Dominic Price Whats your happiness score TED

Transcriber:

Hello, my name is Dom Price
and I’m a work futurist,

which is a made-up job
that no one’s called me out on yet,

but it’s got me here on this stage today.

My job’s all about predicting the future,

the future of work, society,

the economy and education.

Which, surely you can imagine
this year of all the years,

it’s been pretty fascinating.

Now, there’s a huge amount
of self-help literature out there

that will help you be happier over time.

But today, I want
to talk to you specifically

about being happy in a year like 2020.

It’s a year like no other.

It’s a year when many of us
haven’t felt of much happiness

or our happy days have been reduced
to happy minutes and moments.

And the uncertainty of the future

has quite rightly
weighed heavily on our minds.

But to talk to you about a year like 2020,

and to talk about how shit it’s been,

first of all, I have to tell you
how shit my year has been.

You see, my sister is my best friend,

and a few years ago I got the call
that no brother wants to get.

Trudy had been diagnosed
with stage IV breast cancer,

and given that she lived a 24-hour
flight away in Manchester, England,

as a single mother of two boys,

I’m sure you can imagine how I felt.

But she’s stubborn as an ox.

And six years later, at the start
of 2020, she was still with us.

Then February rolled in.

I got another call.

This time it was my doctor telling me
that I had early-stage bowel cancer.

A week later, I had a subtotal colectomy
and I had my colon removed.

Strangely, the same day my sister went
to see her specialist in the UK,

who confirmed that they
were ceasing all treatment.

She had a matter of months left to live.

Now, post-surgery,

I wasn’t officially allowed to travel
due to COVID travel restrictions,

but I managed to get an exemption
from the government

and I was on one of very few flights
out to Manchester in April

to look after my sister and her two boys.

A few weeks later, on Tuesday, May 19,

Trudy collapsed suddenly at home.

Despite trying CPR,

she died in my arms
before the ambulance arrived.

She was 45.

After some very emotional
goodbyes to family,

the only thing certain
in my immediate future

was 14 days in quarantine.

But before I got on that plane,

I gave my nephews
an extra special uncle-Dom hug.

And in those 14 days in quarantine,

you’re kind of left alone
with your own thoughts.

And it got me thinking,

where does our happiness
actually come from?

How can a year this shit
make anyone happy?

And the problem with those thoughts
is when you’ve got 14 days,

you really do get to invest in them.

And it got me thinking,
how can we find our happiness?

And as is with death, sometimes,

I actually started thinking
with renewed clarity about life

and work and COVID

and all the things that mattered.

In Bronnie Ware’s book
“The Top Five Regrets of the Dying,”

Bronnie will tell you
the second-biggest regret

is “I wish I hadn’t spent
so much time in the office.”

But you don’t need me to tell you that.

You know what’s important
on your deathbed,

the love of friends and family,

the legacy you’re leaving behind,

knowing that you’ve done things
that made you happy,

knowing that you’ve done great things.

And yet few of us can honestly say
this is how we’re living our lives today.

Take work, for example.

Work today stems from
the Industrial Revolution 300 years ago.

That’s when we were the machines,
we were the robots.

It was all about presenteeism.

We worked on the production line.

We were measured by speed
and efficiency.

It was about how much work
you could get done in one day.

Let’s be honest,

it was about making your boss richer.

And in that time,
we had these measures of success,

economic growth and productivity.

We’re 300 years later,
and it’s simply not working.

Productivity growth has stagnated.

Australia is one
of the worst-performing countries

in terms of longer working hours.

And this idea of productivity

that governments and businesses
speak about all the time,

it measures 10 million dollars
invested in a hospital,

the same as 10 million dollars
spent on a coal-fired power plant.

And our most precious resource,
the planet, is dying,

and we have no planet B.

So we’re not happy at work.

And we’re not productive.

And oddly, in the time of the pandemic,

when we’re touting mental health
and wellness and the importance of people,

studies show we’ve actually extended
the average working day by 40 minutes

since March this year.

