The lies our culture tells us about what matters and a better way to live David Brooks

So, we all have bad seasons in life.

And I had one in 2013.

My marriage had just ended,

and I was humiliated
by that failed commitment.

My kids had left home for college
or were leaving.

I grew up mostly
in the conservative movement,

but conservatism had changed,

so I lost a lot of those friends, too.

And so what I did is,
I lived alone in an apartment,

and I just worked.

If you opened the kitchen drawers
where there should have been utensils,

there were Post-it notes.

If you opened the other drawers
where there should have been plates,

I had envelopes.

I had work friends, weekday friends,
but I didn’t have weekend friends.

And so my weekends
were these long, howling silences.

And I was lonely.

And loneliness, unexpectedly,
came to me in the form of –

it felt like fear,
a burning in my stomach.

And it felt a little like drunkenness,

just making bad decisions,
just fluidity, lack of solidity.

And the painful part of that moment
was the awareness

that the emptiness in my apartment
was just reflective of the emptiness

in myself,

and that I had fallen for some of the lies
that our culture tells us.

The first lie is that
career success is fulfilling.

I’ve had a fair bit of career success,

and I’ve found that it helps me avoid
the shame I would feel

if I felt myself a failure,

but it hasn’t given me any positive good.

The second lie is I can make myself happy,

that if I just win one more victory,

lose 15 pounds, do a little more yoga,

I’ll get happy.

And that’s the lie of self-sufficiency.

But as anybody
on their deathbed will tell you,

the things that make people happy
is the deep relationships of life,

the losing of self-sufficiency.

The third lie is the lie
of the meritocracy.

The message of the meritocracy
is you are what you accomplish.

The myth of the meritocracy
is you can earn dignity

by attaching yourself
to prestigious brands.

The emotion of the meritocracy
is conditional love,

you can “earn” your way to love.

The anthropology of the meritocracy
is you’re not a soul to be purified,

you’re a set of skills to be maximized.

And the evil of the meritocracy

is that people who’ve achieved
a little more than others

are actually worth
a little more than others.

And so the wages of sin are sin.

And my sins were the sins of omission–

not reaching out,
failing to show up for my friends,

evasion, avoiding conflict.

And the weird thing was
that as I was falling into the valley –

it was a valley of disconnection –

a lot of other people
were doing that, too.

And that’s sort of
the secret to my career;

a lot of the things that happen to me

are always happening
to a lot of other people.

I’m a very average person
with above average communication skills.

(Laughter)

And so I was detached.

And at the same time,
a lot of other people were detached

and isolated and fragmented
from each other.

Thirty-five percent of Americans
over 45 are chronically lonely.

Only eight percent of Americans
report having meaningful conversation

with their neighbors.

Only 32 percent of Americans
say they trust their neighbors,

and only 18 percent of millennials.

The fastest-growing
political party is unaffiliated.

The fastest-growing religious
movement is unaffiliated.

Depression rates are rising,
mental health problems are rising.

The suicide rate has risen
30 percent since 1999.

For teen suicides
over the last several years,

the suicide rate has risen by 70 percent.

Forty-five thousand Americans
kill themselves every year;

72,000 die from opioid addictions;

life expectancy is falling, not rising.

So what I mean to tell you,
I flew out here to say

that we have an economic crisis,
we have environmental crisis,

we have a political crisis.

We also have a social
and relational crisis;

we’re in the valley.

We’re fragmented from each other,

we’ve got cascades of lies
coming out of Washington …

We’re in the valley.

And so I’ve spent the last five years –

how do you get out of a valley?

The Greeks used to say,
“You suffer your way to wisdom.”

And from that dark period where I started,
I’ve had a few realizations.

The first is, freedom sucks.

Economic freedom is OK,
political freedom is great,

social freedom sucks.

The unrooted man is the adrift man.

The unrooted man is the unremembered man,
because he’s uncommitted to things.

