What are animals thinking and feeling Carl Safina

Have you ever wondered
what animals think and feel?

Let’s start with a question:

Does my dog really love me,
or does she just want a treat?

Well, it’s easy to see
that our dog really loves us,

easy to see, right,

what’s going on in that fuzzy little head.

What is going on?

Something’s going on.

But why is the question always
do they love us?

Why is it always about us?

Why are we such narcissists?

I found a different question
to ask animals.

Who are you?

There are capacities of the human mind

that we tend to think are capacities
only of the human mind.

But is that true?

What are other beings
doing with those brains?

What are they thinking and feeling?

Is there a way to know?

I think there is a way in.

I think there are several ways in.

We can look at evolution,
we can look at their brains

and we can watch what they do.

The first thing to remember is:
our brain is inherited.

The first neurons came from jellyfish.

Jellyfish gave rise
to the first chordates.

The first chordates gave rise
to the first vertebrates.

The vertebrates came out of the sea,

and here we are.

But it’s still true that a neuron,
a nerve cell, looks the same

in a crayfish, a bird or you.

What does that say
about the minds of crayfish?

Can we tell anything about that?

Well, it turns out that
if you give a crayfish

a lot of little tiny electric shocks

every time it tries
to come out of its burrow,

it will develop anxiety.

If you give the crayfish the same drug

used to treat anxiety disorder in humans,

it relaxes and comes out and explores.

How do we show how much
we care about crayfish anxiety?

Mostly, we boil them.

(Laughter)

Octopuses use tools,
as well as do most apes

and they recognize human faces.

How do we celebrate the ape-like
intelligence of this invertebrate?

Mostly boiled.

If a grouper chases a fish
into a crevice in the coral,

it will sometimes go to where it knows
a moray eel is sleeping

and it will signal
to the moray, “Follow me,”

and the moray will understand that signal.

The moray may go into the crevice
and get the fish,

but the fish may bolt
and the grouper may get it.

This is an ancient partnership that we
have just recently found out about.

How do we celebrate
that ancient partnership?

Mostly fried.

A pattern is emerging and it says
a lot more about us

than it does about them.

Sea otters use tools

and they take time away
from what they’re doing

to show their babies what to do,
which is called teaching.

Chimpanzees don’t teach.

Killer whales teach
and killer whales share food.

When evolution makes something new,

it uses the parts it has
in stock, off the shelf,

before it fabricates a new twist.

And our brain has come to us

through the enormity
of the deep sweep of time.

If you look at the human brain
compared to a chimpanzee brain,

what you see is we have basically
a very big chimpanzee brain.

It’s a good thing ours is bigger,
because we’re also really insecure.

(Laughter)

But, uh oh, there’s a dolphin,

a bigger brain with more convolutions.

OK, maybe you’re saying,
all right, well, we see brains,

but what does that
have to say about minds?

Well, we can see the working of the mind

in the logic of behaviors.

So these elephants, you can see,

obviously, they are resting.

They have found a patch of shade
under the palm trees

under which to let their babies sleep,

while they doze but remain vigilant.

We make perfect sense of that image

just as they make perfect sense
of what they’re doing

because under the arc of the same sun
on the same plains,

listening to the howls
of the same dangers,

they became who they are
and we became who we are.

We’ve been neighbors for a very long time.

No one would mistake
these elephants as being relaxed.

They’re obviously very
concerned about something.

What are they concerned about?

It turns out that if you record
the voices of tourists

and you play that recording
from a speaker hidden in bushes,

elephants will ignore it,
because tourists never bother elephants.

But if you record the voices of herders

who carry spears and often hurt elephants
in confrontations at water holes,

the elephants will bunch up
and run away from the hidden speaker.

Not only do elephants know
that there are humans,

they know that there are
different kinds of humans,

and that some are OK
and some are dangerous.

They have been watching us for much longer
than we have been watching them.

They know us better than we know them.

We have the same imperatives:

take care of our babies,
find food, try to stay alive.

Whether we’re outfitted for hiking
in the hills of Africa

or outfitted for diving under the sea,
we are basically the same.

We are kin under the skin.

The elephant has the same skeleton,

the killer whale has the same skeleton,

as do we.

We see helping where help is needed.

We see curiosity in the young.

We see the bonds of family connections.

We recognize affection.

Courtship is courtship.

And then we ask, “Are they conscious?”

