靈堂內的尸體忽然破棺而出,到底是詐尸還是另有隱情疯趟,我是刑警寧澤羽德,帶...
    沈念sama閱讀 36,573評論 5 351
  • 正文 年R本政府宣布,位于F島的核電站迅办,受9級特大地震影響宅静,放射性物質發(fā)生泄漏。R本人自食惡果不足惜站欺,卻給世界環(huán)境...
    茶點故事閱讀 42,255評論 3 336
  • 文/蒙蒙 一姨夹、第九天 我趴在偏房一處隱蔽的房頂上張望。 院中可真熱鬧矾策,春花似錦磷账、人聲如沸。這莊子的主人今日做“春日...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 32,749評論 0 25
  • 文/蒼蘭香墨 我抬頭看了看天上的太陽。三九已至蓬豁,卻和暖如春绰咽,著一層夾襖步出監(jiān)牢的瞬間,已是汗流浹背地粪。 一陣腳步聲響...
    開封第一講書人閱讀 33,862評論 1 274
  • 我被黑心中介騙來泰國打工取募, 沒想到剛下飛機就差點兒被人妖公主榨干…… 1. 我叫王不留,地道東北人蟆技。 一個月前我還...
    沈念sama閱讀 49,364評論 3 379
  • 正文 我出身青樓玩敏,卻偏偏與公主長得像,于是被迫代替她去往敵國和親质礼。 傳聞我的和親對象是個殘疾皇子旺聚,可洞房花燭夜當晚...
    茶點故事閱讀 45,926評論 2 361

推薦閱讀更多精彩內容

  • **2014真題Directions:Read the following text. Choose the be...
    又是夜半驚坐起閱讀 9,586評論 0 23
  • 我是日記星球239號星寶寶,來自深圳的葉子眶蕉。我是日記星球第五期的學員砰粹,我相信日積月累的力量,最美的年紀遇到最美的自...
    水晶媽咪閱讀 630評論 0 0
  • 1 最近網上有個很火的專題叫:如果你回到十年前你會怎么樣妻坝?這吸引了70.80.90年代的網友的熱議伸眶。 有的網友說如...
    驕傲的向日葵閱讀 557評論 0 2
  • 每次兼職都能遇見善良可愛的人兒惊窖,這是件開心的事兒,給我的心一絲溫暖厘贼,像陽光一樣界酒!
    空歡喜呀閱讀 215評論 1 1
  • 利物浦的天氣接連兩個清晨都是以小冰雹開始毁欣。 四、五點鐘岳掐,黑漆漆的天空幾乎看不到它們的形體凭疮,但清晰地聽得見每一個小冰...
    一株香柏樹閱讀 269評論 0 0