Freedom is not an ocean
you want to swim in,

it’s a river you want to get across,

so you can commit and plant yourself
on the other side.

The second thing I learned

is that when you have
one of those bad moments in life,

you can either be broken,

or you can be broken open.

And we all know people who are broken.

They’ve endured some pain
or grief, they get smaller,

they get angrier, resentful,
they lash out.

As the saying is,

“Pain that is not transformed
gets transmitted.”

But other people are broken open.

Suffering’s great power
is that it’s an interruption of life.

It reminds you you’re not the person
you thought you were.

The theologian Paul Tillich said

what suffering does is it carves through
what you thought was the floor

of the basement of your soul,

and it carves through that,
revealing a cavity below,

and it carves through that,
revealing a cavity below.

You realize there are depths of yourself
you never anticipated,

and only spiritual and relational food
will fill those depths.

And when you get down there,
you get out of the head of the ego

and you get into the heart,

the desiring heart.

The idea that what we really yearn for
is longing and love for another,

the kind of thing that Louis de Bernières
described in his book,

“Captain Corelli’s Mandolin.”

He had an old guy talking to his daughter

about his relationship with his late wife,

and the old guy says,

“Love itself is whatever is leftover
when being in love is burned away.

And this is both an art
and a fortunate accident.

Your mother and I had it.

We had roots that grew
towards each other underground,

and when all the pretty blossoms
had fallen from our branches,

we discovered that we are
one tree and not two.”

That’s what the heart yearns for.

The second thing
you discover is your soul.

Now, I don’t ask you to believe in God
or not believe in God,

but I do ask you to believe
that there’s a piece of you

that has no shape, size, color or weight,

but that gives you
infinite dignity and value.

Rich and successful people
don’t have more of this

than less successful people.

Slavery is wrong because
it’s an obliteration of another soul.

Rape is not just an attack
on a bunch of physical molecules,

it’s an attempt to insult
another person’s soul.

And what the soul does
is it yearns for righteousness.

The heart yearns for fusion with another,
the soul yearns for righteousness.

And that led to my third realization,
which I borrowed from Einstein:

“The problem you have
is not going to be solved

at the level of consciousness
on which you created it.

You have to expand
to a different level of consciousness.”

So what do you do?

Well, the first thing you do
is you throw yourself on your friends

and you have deeper conversations
that you ever had before.

But the second thing you do,

you have to go out alone
into the wilderness.

You go out into that place
where there’s nobody there to perform,

and the ego has nothing to do,
and it crumbles,

and only then are you capable
of being loved.

I have a friend who said
that when her daughter was born,

she realized that she loved her
more than evolution required.

(Laughter)

And I’ve always loved that.

(Applause)

Because it talks about the peace
that’s at the deep of ourself,

our inexplicable care for one another.

And when you touch that spot,
you’re ready to be rescued.

The hard thing about
when you’re in the valley

is that you can’t climb out;

somebody has to reach in and pull you out.

It happened to me.

I got, luckily, invited over to a house
by a couple named Kathy and David,

and they were –

They had a kid in the DC
public school, his name’s Santi.

Santi had a friend
who needed a place to stay

because his mom had some health issues.

And then that kid had a friend
and that kid had a friend.

When I went to their house six years ago,

I walk in the door, there’s like
25 around the kitchen table,

a whole bunch sleeping
downstairs in the basement.

I reach out to introduce myself to a kid,

and he says, “We don’t really
shake hands here.

We just hug here.”

And I’m not the huggiest guy
on the face of the earth,

but I’ve been going back to that home
every Thursday night when I’m in town,

and just hugging all those kids.

They demand intimacy.

They demand that you behave in a way
where you’re showing all the way up.

And they teach you a new way to live,

which is the cure
for all the ills of our culture

which is a way of direct –
really putting relationship first,

not just as a word, but as a reality.

And the beautiful thing is,
these communities are everywhere.