When you get general anesthesia,
it makes you unconscious,

which means you have
no sensation of anything.

Consciousness is simply
the thing that feels like something.

If you see, if you hear, if you feel,
if you’re aware of anything,

you are conscious, and they are conscious.

Some people say

well, there are certain things
that make humans humans,

and one of those things is empathy.

Empathy is the mind’s ability
to match moods with your companions.

It’s a very useful thing.

If your companions start to move quickly,

you have to feel like
you need to hurry up.

We’re all in a hurry now.

The oldest form of empathy
is contagious fear.

If your companions suddenly
startle and fly away,

it does not work very well for you to say,

“Jeez, I wonder why everybody just left.”

(Laughter)

Empathy is old, but empathy,
like everything else in life,

comes on a sliding scale
and has its elaboration.

So there’s basic empathy:
you feel sad, it makes me sad.

I see you happy, it makes me happy.

Then there’s something
that I call sympathy,

a little more removed:

“I’m sorry to hear that your grandmother
has just passed away.

I don’t feel that same grief,
but I get it; I know what you feel

and it concerns me.”

And then if we’re motivated
to act on sympathy,

I call that compassion.

Far from being the thing
that makes us human,

human empathy is far from perfect.

We round up empathic creatures,
we kill them and we eat them.

Now, maybe you say OK,
well, those are different species.

That’s just predation,
and humans are predators.

But we don’t treat our own kind
too well either.

People who seem to know
only one thing about animal behavior

know that you must never attribute
human thoughts and emotions

to other species.

Well, I think that’s silly,

because attributing human thoughts
and emotions to other species

is the best first guess about what
they’re doing and how they’re feeling,

because their brains
are basically the same as ours.

They have the same structures.

The same hormones that create
mood and motivation in us

are in those brains as well.

It is not scientific to say that they
are hungry when they’re hunting

and they’re tired when
their tongues are hanging out,

and then say when they’re playing
with their children

and acting joyful and happy,

we have no idea if they can possibly
be experiencing anything.

That is not scientific.

So OK, so a reporter said to me,

“Maybe, but how do you really know
that other animals can think and feel?”

And I started to rifle
through all the hundreds

of scientific references
that I put in my book

and I realized that the answer
was right in the room with me.

When my dog gets off the rug
and comes over to me –

not to the couch, to me –

and she rolls over on her back
and exposes her belly,

she has had the thought,
“I would like my belly rubbed.

I know that I can go over to Carl,

he will understand what I’m asking.

I know I can trust him
because we’re family.

He’ll get the job done,
and it will feel good.”

(Laughter)

She has thought and she has felt,

and it’s really not
more complicated than that.

But we see other animals
and we say, “Oh look, killer whales,

wolves, elephants:

that’s not how they see it.”

That tall-finned male is L41.

He’s 38 years old.

The female right on his left side is L22.

She’s 44.

They’ve known each other for decades.

They know exactly who they are.

They know who their friends are.

They know who their rivals are.

Their life follows the arc of a career.

They know where they are all the time.

This is an elephant named Philo.

He was a young male.

This is him four days later.

Humans not only can feel grief,
we create an awful lot of it.

We want to carve their teeth.

Why can’t we wait for them to die?

Elephants once ranged from the shores
of the Mediterranean Sea

all the way down to the Cape of Good Hope.

In 1980, there were vast
strongholds of elephant range

in Central and Eastern Africa.

And now their range is shattered
into little shards.

This is the geography of an animal
that we are driving to extinction,

a fellow being, the most
magnificent creature on land.

Of course, we take much better care
of our wildlife in the United States.

In Yellowstone National Park,
we killed every single wolf.

We killed every single wolf
south of the Canadian border, actually.

But in the park, park rangers
did that in the 1920s,

and then 60 years later
they had to bring them back,

because the elk numbers
had gotten out of control.

And then people came.

People came by the thousands
to see the wolves,

the most accessibly
visible wolves in the world.

And I went there and I watched
this incredible family of wolves.

A pack is a family.

It has some breeding adults
and the young of several generations.

And I watched the most famous, most stable
pack in Yellowstone National Park.

And then, when they wandered
just outside the border,

two of their adults were killed,

including the mother,

which we sometimes call the alpha female.

The rest of the family immediately
descended into sibling rivalry.

Sisters kicked out other sisters.

That one on the left tried for days
to rejoin her family.

They wouldn’t let her
because they were jealous of her.

