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In December 2010, I was doing a speaking tour in the Middle East and I had a day off in Qatar.
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And I decided that I wanted to go dune-blasting
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because the brochure in the hotel said that...
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“your guide will drive you over 100-foot sand cliffs at 70 mpr
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But my favorite part of the brochure was that it said...
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“and then he will help keep you alive overnight in the desert.”
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And then I said –“That sounds confident enough for me. Let’s do that!”
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So I wandered out at 7 o’clock in the morning, and I meet my guide.
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And it’s this man right here.
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Now, this is the only time throughout the entire course of the day that he was not smiling.
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Because he said the ladies like it when you look intense in photographs.
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And then I walked towards this guy.
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He jumps out of the car. And he throws his hands and he goes,
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“Mr. Dudley! Welcome to Mustafa’s Grand Adventure. I am Mustafa!”
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And I want to match his energy,
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so I idiotically went with this, “Mustafa, like the Lion King.”
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(Sings Lion King melody)
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And he’d like deadpan looks at me and goes, “That’s Mufasa.”
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I see apparently he’s not gonna try that hard to keep me alive in the desert, right?
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And then he gets this big grin and said, “I’m kidding. I’m kidding. Hop in.”
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And this guy starts to talk.
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And he starts to talk about what we’re going to learn from the desert.
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He starts to talk about all he knows about Canada.
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This man is just pouring energy out.
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And this is seven o’clock in the morning.
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And this is one hour non-stop.
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And we’re outside the city and have fun and I just go, “Mustafa – man - where do you get your energy?
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You are the most upbeat dude that I’ve ever been with.”
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And he looks at me with a huge smile and says, “It’s my first day! “
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(Laughter)
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Now I’m well aware that everyone has to start somewhere.
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But when there are100-foot cliffs involved, I’d rather not be in the car with a newbie, right?
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And I guess I looked terrified.
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And he goes, “don’t worry. Don’t worry.It’s always my first day.”
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And I said, “what do you mean?”
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He goes, “think about it, on your first day, you dress your best.
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You show up early.
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You really, really try to impress your boss.
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You are incredibly nice to your co-workers.
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You’re never more committed to your job than you are on your first day.
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As a matter of fact, you are never more convinced...
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that this is going to be the greatest job that you've ever had that you are on your first day.
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As soon as your second day starts,
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all of that starts to stop being quite so true. “
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He said, “13 years ago I started this job.
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AndI loved it. And I knew that I was gonna love it.
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And so I decided 13 years ago that I would never have a second day of work.
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So it has been my first day for 13 years.”
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And I was so inspired by that way of looking at life and work.
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But what’s really weird was that just as quickly I kind of got depressed.
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Because this was right after I quit my job.
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And I loved my job.
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But there had been this really intense inter-personal conflict
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that has been going on for quite a while
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And finally made me feel that I had to go.
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And when I heard him talk about how much he loved his job,
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I couldn’t help but start to think about everything that I felt like I had been pushed away from my mind.
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Everything I helped to build, that I had to say goodbye to.
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And everything that seemed to be like, torn apart.
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And I start to think about the person that I held responsible for
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And I got really quiet.
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And he thought that he insulted me.
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And he said, “Drew, I’m so sorry. Did I say something wrong?”
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And I said, “no. Mustafa.”
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And then I basically tell this complete stranger an incredibly personal story of my life’s conflict.
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And he gets really quiet. He finally says,
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“Drew, this person that you are talking about. They are so far away.
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They are so far away that it is night where they are, it is day where you are.
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But you are letting them make it night where you are.
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You are letting them wreck Mustafa’s Grand Adventure.
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And they are not even here.
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And what’s worse, you are acting like it’s their fault.”
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I kind of got annoyed, “Well, it is their fault. I just told you the story.”
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“No, with respect, Drew. It’s your fault. Because you are letting live rent-free in your head.
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He says, “think about it.
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Think about a landlord.
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A landlord will allow people to use their property
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But they charge rent to make sure they get something valuable in return to protect their investment.