I started something at the Aspen Institute
called “Weave: The Social Fabric.”

This is our logo here.

And we plop into a place and we find
weavers anywhere, everywhere.

We find people like Asiaha Butler,
who grew up in –

who lived in Chicago, in Englewood,
in a tough neighborhood.

And she was about to move
because it was so dangerous,

and she looked across the street
and she saw two little girls

playing in an empty lot
with broken bottles,

and she turned to her husband
and she said, “We’re not leaving.

We’re not going to be just another family
that abandon that.”

And she Googled “volunteer in Englewood,”
and now she runs R.A.G.E.,

the big community organization there.

Some of these people
have had tough valleys.

I met a woman named Sarah in Ohio
who came home from an antiquing trip

and found that her husband
had killed himself and their two kids.

She now runs a free pharmacy,
she volunteers in the community,

she helps women cope
with violence, she teaches.

She told me, “I grew from this
experience because I was angry.

I was going to fight back against
what he tried to do to me

by making a difference in the world.

See, he didn’t kill me.

My response to him is,

‘Whatever you meant to do to me,
screw you, you’re not going to do it.'”

These weavers are not living
an individualistic life,

they’re living a relationist life,
they have a different set of values.

They have moral motivations.

They have vocational certitude,
they have planted themselves down.

I met a guy in Youngstown, Ohio,

who just held up a sign
in the town square,

“Defend Youngstown.”

They have radical mutuality,

and they are geniuses at relationship.

There’s a woman named Mary Gordon

who runs something
called Roots of Empathy.

And what they do is they take
a bunch of kids, an eighth grade class,

they put a mom and an infant,

and then the students have to guess
what the infant is thinking,

to teach empathy.

There was one kid in a class
who was bigger than the rest

because he’d been held back,
been through the foster care system,

seen his mom get killed.

And he wanted to hold the baby.

And the mom was nervous
because he looked big and scary.

But she let this kid,
Darren, hold the baby.

He held it, and he was great with it.

He gave the baby back and started
asking questions about parenthood.

And his final question was,

“If nobody has ever loved you,
do you think you can be a good father?”

And so what Roots of Empathy does

is they reach down and they grab
people out of the valley.

And that’s what weavers are doing.

Some of them switch jobs.

Some of them stay in their same jobs.

But one thing is,
they have an intensity to them.

I read this –

E.O. Wilson wrote a great book
called “Naturalist,” about his childhood.

When he was seven,
his parents were divorcing.

And they sent him
to Paradise Beach in North Florida.

And he’d never seen the ocean before.

And he’d never seen a jellyfish before.

He wrote, “The creature was astonishing.
It existed beyond my imagination.”

He was sitting on the dock one day

and he saw a stingray
float beneath his feet.

And at that moment, a naturalist was born
in the awe and wonder.

And he makes this observation:

that when you’re a child,

you see animals at twice the size
as you do as an adult.

And that has always impressed me,

because what we want as kids
is that moral intensity,

to be totally given ourselves
over to something

and to find that level of vocation.

And when you are around these weavers,

they see other people
at twice the size as normal people.

They see deeper into them.

And what they see is joy.

On the first mountain of our life,
when we’re shooting for our career,

we shoot for happiness.

And happiness is good,
it’s the expansion of self.

You win a victory,

you get a promotion,
your team wins the Super Bowl,

you’re happy.

Joy is not the expansion of self,
it’s the dissolving of self.

It’s the moment when the skin barrier
disappears between a mother and her child,

it’s the moment when a naturalist
feels just free in nature.

It’s the moment where you’re so lost
in your work or a cause,

you have totally self-forgotten.

And joy is a better thing
to aim for than happiness.

I collect passages of joy,
of people when they lose it.

One of my favorite is from Zadie Smith.

In 1999, she was in a London nightclub,

looking for her friends,
wondering where her handbag was.