All in the pursuit of productivity.

And I think it’s because we first thought
that COVID was a fleeting moment.

You see, COVID is like a snowstorm.

After years of what seemed
like endless sunshine outside,

we looked out and we saw snow.

So we did the right thing.

We closed the windows and doors
and we stayed inside.

But a few weeks later, we looked out
and it was still snowing.

And we’re like, “Ah, it’s not a snowstorm,

it’s winter.”

So we did the right thing.

We went online, bought a new jumper
jacket and a scarf.

But by the time they were
delivered to our door,

we realized it wasn’t winter.

It was the ice age.

What was the moment when you realized
that this was the ice age?

Think about it.

That moment when
you sat there and thought,

“It’s kind of not an eight-week thing
anymore, this, is it?

It’s been here for a while.

In fact, maybe it’s here forever.”

And how did that moment of realization
make you feel about work,

something that you spend about a third
of your time doing, by the way?

I can tell you how it made
5,000 people feel

across Australia, the US, Japan,
France and Germany

in a recent study
commissioned by Atlassian.

Despite the fact that people
weren’t commuting to work

and therefore saving that time,

nearly half of respondents said

they had less time for personal pursuits.

Personal pursuits,

the things that actually make you happy.

And the number one complaint at this time?

Work-life balance.

Me personally,

I’ve put on five kilos since March.

I’m drinking more and I’m sleeping less.

That’s COVID’s fault, right?

Or is it simply that I’m just not happy?

That in my relentless pursuit
of productivity,

I’ve lost sight
of what’s really important.

Now, we could spend the rest of this talk
sharing stories about how unhappy we are,

or we can actually flip the tables
and talk about what we can do.

I’m choosing to do the latter.

I’d like you to close
your eyes for a second.

I want you to imagine a world

where our measure of success
is not productivity.

I want you to imagine a world

where instead of thinking
about busyness and titles

and bank balances,

we think about our impact on the world.

I want you to imagine a world

where status isn’t the reason
for our existence.

Open your eyes.

I’d now like to introduce you
to the Personal Moral Inventory.

The Personal Moral Inventory
is inspired by two pieces of work.

The first, the work
from the world of finance,

something called
the quadruple bottom line,

aimed at getting businesses to report
in a more rounded fashion.

The second,

an exercise that elite
military personnel go through

to self-assess themselves
and their teammates

before going into battle.

I believe that these four things,

Productivity and Profit, People,

the Planet and our Purpose,

are the secret to our happiness.

And what’s important
in the time of the ice age,

the time we’re in right now,

is not to get distracted
by the things we can’t do,

but to find the things that we can do.

It’s on us to take ownership
and control of our own happiness.

Let’s do the exercise together.

What I’m going to do is rate each area
minus one, zero or one.

One is you’re nailing it.

High fives all round, good on you.

Zero is you’re getting by.

Not awesome. Not awful.

And minus one is you’re struggling.

Here’s mine for this year.

For Productivity and Profit, I’m a one.

I have a good job, I have a good salary,

I have a roof over my head,

I can pay the bills.

But here’s the thing.

You can’t score more than a one,

so it becomes impossible to pack
all your happiness into one category.

And it’s like we’re all trying
to get to a two on Productivity,

but to what extent?

The next area is People.

People is about how you think
about your personal,

mental and physical health.

You have to start with yourself.

You have to put your own oxygen mask on
before you can help others.

This is also about how you impact
family, friends, society.

It’s about being human

and having a positive impact on humanity.

For this, I score myself a zero.

Planet.

Let’s just say I took
over 100 flights last year,

so I’m going to score myself a minus one.

And finally, Purpose.

Purpose is about the impact
you want to have

and the legacy you want to leave behind.

It’s the why you do what you do.

For this, I score myself a zero.

Now, I can already tell
the keen beans in the room and online

are trying to add this up
and net this off.