She was getting too much attention
from two new males,

and she was the precocious one.

That was too much for them.

She wound up wandering
outside the park and getting shot.

The alpha male wound up
being ejected from his own family.

As winter was coming in,

he lost his territory,
his hunting support,

the members of his family and his mate.

We cause so much pain to them.

The mystery is, why don’t
they hurt us more than they do?

This whale had just finished eating
part of a grey whale

with his companions
who had killed that whale.

Those people in the boat
had nothing at all to fear.

This whale is T20.

He had just finished tearing a seal
into three pieces with two companions.

The seal weighed about as much
as the people in the boat.

They had nothing to fear.

They eat seals.

Why don’t they eat us?

Why can we trust them around our toddlers?

Why is it that killer whales have returned
to researchers lost in thick fog

and led them miles until the fog parted

and the researchers' home
was right there on the shoreline?

And that’s happened more than one time.

In the Bahamas, there’s a woman
named Denise Herzing,

and she studies spotted dolphins
and they know her.

She knows them very well.
She knows who they all are.

They know her.
They recognize the research boat.

When she shows up,
it’s a big happy reunion.

Except, one time showed up and they
didn’t want to come near the boat,

and that was really strange.

And they couldn’t figure out
what was going on

until somebody came out on deck

and announced that one
of the people onboard had died

during a nap in his bunk.

How could dolphins know
that one of the human hearts

had just stopped?

Why would they care?

And why would it spook them?

These mysterious things just hint at
all of the things that are going on

in the minds that are with us on Earth

that we almost never think about at all.

At an aquarium in South Africa

was a little baby bottle-nosed
dolphin named Dolly.

She was nursing, and one day
a keeper took a cigarette break

and he was looking into the window
into their pool, smoking.

Dolly came over and looked at him,

went back to her mother,
nursed for a minute or two,

came back to the window

and released a cloud of milk
that enveloped her head like smoke.

Somehow, this baby bottle-nosed dolphin

got the idea of using milk
to represent smoke.

When human beings use one thing
to represent another,

we call that art.

(Laughter)

The things that make us human

are not the things
that we think make us human.

What makes us human is that,

of all these things that our minds
and their minds have,

we are the most extreme.

We are the most compassionate,

most violent, most creative

and most destructive animal
that has ever been on this planet,

and we are all of those things
all jumbled up together.

But love is not the thing
that makes us human.

It’s not special to us.

We are not the only ones
who care about our mates.

We are not the only ones
who care about our children.

Albatrosses frequently fly six,
sometimes ten thousand miles

over several weeks to deliver
one meal, one big meal,

to their chick who is waiting for them.

They nest on the most remote islands
in the oceans of the world,

and this is what it looks like.

Passing life from one generation
to the next is the chain of being.

If that stops, it all goes away.

If anything is sacred, that is,
and into that sacred relationship

comes our plastic trash.

All of these birds
have plastic in them now.

This is an albatross six months old,
ready to fledge –

died, packed with red cigarette lighters.

This is not the relationship
we are supposed to have

with the rest of the world.

But we, who have named
ourselves after our brains,

never think about the consequences.

When we welcome new
human life into the world,

we welcome our babies
into the company of other creatures.

We paint animals on the walls.

We don’t paint cell phones.

We don’t paint work cubicles.

We paint animals to show them
that we are not alone.

We have company.

And every one of those animals
in every painting of Noah’s ark,

deemed worthy of salvation
is in mortal danger now,

and their flood is us.

So we started with a question:

Do they love us?

We’re going to ask another question.

Are we capable of using what we have

to care enough to simply
let them continue?

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

你有没有
想过动物的想法和感受?

让我们从一个问题开始:

我的狗是真的爱我,
还是只是想请客?

嗯,很容易
看出我们的狗真的很爱我们,

很容易看出,

对,那个毛茸茸的小脑袋里发生了什么。

到底是怎么回事?

有什么事情发生了。


为什么他们总是爱我们?

为什么它总是关于我们?

为什么我们是这样的自恋者?

我发现了一个不同的问题
来问动物。

你是谁?

我们倾向于认为
人类思想的某些能力只是人类思想的能力。

但这是真的吗?

其他生物
在用这些大脑做什么?

他们在想什么,有什么感受?

有没有办法知道?