And suddenly, as she writes,

“… a rail-thin man with enormous eyes
reached across a sea of bodies

for my hand.

He kept asking me the same thing
over and over, ‘Are you feeling it?’

My ridiculous heels were killing me,
I was terrified that I might die,

yet I felt simultaneously
overwhelmed with delight

that ‘Can I Kick It?’
should happen to be playing

on this precise moment
in the history of the world

on the sound system,

and it was now morphing
into ‘Teen Spirit.’

I took the man’s hand,
the top of my head blew away,

we danced, we danced,
we gave ourselves up to joy.”

And so what I’m trying to describe
is two different life mindsets.

The first mountain mindset, which is about
individual happiness and career success.

And it’s a good mindset,
I have nothing against it.

But we’re in a national valley,

because we don’t have
the other mindset to balance it.

We no longer feel good
about ourselves as a people,

we’ve lost our defining
faith in our future,

we don’t see each other deeply,
we don’t treat each other as well.

And we need a lot of changes.

We need an economic change
and environmental change.

But we also need a cultural
and relational revolution.

We need to name the language
of a recovered society.

And to me, the weavers
have found that language.

My theory of social change
is that society changes

when a small group of people
find a better way to live,

and the rest of us copy them.

And these weavers have found
a better way to live.

And you don’t have to theorize about it.

They are out there as community builders
all around the country.

We just have to shift our lives a little,

so we can say, “I’m a weaver,
we’re a weaver.”

And if we do that,

the hole inside ourselves gets filled,

but more important,
the social unity gets repaired.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

所以,我们都有生活中糟糕的季节。

我在 2013 年拥有了一个。

我的婚姻刚刚结束

,我为
失败的承诺感到羞辱。

我的孩子已经离开家上大学
或即将离开。

我主要
在保守运动中长大,

但保守主义已经改变,

所以我也失去了很多朋友。

所以我所做的是,
我一个人住在公寓里

,我只是工作。

如果你打开厨房抽屉
里应该有餐具的地方,

里面有便利贴。

如果你打开其他
应该有盘子的抽屉,

我有信封。

我有工作的朋友,工作日的朋友,
但我没有周末的朋友。

所以我的周末
就是这些漫长而嚎叫的寂静。

而我很孤独。

出乎意料的是,孤独
以一种形式出现在我身上——

感觉就像恐惧,
我的胃里有一种灼烧感。

感觉有点像醉酒,

只是做出错误的决定,
只是流动性,缺乏稳定性。

那一刻最痛苦的部分是

意识到我公寓
里的空虚只是反映了

我自己的空虚,

而且我已经为
我们的文化告诉我们的一些谎言而堕落了。

第一个谎言是
事业上的成功是充实的。

我在事业上取得了一些成功

,我发现它可以帮助我避免

如果我觉得自己失败了会感到羞耻,

但这并没有给我带来任何积极的好处。

第二个谎言是我可以让自己快乐

,如果我再赢一场,

减掉 15 磅,多做一点瑜伽,

我就会快乐。

这就是自给自足的谎言。

但正如
临终前的任何人都会告诉你

的那样,让人们快乐的
是生活中深厚的关系

,失去自给自足。

第三个谎言是精英的谎言

精英管理的信息
是你就是你所完成的。

精英管理的神话
是,你可以

通过
依附于知名品牌来赢得尊严。

精英的情感
是有条件的爱,

你可以“赚”到自己的爱。

精英的人类学
是你不是一个需要净化的灵魂,

你是一套需要最大化的技能。

而精英管理的弊端

在于,
比别人多一点成就的人

实际上
比别人更有价值一点。

所以罪的工价就是罪。

而我的罪是疏忽的罪——

没有伸出援手,
没有出现在我的朋友

面前,逃避,避免冲突。

奇怪的是
,当我掉进山谷时——

那是一个与世隔绝的山谷

——很多其他人
也在这样做。

这就是
我职业生涯的秘密;