That is not how it works.

Your positive impacts in one category

doesn’t mitigate your negative impacts
in another category.

For me, the fact
that I’m financially well off

doesn’t make up for the fact
that I’m killing the planet.

It wasn’t this realization, though,

that got me thinking
something had to change.

Shortly after my sister passed away,

I did this exercise on her behalf.

And it got me thinking.

For Productivity and Profit,
she was a zero.

She struggled financially.

In her final few years she couldn’t work,

but she got by.

For People, she was a definite one.

She really knew her own identity.

She invested in her life.

She had a lot of fun.

You all remember
the party you were at with Trudy.

And she invested in the local school,
community, friends and family.

For Planet, she was also a one.

She had a very low carbon footprint.

She very rarely flew anywhere.

She didn’t own a car.

She was avid at reduce, reuse, recycle.

And in winter,

she would make you put a jumper on

before she’d let you turn the heating on.

And on Purpose,
she was also a strong one.

She knew the legacy
she wanted to leave behind.

She knew exactly
why she was on this planet.

Purpose isn’t about being a superhero.

It’s not about wearing a cape

or single-handedly saving the world.

Trudy’s purpose was to give
those two boys the best upbringing

in the small time that she had available.

I learned two things
doing this exercise for her.

Firstly, I learned
that happiness is contextual.

Like, for Trudy, the fact
that she was financially struggling,

she didn’t let that dictate her happiness.

She didn’t put all her eggs in that basket

and shut up shop.

But the second realization
hit me a lot harder.

Despite everything,
Trudy was happier than me.

Here’s where we get to take
our happiness into our own hands.

What I want you to do

is to think about the areas
where you would score zero

or minus one

and commit to doing something to improve.

So whatever you commit to do,

I want you to give it a red hot go
in the next summer.

Why?

Well, the best time to plant a tree
was 20 years ago.

The second best time is today.

So we’re going to do this right now.

For me, my worst score was Planet.

I’m going to commit to going meat-free
for three days a week

and then I’ll reassess.

I’ve already changed my energy provider
to one that’s carbon neutral.

And I’ve invested in a company
that’s trying to save our oceans.

Small steps, but then I can reassess.

On People,

I’m going to commit to be more present
with the people I care about.

For the last four years,
I’ve essentially been single

and if I’m really honest,
I was emotionally unavailable.

But I’ve actually been very fortunate
to meet someone amazing.

So what I’m going to do is
commit to investing in that relationship

with openness, authenticity
and vulnerability.

And a little bit of cheekiness.

And on Purpose,

a year ago, I was actually
a one on Purpose.

My purpose was twofold,

it was the impact I was having on people
through my public speaking,

and it was the precious time
I got to spend with my sister.

But in a few short weeks
at the start of 2020,

both of those disappeared.

And in the months since, I’ve been really
trying to rediscover my purpose.

And I’ll be honest,

I’ve really struggled to find it.

And I think that’s OK.

But then I realized that I have this,

today, this moment.

This is me rediscovering my purpose.

What are you going to do?

What action are you going to take?

Whatever action you do take,

you suddenly realize that you can stop
hinging all your happiness

on one category of the personal
moral inventory.

Instead, you invest in taking control
of your own happiness.

Our future is not predetermined.

Our future is not written

and our future is not waiting for us.

I’m building mine and I believe
you are building yours.

And how happy we are in our future
will be based solely on our action

or inaction across all facets of life,

not just the working week.

I am the key to unleashing
my own happiness,

and I believe you are the key
to unleashing your own happiness.

I can safely say that Trudy
didn’t have any regrets,

but she did have one wish.

To see me on stage, live,
presenting at TEDx.

Thank you very much.