我认为有一种方法。

我认为有几种方法。

我们可以看看进化,
我们可以看看他们的大脑

,我们可以看看他们做了什么。

首先要记住的是:
我们的大脑是遗传的。

第一个神经元来自水母。

水母
产生了第一个脊索动物。

第一批脊索动物产生
了第一批脊椎动物。

脊椎动物从海里出来

,我们就在这里。

但是,一个神经元,
一个神经细胞,

在小龙虾、鸟或你身上看起来都是一样的,这仍然是事实。

这说明
了小龙虾的思想是什么?

我们能告诉你什么吗?

好吧,事实证明,
如果你给一只小龙虾

每次试图
从它的洞穴里出来的时候,给它很多小小的电击,

它会产生焦虑。

如果你给小龙虾服用

与治疗人类焦虑症相同的药物,

它会放松并出来探索。

我们如何表明
我们对小龙虾焦虑的关心程度?

大多数情况下,我们将它们煮沸。

(笑声)

章鱼会使用工具
,大多数猿类

也是如此,它们能识别人脸。

我们如何
庆祝这种无脊椎动物的类人猿智力?

大多是煮的。

如果石斑鱼将一条鱼
追到珊瑚的缝隙中,

它有时会去它
知道海鳗正在睡觉的地方

,它会
向海鳗发出信号,“跟我来”

,海鳗会理解这个信号。

海鳗可能会进入裂缝
并得到鱼,

但鱼可能会散开
,石斑鱼可能会得到它。

这是我们最近才发现的一种古老的伙伴关系

我们如何庆祝
这种古老的伙伴关系?

大多是油炸的。

一种模式正在出现,它对
我们的描述

比对它们的描述要多得多。

海獭使用工具


他们从正在做的事情中抽出时间

来告诉他们的孩子该做什么,
这被称为教学。

黑猩猩不教书。

虎鲸教书
,虎鲸分享食物。

当进化创造出新的东西时,

它会

制造新的转折之前使用它库存的、现成的零件。

我们的大脑是

通过
时间的深度扫描来到我们身边的。

如果你把人脑
与黑猩猩的大脑进行比较,

你会看到我们基本上
有一个非常大的黑猩猩大脑。

我们的更大是件好事,
因为我们也很不安全。

(笑声)

但是,哦,有一只海豚,

一个更大的大脑,有更多的卷积。

好吧,也许你在说,
好吧,好吧,我们看到了大脑,

但是这
对头脑有什么影响呢?

好吧,我们可以

在行为逻辑中看到思想的运作。

所以这些大象,你可以看到,

很明显,它们正在休息。

他们在棕榈树下找到了一片阴凉处

,让他们的婴儿在下面睡觉,

同时他们打瞌睡,但保持警惕。

我们完全理解那个形象

,就像他们完全
理解他们正在做的事情一样,

因为在同一个平原上同一个太阳的弧线下


着同样危险的嚎叫,

他们变成了他们
,我们变成了谁 我们是。

我们是邻居很久了。

没有人会误以为
这些大象很放松。

他们显然非常
关心某事。

他们在担心什么?

事实证明,如果你录制
游客的声音,

然后
用隐藏在灌木丛中的扬声器播放录音,

大象会忽略它,
因为游客从不打扰大象。

但如果你录下

牧民携带长矛并经常
在水坑对峙时伤害大象的声音

,大象就会聚
在一起逃离隐藏的扬声器。

大象不仅
知道有人类,

它们还知道有
不同种类的人类

,有些是好的
,有些是危险的。

他们注视我们的时间
比我们注视他们的时间长得多。

他们比我们更了解我们。

我们有同样的要求:

照顾我们的婴儿,
寻找食物,努力活下去。

无论我们是为
在非洲的山丘上远足而

装备,还是为在海底潜水而装备,
我们基本上都是一样的。

我们是皮肤下的亲人。

大象的骨架相同

,虎鲸的骨架相同,

我们也一样。

我们看到在需要帮助的地方提供帮助。

我们看到了年轻人的好奇心。

我们看到了家庭关系的纽带。

我们承认感情。

求爱就是求爱。

然后我们问,“他们有意识吗?”