很多发生在我身上的事情

总是发生
在很多其他人身上。

我是一个非常普通的人,
具有高于平均水平的沟通技巧。

(笑声

) 所以我是超然的。

同时
,许多其他人彼此分离

、孤立和支离破碎
。 45

岁以上的美国人中有 35%
长期孤独。

只有 8% 的美国人
报告说与他们的邻居进行了有意义的对话

只有 32% 的美国人
表示他们信任邻居,

而在千禧一代中这一比例仅为 18%。

发展最快的
政党是无党派的。

发展最快的宗教
运动是独立的。

抑郁症的发病率正在上升,
心理健康问题正在上升。

自 1999 年以来,自杀率上升了
30%。

在过去几年中

,青少年自杀率上升了 70%。 每年有

四万五千美国人
自杀;

72,000 人死于阿片类药物成瘾;

预期寿命在下降,而不是在上升。

所以我的意思是告诉你,
我飞到这里是为了

说我们有经济危机,
我们有环境危机,

我们有政治危机。

我们也有社会
和关系危机;

我们在山谷里。

我们彼此支离破碎,华盛顿

的谎言
层出不穷……

我们在山谷中。

所以我在过去的五年里度过了——

你是如何走出山谷的?

古希腊人常说:
“你要靠自己的方式获得智慧。”

从我开始的那个黑暗时期开始,
我有了一些认识。

首先是,自由很烂。

经济自由还可以,
政治自由很好,

社会自由很烂。

无根之人是漂泊之人。

没有根基的人就是没有被记住的人,
因为他对事情没有承诺。

自由不是
你想在其中游泳的海洋,

它是你想跨越的河流,

所以你可以承诺并将自己植根
于另一边。

我学到的第二件事

是,当你
在生活中遇到那些糟糕的时刻时,

你要么被打破,

要么被打破。

我们都知道那些破碎的人。

他们忍受了一些痛苦
或悲伤,他们变得更小,

他们变得更愤怒,怨恨,
他们猛烈抨击。

俗话说,

“不转化的痛苦
会传播”。

但是其他人被打破了。

苦难的巨大力量
在于它是生命的中断。

它提醒你,你不是
你以为的那个人。

神学家保罗·蒂利希 (Paul Tillich)

说,苦难的作用是它雕刻
出你认为是

你灵魂地下室的地板,

它穿过它
,在下面露出一个空洞,

它穿过它,
在下面露出一个空洞。

你意识到自己有
你从未预料到的深度

,只有精神和关系的食物
才能填满这些深度。

当你下到那里时,
你会离开小我的头脑

,进入心

,渴望的心。

我们真正渴望的
是对另一个人的渴望和爱

,路易斯·德·伯尼埃
在他的书中描述的那种东西,

“科雷利船长的曼陀林”。

他让一个老人和他的女儿

谈论他与已故妻子的关系

,老人说,

“爱本身
就是爱情被烧毁后剩下的东西

。这既是一门艺术
,也是一个幸运的意外。

你的

“是的

这就是心所向往的。 你发现

的第二件事
是你的灵魂。

现在,我不要求你相信上帝
或不相信上帝,

但我确实要求你相信
,有一块你

没有形状、大小、颜色或重量,

但它给了你
无限的尊严和价值 .

富有和成功的人
并不

比不太成功的人拥有更多。

奴隶制是错误的,因为
它是对另一个灵魂的抹杀。

强奸不仅仅是
对一堆物理分子的攻击,

而是企图侮辱
另一个人的灵魂。

而灵魂所做的
是它渴望正义。

心渴望与他人融合
,灵魂渴望正义。

这导致了
我从爱因斯坦那里借来的第三个认识:

“你的问题
不会

在你创造它的意识层面上得到解决。

你必须扩展
到不同的意识层面。”

所以你会怎么做?