抄写员:

你好,我的名字是 Dom Price
,我是一名工作未来学家,

这是一个虚构的工作
,还没有人叫我出来,

但它让我今天来到了这个舞台上。

我的工作就是预测

未来、工作、社会

、经济和教育的未来。

哪一个,你当然可以想象
这么多年的这一年,

它非常迷人。

现在,有大量
的自助

文献可以帮助你随着时间的推移变得更快乐。

但是今天,我
想和大家具体

谈谈在 2020 年这样的一年里是否幸福。这是与众不同

的一年。

在这一年中,我们中的许多人
都没有感到多少幸福,

或者我们的快乐日子已被简化
为快乐的时刻。

未来的不确定性

非常正确
地压在我们的脑海中。

但是要和你谈2020年这样的一年,

说它有多糟糕,

首先我得告诉你
我的这一年有多糟糕。

你看,我姐姐是我最好的朋友

,几年前我接到
了一个兄弟都不想接到的电话。

特鲁迪被诊断出
患有 IV 期乳腺癌

,考虑到她作为两个男孩的单亲妈妈住在 24 小时
外的英国曼彻斯特,

我相信你可以想象我当时的感受。

但她固执如牛。

六年后,也
就是 2020 年初,她仍然和我们在一起。

然后二月来了。

我接到了另一个电话。

这次是我的医生告诉
我我患有早期肠癌。

一周后,我进行了结肠次全切除术,
并切除了结肠。

奇怪的是,就在同一天,我姐姐
去英国看她的专科医生,

她证实他们
正在停止所有治疗。

她只剩下几个月的生命了。

现在,手术后,由于 COVID 的旅行限制,

我没有被正式允许旅行

但我设法获得
了政府的豁免,

并且我乘坐了
四月份飞往曼彻斯特

照顾我姐姐和 她的两个男孩。

几周后,也就是 5 月 19 日星期二,

特鲁迪在家中突然昏倒。

尽管尝试了心肺复苏术,

但在救护车到达之前,她就死在了我的怀里

她 45 岁。


向家人告别后

,我唯一确定的

就是隔离 14 天。

但在我上飞机之前,

我给了我的侄子
一个特别特别的拥抱。

在隔离的这 14 天里,

你有点
独自思考自己的想法。

这让我开始思考,

我们的幸福
究竟来自哪里?

这狗屎的一年怎么
能让任何人快乐?

这些想法的问题
在于,当你有 14 天的时间时,

你真的可以投资于它们。

它让我思考,
我们怎样才能找到我们的幸福?

就像死亡一样,有时,

我实际上
开始重新清晰地思考生活

、工作、新冠病毒

以及所有重要的事情。

在 Bronnie Ware 的
《临终前的五个遗憾》一

书中,Bronnie 会告诉
你第二大遗憾

是“我希望我没有
在办公室度过这么多时间。”

但你不需要我告诉你。

你知道临终时什么是重要

的,朋友和家人的爱,

你留下的遗产,

知道你做
了让你快乐的事情,

知道你做了伟大的事情。

然而,我们当中很少有人能诚实地说
这就是我们今天的生活方式。

以工作为例。

今天的工作源于
300 年前的工业革命。

那时我们是机器,
我们是机器人。

这都是关于出勤率的。

我们在生产线上工作。

我们以速度
和效率来衡量。

这是关于
你一天能完成多少工作。

老实说,

这是为了让你的老板更富有。

在那个时候,
我们有这些衡量成功、

经济增长和生产力的标准。

我们在 300 年后
,它根本行不通。

生产力增长停滞不前。

就较长的工作时间而言,澳大利亚是表现最差的国家之一。

而政府和企业
一直在谈论的这种生产力理念,

它相当于在医院投资 1000 万美元

,相当于
在燃煤发电厂上花费 1000 万美元。

而我们最宝贵的资源
,地球,正在消亡

,我们没有B星球。

所以我们在工作中并不快乐。

而且我们没有生产力。

奇怪的是,在大流行期间,

当我们宣传心理
健康和人的重要性时,

研究表明,自今年 3 月以来,我们实际上已将
平均工作日延长了 40 分钟

一切都在追求生产力。

我认为这是因为我们首先
认为 COVID 是一个转瞬即逝的时刻。

你看,COVID就像一场暴风雪。

经过多年
外面看似无尽的阳光,

我们向外望去,我们看到了雪。

所以我们做了正确的事。

我们关上了门窗
,我们呆在里面。

但是几个星期后,我们向外看
,仍然在下雪。

我们就像,“啊,这不是暴风雪,

这是冬天。”

