How to be an upstander instead of a bystander Anglique ParisotPotter

Transcriber: TED Translators Admin
Reviewer: Rhonda Jacobs

Let me tell you a story,
where you’ll meet the characters

who I’ll call Bilal and Brenda.

I was working in a most
remarkable part of the world.

And one unremarkable morning,

a colleague came to see me.

She told me that Bilal,
one of our senior executives,

had been telling everyone
I was being removed

because I’d been messing
with the wrong people.

And now, I was going to
face the consequences.

I wasn’t alarmed,

because I knew I had done
what I’d been hired to do:

my job,

dealing with thorny issues head on

and leaving no stone unturned.

In fact, in the months prior to this,

we’d overturned more
than just a few stones.

Those details are for another time.

I called my husband, James,

to tell him about
this bizarre conversation,

and with what proved
to be great foresight,

he said, “Angélique, pack your things
and call Brenda, in that order.”

I called Brenda.

I’d worked with her for a number of years,

and I trusted her.

She was the person who’d
recommended me for that job.

I cut to the chase,

because my husband’s reaction
made me realize

this was more than just the usual stuff
I’d encountered before.

And I say usual,
but in that moment of clarity,

it dawned on me what James
had already recognized:

none of this was usual.

These irregularities,
part of a pattern I’d failed to notice,

were what I now know as open secrets

living beneath those proverbial stones
I’d had the audacity to overturn.

To my shock, I learned
that this was happening

because I hadn’t tried hard enough
to operate in the “gray space.”

I didn’t seem to know when
to kick things into the long grass.

And I didn’t understand
that this was how the system worked.

The message, the implied threat,

was clear.

Over the next few weeks,

I was replaced by a convenient yes-man
while I was still there.

I suffered from terrible gastritis,

and I pretended
to our two young daughters

that I still had that job.

Leaving home every morning,
dressed up as if for work,

to drop them to school, for six months.

I did not submit,

but I won’t pretend
that it was easy to speak up

or beneficial in any way to me,
to my family or to my career.

When we speak up in the workplace
despite policies to the contrary,

whilst we may not lose our jobs,

we are likely to lose
the camaraderie of our coworkers.

Disbelieved, ostracized,

faced with under-the-radar bullying.

You know the kind when you walk
into a room and everyone stops talking?

We think: It’s not my
responsibility to say anything.

So why did I choose to act
despite the risks to my family and to me?

The sin of omission is a failure
to do what you know is right.

When you stay quiet,

even though you’re not guilty
of wrongdoing yourself,

what will you have to live with
if you don’t take action?

So who are you in this lineup of actors?

The bad actor, the wrongdoer?

The bad stander who benefits
directly or indirectly

and acts as a puppet for the bad actor?

The bystander, aware of the open secrets

but not actually doing anything
wrong or the upstander?

This is the person we want to see
when we look in the mirror.

I’ve learned three things:

One, don’t second guess yourself.

When you see something
amiss, ask questions,

because it is okay
to challenge those in authority.

Two, don’t be complicit.

You always have the power to say no
in the face of wrongdoing.

And three, be an upstander.

Speaking up is not about being brave.

It’s not about not feeling scared.

But when you do what you know is right,
you can be at peace with yourself.

Yes, it is hard to say
what you feel in the moment.

Do it anyway. Be fearless.

Martin Luther King said,

“In the end, we will remember
not the words of our enemies,

but the silence of our friends.”

So when you look in the mirror,

who will you see?

A bystander, keeper of open secrets?

Or will the person looking
back at you be an upstander?

I know who I see.

I know who my daughters see.

The choice is yours.

抄写员:TED Translators Admin
Reviewer:Rhonda Jacobs

让我告诉你一个故事,
在那里你会

遇到我称之为 Bilal 和 Brenda 的角色。


在世界上一个最了不起的地方工作。

一个不起眼的早晨,

一位同事来看我。

她告诉我
,我们的一位高级管理人员比拉尔

一直在告诉所有人
我被免职,

因为我一直在
招惹错误的人。

而现在,我要
面对后果了。

我并不惊慌,

因为我知道我已经完成
了我被聘用的工作:

我的工作,

直面棘手的问题

,不遗余力。

事实上,在此之前的几个月里,

我们推翻的
不仅仅是几块石头。

这些细节是另一个时间。

我打电话给我的丈夫詹姆斯

,告诉他
这次奇怪的谈话

,事实
证明,他很有远见,

他说:“安吉丽克,收拾好你的东西
,然后按顺序给布伦达打电话。”

我打电话给布伦达。

我和她一起工作了很多年

,我信任她。

她是
推荐我做那份工作的人。

我切入正题,

因为我丈夫的反应
让我意识到

这不仅仅是
我以前遇到的常见事情。

我说的是通常,
但在那一刻清晰的

时候,我恍然大悟,詹姆斯
已经认识到:

这一切都不寻常。

这些违规行为,
是我没有注意到的模式的一部分,

是我现在所知道的公开秘密,

生活在我敢于推翻的那些众所周知的石头下面

令我震惊的是,我
得知这种情况正在发生,

因为我没有足够
努力地在“灰色空间”中操作。

我似乎不知道什么时候
该把东西踢进长长的草丛中。

而且我不
明白这就是系统的工作方式。

信息,隐含的威胁,

很清楚。

在接下来的几周里,当我还在那儿时,

我被一个方便的应声者取代

我患有严重的胃炎

,我
向我们的两个年幼的女儿假装

我还有那份工作。

每天早上离开家,
打扮成上班的样子,

送他们去上学,持续了六个月。

我没有屈服,

但我不会
假装说出来很容易

或对我
、我的家人或我的事业有任何好处。

当我们不顾相反的政策在工作场所大声疾呼时

虽然我们可能不会失去工作,

但我们很可能会失去
同事的友情。

不相信,被排斥,

面对不为人知的欺凌。

你知道当你
走进一个房间,每个人都停止说话的那种吗?

我们认为:说什么不是我的
责任。

那么,
尽管对我的家人和我自己有风险,为什么我还是选择采取行动呢?

疏忽之罪是
没有做你知道是正确的事。

当你保持沉默时,

即使你自己没有做错

事,
如果你不采取行动,你还能忍受什么?

那么你在这个演员阵容中是谁?

坏演员,犯错者?

直接或间接受益

并为不良演员充当傀儡的不良立场?

旁观者,知道公开的秘密,

但实际上没有做错任何
事,还是站在旁观者?

这是我们照镜子时想看到的人

我学到了三件事:

第一,不要再猜测自己。

当您发现有
问题时,请提出问题,

因为
可以挑战当权者。

二、不要同谋。

面对不法行为,你总是有权说不。

第三,做一个正直的人。

说话不是要勇敢。

这不是不感到害怕。

但是当你做你知道是正确的事情时,
你就可以与自己和平相处。

是的,很难
说出你此刻的感受。

无论如何都要这样做。 无所畏惧。

马丁路德金说:

“到头来,我们记住的
不是敌人的话,

而是朋友的沉默。”

那么当你照镜子的时候,

你会看到谁呢?

旁观者,公开秘密的守护者?

或者回头看你的人
会是一个正直的人吗?

我知道我看到的是谁。

我知道我的女儿们看到了谁。

这是你的选择。