好吧,你做的第一件事
就是把自己扔给你的朋友

,你会进行前所未有的更深入的对话

但是你要做的第二件事,

你必须独自
到旷野去。

你走到
没有人可以表演的地方,小我

无事可做
,它崩溃了

,只有这样你
才能被爱。

我有一个朋友说
,当她的女儿出生时,

她意识到她爱她
超过了进化所需要的。

(笑声)

我一直很喜欢。

(掌声)

因为它讲的
是我们内心深处的平静,

我们对彼此莫名的关心。

当你触摸到那个地方时,
你就准备好被救了。

当你在山谷里的时候,最困难的

是你爬不出来;

必须有人伸手把你拉出来。

它发生在我身上。

幸运的是,我
被一对名叫凯西和大卫的夫妇邀请到一所房子里

,他们是 -

他们在华盛顿公立学校有一个孩子
,他的名字叫桑蒂。

桑蒂有一个
朋友需要一个地方住,

因为他妈妈有一些健康问题。

然后那个孩子有一个朋友
,那个孩子也有一个朋友。

六年前我去他们家的时候,

我走进门,
厨房桌子周围大约有 25 个人,

一大群人睡
在楼下的地下室。

我伸手向一个孩子介绍自己

,他说:“我们
在这里并不真正握手。

我们只是在这里拥抱。”

而且我不是地球上最拥抱的人


我每周四晚上在城里时都会回到那个家

,只是拥抱所有那些孩子。

他们要求亲密。

他们要求你以一种
你一直表现出来的方式行事。

他们教你一种新的生活方式,

它可以治愈
我们文化中的所有弊病,

这是一种直接的方式——
真正把关系放在首位,

不仅仅是一个词,而是一个现实。

美妙的是,
这些社区无处不在。

我在阿斯彭研究所开始了一个
名为“编织:社会结构”的活动。

这是我们的标志。

我们扑通一声跑到一个
地方,到处都能找到织布工。

我们发现像艾莎哈巴特勒这样的人,
他们

在芝加哥长大,在恩格尔伍德,
在一个艰难的社区。

她正要搬家,
因为那里太危险了

,她看了看马路对面
,看到两个小女孩拿着破瓶子

在空地上玩耍

,她转向丈夫
说:“我们不走。

我们不会只是另一个
放弃这一点的家庭。”

她在 Google 上搜索了“Englewood 的志愿者”
,现在她经营着那里

的大型社区组织 R.A.G.E.。

其中一些
人经历了艰难的山谷。

我在俄亥俄州遇到了一位名叫莎拉的女人,她
从一次古董之旅回家

后发现她的
丈夫杀死了自己和他们的两个孩子。

她现在经营一家免费药房,
她在社区做志愿者,

她帮助妇女
应对暴力,她教书。

她告诉我,“我从这次
经历中成长,因为我很生气。

我要通过改变世界来反击
他试图对我做的事情

看,他没有杀我。

我对他的回应 就是,

‘不管你想对我做什么,
去死,你不会去做。’”

这些织布工不是
过着个人主义的生活,

他们过着关系主义的生活,
他们有一套不同的价值观。

他们有道德动机。

他们有职业的信心,
他们已经把自己埋了下来。

我在俄亥俄州扬斯敦遇到了一个人,

他刚刚
在城镇广场上举着一个牌子,

“保卫扬斯敦”。

他们有激进的相互

关系,他们是关系方面的天才。

有一个叫 Mary Gordon 的女人

,她经营着一个
叫做 Roots of Empathy 的东西。

他们所做的就是带
一群孩子,一个八年级的班级,

他们放一个妈妈和一个婴儿,

然后学生们必须
猜测婴儿在想什么,

以教授同理心。

班上有一个
孩子比其他孩子大,

因为他被阻止
,经历过寄养系统,

看到他妈妈被杀。

他想抱着孩子。

妈妈很紧张,
因为他看起来又大又吓人。

但她让这个孩子,
达伦,抱着孩子。

他拿着它,他很擅长。

他把孩子还给了孩子,并开始
询问有关为人父母的问题。

他的最后一个问题是,

“如果没有人爱过你,
你认为你能成为一个好父亲吗?”