所以我们做了正确的事。

我们上网,买了一件新的套头衫
和一条围巾。

但是当它们被
送到我们家门口时,

我们意识到这不是冬天。

那是冰河时代。

当你意识到这是冰河时代的那一刻

想想看。

那一刻
你坐在那里想,

“这不再是八周的事情
了,是吗?

它已经在这里有一段时间了。

事实上,也许它永远都在这里。” 顺便说一句

,那一刻的实现
让你对工作有

什么感觉,你花了大约三分之一
的时间在做的事情?

我可以告诉你

,在 Atlassian 最近委托进行的一项研究中,澳大利亚、美国、日本、
法国和德国的 5,000 人对此有何感受

尽管
人们没有通勤上班

,因此节省了时间,但

近一半的受访者表示,

他们用于个人追求的时间更少。

个人追求

,真正让你快乐的事情。

而此时的第一大投诉是什么?

工作与生活的平衡。

就我个人而言,

自三月份以来,我的体重已经增加了五公斤。

我喝多了,睡得少了。

那是COVID的错,对吧?

还是只是我不开心?

在我
对生产力的不懈追求中,


忽略了真正重要的东西。

现在,我们可以在接下来的演讲中
分享我们有多不开心的故事,

或者我们实际上可以翻转桌子
并谈论我们能做些什么。

我选择做后者。

我想让
你闭上眼睛一会儿。

我想让你想象

一个我们衡量成功
的标准不是生产力的世界。

我想让你想象一个世界

,我们不
考虑忙碌、头衔

和银行余额,

而是考虑我们对世界的影响。

我想让你想象

一个地位不是
我们存在的理由的世界。

张开你的眼睛。

我现在想向您
介绍个人道德清单。

个人道德清单
的灵感来自两件作品。

首先,
来自金融界的工作,


称为四重底线,

旨在让企业
以更全面的方式进行报告。

第二

,精英
军事人员在参战前对

自己和队友进行自我评估的演习

我相信这四件事,

生产力和利润,人

,地球和我们的目标,

是我们幸福的秘诀。


在冰河时代,我们现在所处的时代,重要的

不是因为
我们不能做的事情而分心,

而是要找到我们可以做的事情。

我们有责任拥有
和控制自己的幸福。

让我们一起做练习。

我要做的是给每个区域
打分,减一、零或一。

一个是你正在钉它。

全场击掌,祝你好运。

零是你过得去。

不是很棒。 不可怕。

减一是你在挣扎。

这是我今年的。

对于生产力和利润,我是其中之一。

我有一份好工作,我有一份不错的薪水,

我有一个屋顶,

我可以支付账单。

但事情就是这样。

你的得分不能超过一个,

因此不可能将
你所有的快乐归为一类。

就像我们都试图
在生产力上达到两个,

但到什么程度呢?