当您进行全身麻醉时,
它会使您失去知觉,

这意味着您
对任何事情都没有感觉。

意识
只是感觉像是某种东西的东西。

如果你看到,如果你听到,如果你感觉到,
如果你意识到任何事情,

你是有意识的,他们也是有意识的。

有些人说

得好,有些东西
使人类成为人类,

其中之一就是同理心。

同理心是大脑
与同伴匹配情绪的能力。

这是一个非常有用的东西。

如果您的同伴开始快速移动,

您必须感觉
自己需要快点。

我们现在都很着急。

最古老的移情形式
是具有传染性的恐惧。

如果你的同伴突然
吓了一跳,飞走了,

你说:

“天啊,我不知道为什么大家都离开了。”

(笑声)

同理心是古老的,但是同理心,
就像生活中的其他一切一样,

是在一个滑动的范围内出现的,
并且有它的阐述。

所以有基本的同理心:
你感到难过,这让我难过。

我看到你很开心,这让我很开心。

然后有一种
我称之为同情的东西,

稍微移开一点:

“听到你的祖母
刚刚去世,我

很遗憾。我没有同样的悲伤,
但我明白了;我知道你的感受

和担忧 我。”

然后,如果我们有
动力表现出同情心,

我称之为同情心。 人类的同理心

远非
使我们成为人类的东西,

远非完美。

我们围捕具有同理心的生物
,杀死它们并吃掉它们。

现在,也许你会说好吧,
好吧,那些是不同的物种。

那只是捕食
,人类是掠食者。

但我们也不会善待自己的同类

对动物行为似乎只知道一件事的人

知道,你绝不能将
人类的思想和情感

归因于其他物种。

好吧,我认为这很愚蠢,

因为将人类的思想
和情感归因于其他物种

是对
他们在做什么以及他们的感受如何的最佳初步猜测,

因为他们的大脑
与我们的大脑基本相同。

它们具有相同的结构。

在我们体内创造情绪和动力的荷尔蒙也

存在于这些大脑中。


他们打猎时饿了,

吐舌头时累了,

然后说
他们和孩子玩耍

时表现得开心快乐,

我们不知道他们是否 可能
正在经历任何事情。

那是不科学的。

好吧,所以一个记者对我说,

“也许吧,但是你怎么
知道其他动物可以思考和感受呢?”

我开始
翻阅我放入书中的所有数百

个科学参考资料

,我意识到答案
就在我的房间里。

当我的狗从地毯
上下来并向我走来——

不是沙发,而是我

——她仰面翻身
,露出肚皮时,

她有这样的想法:
“我想揉揉我的肚皮。

我 “我知道我可以去找卡尔,

他会理解我的要求。

我知道我可以信任他,
因为我们是家人。

他会完成工作
,感觉很好。”

(笑声)

她想过,也感受过

,真的没有
比这更复杂的了。

但我们看到其他动物
,我们会说,“哦,看,虎鲸、

狼、大象:

他们不是这样看的。”

那个高鳍雄性是L41。

他今年 38 岁。

他左侧的女性右侧是L22。

她今年 44 岁。

他们已经认识了几十年。

他们确切地知道自己是谁。

他们知道他们的朋友是谁。

他们知道他们的对手是谁。

他们的生活遵循职业生涯的弧线。

他们一直都知道自己在哪里。

这是一头名叫菲洛的大象。

他是一个年轻的男性。

这是四天后的他。

人类不仅会感到悲伤,
我们还会制造很多悲伤。

我们要雕刻他们的牙齿。

为什么我们不能等他们死?

大象曾经从地中海沿岸

一直延伸到好望角。

1980 年,中非和东非有大量大象分布的
据点

现在他们的射程被粉碎
成小碎片。

这是我们正在走向灭绝的动物的地理,

一个同胞,
陆地上最壮丽的生物。

当然,我们在美国会更好地
照顾我们的野生动物。

在黄石国家公园,
我们杀死了每一只狼。

实际上,我们杀死了加拿大边境以南的每一只狼。

但在公园里,公园管理员
在 1920 年代这样做了,

然后 60 年后
他们不得不把它们带回来,

因为麋鹿的数量
已经失控。

然后人来了。

成千上万的人
前来观看狼群

,这
是世界上最容易看到的狼群。

我去了那里,我看着
这个令人难以置信的狼家族。

一个包就是一个家庭。

它有一些繁殖的成年人
和几代的年轻人。

我还观看了黄石国家公园最著名、最稳定的
背包。

然后,当他们在边境外徘徊时,他们的

两个成年人被杀,

包括母亲

,我们有时称之为阿尔法女性。

家里的其他人立即
陷入了兄弟姐妹的竞争。

姐妹们把其他姐妹们踢出去了。

左边的那个人花了几天时间
试图重新加入她的家人。

他们不让她,
因为他们嫉妒她。

她得到
了两个新男性的太多关注,

而且她是那个早熟的。

这对他们来说太过分了。

她最终
在公园外徘徊并被枪杀。

阿尔法男性最终
被逐出自己的家庭。

随着冬天的到来,

他失去了他的领地、
他的狩猎支持、

他的家人和他的伴侣。

我们给他们带来了太多的痛苦。

谜团在于,为什么他们没有
比他们更伤害我们?