所以移情之根所做的

就是他们向下伸手将
人们从山谷中拉出来。

这就是织布工正在做的事情。

他们中的一些人换工作。

他们中的一些人继续从事同样的工作。

但有一件事是,
他们对他们有一种强度。

我读了这个

——E.O. 威尔逊写了一本伟大的书,
名为《自然主义者》,讲述了他的童年。

在他七岁的时候,
他的父母正在离婚。

他们把他
送到了北佛罗里达的天堂海滩。

而且他以前从未见过大海。

而且他以前从未见过水母。

他写道:“这个生物令人惊讶。
它的存在超出了我的想象。”

有一天,他坐在码头上,

看到一只黄貂鱼
漂浮在他的脚下。

就在那一刻,一位博物学家
在敬畏和惊奇中诞生了。

他做了这样的观察

:当你还是个孩子的时候,

你看到的动物
是成年人的两倍。

这一直给我留下深刻印象,

因为我们小时候想要的
是那种道德强度

,完全把自己
交给某事

并找到那种水平的职业。

当你在这些织布工身边时,

他们会看到其他人
的体型是正常人的两倍。

他们看得更深。

他们看到的是喜悦。

在我们人生的第一座山上,
当我们为事业而奋斗时,我们也在为幸福而奋斗

幸福是好的,
它是自我的扩展。

你赢得了胜利,

你得到了晋级,
你的球队赢得了超级碗,

你很开心。

喜悦不是自我的扩张,
而是自我的消解。


是母亲和她的孩子之间皮肤屏障消失

的时刻,这是博物学家
在大自然中感到自由的时刻。

这是你完全迷失
在工作或事业中的那一刻,

你完全忘记了自己。

快乐
是比幸福更好的目标。

我收集快乐的段落
,当人们失去它时。

我最喜欢的作品之一来自 Zadie Smith。

1999 年,她在伦敦的一家夜总会,

寻找她的朋友,
想知道她的手提包在哪里。

突然间,正如她所写,

“……一个瘦瘦的男人,一双大眼睛,
越过人海,

伸手要我的手。

他一遍又一遍地问我同样的话
,‘你感觉到了吗?’

可笑的高跟鞋让
我窒息,我害怕我可能会死,但同时我也因

“我能踢它吗?”而欣喜若狂。
应该是

在这个
世界历史上的确切时刻在

音响系统上播放的,

现在它正在变形
为“少年精神”。

我握住那个男人的手
,头顶被吹走了,

我们跳舞,我们跳舞,
我们尽情享受。”

所以我要描述的
是两种不同的生活心态。

第一种高山心态,关乎
个人幸福和事业成功。

这是一个很好的心态,
我没有任何反对意见。

但是我们处于国家山谷中,

因为我们
没有其他的心态来平衡它。

作为一个民族,我们不再对自己感觉良好,

我们对未来失去了坚定的
信念,

我们没有深入了解彼此,
我们也没有善待彼此。

我们需要很多改变。

我们需要经济变革
和环境变革。

但我们也需要一场文化
和关系革命。

我们需要命名
一个恢复社会的语言。

对我来说,织布工
已经找到了这种语言。

我的社会变革理论
是,

当一小部分人
找到更好的生活方式,

而我们其他人都模仿他们时,社会就会发生变化。

这些织布工找到
了更好的生活方式。

而且您不必对此进行理论化。

他们在全国各地作为社区建设者

我们只需要稍微改变我们的生活,

所以我们可以说,“我是织布工,
我们是织布工。”

如果我们这样做,

我们内心的洞就会被填满,

但更重要的是
,社会团结会得到修复。

非常感谢你。

(掌声)