下一个领域是人。

人是关于你如何
看待你的个人、

心理和身体健康的。

你必须从你自己开始。

您必须先戴上自己的氧气面罩,
然后才能帮助他人。

这也是关于你如何影响
家人、朋友和社会。

这是关于成为人类

并对人类产生积极影响。

为此,我给自己打了零分。

行星。

假设我
去年乘坐了 100 多次航班,

所以我会给自己打负分。

最后,目的。

目的是关于你想要产生的影响

和你想要留下的遗产。

这就是你做你所做的事情的原因。

为此,我给自己打了零分。

现在,我已经可以告诉
房间里的热心豆子了,网上

正试图把它加起来
,然后把它清除掉。

这不是它的工作原理。

您在一个类别

中的积极影响不会减轻您
在另一类别中的负面影响。

对我来说,
我经济上富裕

的事实并不能弥补
我正在扼杀地球的事实。

然而,并不是这种认识

让我觉得
有些事情必须改变。

我姐姐去世后不久,

我就替她做了这个功法。

它让我思考。

对于生产力和利润,
她是零。

她在经济上苦苦挣扎。

在她最后的几年里,她无法工作,

但她过得很好。

对于人来说,她是一个明确的人。

她真的很清楚自己的身份。

她投资了自己的生活。

她玩得很开心。

你们都记得
你和特鲁迪一起参加的派对。

她投资于当地的学校、
社区、朋友和家人。

对于星球,她也是一个。

她的碳足迹非常低。

她很少飞到任何地方。

她没有车。

她热衷于减少、再利用、回收。

在冬天,

她会让你穿上套头衫,

然后再让你打开暖气。

出于目的,
她也是一个坚强的人。

她知道
她想留下的遗产。

她很清楚
自己为什么会在这个星球上。

目的不是成为超级英雄。

这不是披着斗篷

或单枪匹马拯救世界。

特鲁迪的目的是让
这两个男孩在

她有空的时间里得到最好的教育。


为她做这个练习学到了两件事。

首先,我
了解到幸福是有情境的。

就像,对于特鲁迪来说,
她在经济上陷入困境的事实,

她并没有让这决定她的幸福。

她没有把所有的鸡蛋都放在那个篮子里,

然后就关门了。

但第二个认识
对我的打击更大。

尽管如此,
特鲁迪还是比我更快乐。

在这里,我们可以
将幸福掌握在自己手中。

我希望你做的

是考虑
你会得分为零

或负一的领域,

并承诺做一些事情来改进。

所以无论你承诺做什么,

我希望你在明年夏天全力以赴

为什么?

嗯,种树的最佳时间
是 20 年前。

第二个最佳时间是今天。

所以我们现在就去做。

对我来说,我最差的成绩是Planet。

我将承诺
每周三天不吃肉

,然后我会重新评估。

我已经将我的能源供应商
改为碳中和的。

我投资了
一家试图拯救海洋的公司。

小步骤,但我可以重新评估。

在人物方面,

我将承诺更多地
与我关心的人在一起。

在过去的四年里,
我基本上一直单身

,如果我真的很诚实,
我在情感上是无法接受的。

但我真的很
幸运遇到了一个了不起的人。

所以我要做的是
致力于

以开放、真实
和脆弱的方式投资于这种关系。

还有一点厚颜无耻。

一年前,在目的上,

我实际上
是一个目的上的人。

我的目的是双重的,

这是我通过公开演讲对人们产生的影响

也是
我与姐姐共度的宝贵时间。


在 2020 年初的短短几周内,

这两者都消失了。

从那以后的几个月里,我一直在
努力重新发现我的目标。

老实说,

我真的很难找到它。

我认为没关系。

但后来我意识到我拥有这个,

今天,这个时刻。

这是我重新发现我的目的。

你会怎样做?

你打算采取什么行动?

无论你采取什么行动,

你都会突然意识到,你可以不再
把所有的幸福都寄托

在一类个人
道德清单上。

相反,你投资于
控制自己的幸福。

我们的未来不是预先确定的。

我们的未来没有写出来

,我们的未来也没有等着我们。

我正在建造我的,我相信
你正在建造你的。

我们未来的幸福程度
将完全取决于我们

在生活的各个方面的作为或不作为,

而不仅仅是工作周。

我是释放
自己幸福的钥匙

,我相信你是
释放自己幸福的钥匙。

我可以肯定地说,特鲁迪
没有任何遗憾,

但她确实有一个愿望。

看到我在舞台上,现场,
在 TEDx 上展示。

非常感谢你。