这只鲸鱼刚刚


杀死那条鲸鱼的同伴一起吃完一头灰鲸的一部分。

船上的那些人,
根本就没有什么好怕的。

这条鲸鱼是T20。

他刚刚和两个同伴将一个封印
撕成三块。

海豹的重量
和船上的人差不多。

他们没有什么好害怕的。

他们吃海豹。

他们为什么不吃我们?

为什么我们可以相信他们在我们蹒跚学步的孩子身边?

为什么虎鲸会
回到迷失在浓雾中的研究人员

身边并带领他们数英里直到雾散开

,研究人员的家
就在海岸线上?

这已经发生了不止一次。

在巴哈马,有一位
名叫丹妮丝·赫辛(Denise Herzing)的女士

,她研究斑点海豚
,他们认识她。

她非常了解他们。
她知道他们都是谁。

他们认识她。
他们认出了研究船。

当她出现时,
这是一次非常快乐的重逢。

只是,有一次出现了,他们
不想靠近船

,这真的很奇怪。

他们不知道发生了
什么事,

直到有人从甲板上出来

并宣布
船上的一个人

在他的铺位上打盹时死亡。

海豚怎么会
知道一颗人的心脏

刚刚停了下来?

他们为什么要关心?

为什么会吓到他们?

这些神秘的事物只是暗示了地球
上我们头脑中正在发生的所有事情,而这些

事情我们几乎从未想过。

在南非的一个水族馆里,

有一只名叫多莉的小瓶鼻
海豚宝宝。

她正在喂奶,有一天,
一位管理员抽了一支烟

,他正
看着他们的游泳池的窗户,抽着烟。

多莉走过来看着他,

回到她妈妈身边,
护理了一两分钟,

回到窗边

,释放出一团牛奶
,像烟雾一样笼罩着她的头。

不知何故,这只婴儿瓶鼻海豚

想到了用牛奶
来代表烟雾。

当人类用一件东西
来代表另一件东西时,

我们称之为艺术。

(笑声)

使我们成为人的东西

并不是我们认为使我们成为人的东西。

使我们成为人类的是,

在我们的思想
和他们的思想所拥有的所有这些东西中,

我们是最极端的。

我们是这个星球上最富有同情心、

最暴力、最具创造力

和最具破坏性的动物

而我们所有的这些东西
都混在一起了。

但爱并不是
使我们成为人类的东西。

这对我们来说并不特别。

我们不是
唯一关心我们的伙伴的人。

我们不是
唯一关心我们孩子的人。

信天翁经常在几周内飞行六
英里,有时是一万英里

,为等待它们的小鸡提供一顿饭,一顿大餐。

它们在世界海洋中最偏远的岛屿上筑巢

,这就是它的样子。

将生命从一代传递
到下一代是存在的链条。

如果停止,一切都会消失。

如果有什么是神圣的,那就是
,进入这种神圣关系的

是我们的塑料垃圾。

现在所有这些鸟
体内都有塑料。

这是一只六个月大的信天翁,
准备长毛——

死了,装满了红色的打火机。

这不是
我们应该

与世界其他地方建立的关系。

但是我们,
以我们的大脑命名自己,

从不考虑后果。

当我们欢迎新的
人类生命进入这个世界时,

我们也欢迎我们的婴儿
加入其他生物的陪伴。

我们在墙上画动物。

我们不画手机。

我们不粉刷工作隔间。

我们画动物是为了向他们
展示我们并不孤单。

我们有公司。

诺亚方舟每幅画中的每一个

被认为值得拯救的动物
现在都处于致命的危险中

,它们的洪水就是我们。

所以我们从一个问题开始

:他们爱我们吗?

我们要问另一个问题。

我们是否能够使用我们必须

足够关心的东西来简单地
让它们继续下去?

非常感谢你。

(掌声)