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Your head and your heart are the most valuable pieces of property that you own.
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If you are going to let people use them
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You’d better make sure that you get something valuable in return.
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All this person brings you is anger, bitterness and sadness.
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None of those things are valuable to you.
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But when you accept anger, bitterness and sadness in return for access to your head and your heart,
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you are basically letting someone live there rent-free.”
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And he said “Drew, the landlord sets the rent. Alright? You are the landlord.
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You are not allowed to be angry when all you get paid is what you ask for.”
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And this guy was dropping knowledge like that on me for 18 hours straight.
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It was like going….honestly, it was like going dune-blasting with Yoda.
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(Laughter)
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And we talked a lot about the power of human connections that day.
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When I think about what Mustafa said,
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what I was reminded of, was that not everything to which we are connected, brings us value.
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And unfortunately some of the most powerful connections that we allow ourselves to forge...
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can actually be among our most limiting.
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And I was a producer of a musical project once,
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And one of the songs that was submitted have this set of lyrics that I’ve always remembered.
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And they said, “There’s a difference between grounded, and run into the ground.
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Some things keep you rooted, and some just weigh you down.
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And you have to decide what you’d rather keep around…”
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And I think that the ability to take a look at the connections in our lives,
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And honestly ask ourselves, which of these things are keeping us rooted, and which of these things are weighing us down -
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that’s an incredibly valuable skill to have.
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In order to get the most out of the life, it’s gonna knock us around some times.
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Because they are things that live rent-free in our heads.
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And it’s not always people. It’s also failures. It’s also losses.
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And it’s also these ideas that somewhere along the way we picked them up, and they start to limit us.
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There’s one particular idea that has been living rent-free in way too many young people’s heads
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that it has kind of become my passion to go after it.
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For me,it started when I was working with a group of university students in a work shop,
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And I asked what I thought was a completely innocuous question.
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And I’m gonna ask some unfortunate person in the front row here as well.
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You of one. Congratulations.
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Are you ready?
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You look so excited right now.
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So let me ask you that question I asked that day:
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“Why do you matter?”
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And that look of absolute terror is exactly what happened.
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And I said okay.
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Then I asked somebody else in the crowd, “Why do you matter?”
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And I get that same look of confusion, and sort of fear.
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And I started to ask that question.
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And I’ve asked it to hundreds of university and college students all around the world.
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And watching them struggle to answer has made me realize that...
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there's this idea that’s been living rent-free in your head:
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you are somehow training to matter right now.
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And that one day when you get good enough marks, from good enough schools
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and you make enough money from prestigious enough jobs,
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then all of a sudden, then you’ll be ready to matter.
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Everything that we are doing in the mean time is some sort of training session.
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And I think we have got to evict this idea that...
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the biggest impact you are going to have on the world is gonna come down the pipe later on.
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We got to evict this idea that this is some sort of “training to matter”.
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You matter right now.
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And we’ve also got to ask ourselves,
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Can we call it an education when the best, the brightest, the smartest and the most well-educated young people in our countries freak out,
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because no one has ever asked them –“Why do you matter?” before?
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Because you do.
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When I was 19 years old, my parents let me throw the “End of High School Party”.
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Like the one that has been on every teen comedy movie ever.
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Half way through the party,
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And I was leaning back against a cottage
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And I saw two of my friends who were a couple, and they were all snuggled up, watching the sun goes down.
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And I snapped a photograph of it.
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And I leaned back against the cottage and got all bitter.
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And I turned to my buddy Scott, who was sitting right next to me.
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And I said, “Scott you know it sucks that I don’t have somebody like that.
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You know, it really sucks. I’m so tired of always being alone.”
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And Scotty, who’s that friend who’s the athlete and musician, the-perfect-balance-of –left-brain-and-right brain guy.
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Scotty looks at me and goes, “Drew, for a guy who’s got everything going for him...
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all I ever hear from you is about what you don’t have.”
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And I was not yet at the point in my life,
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where I want my friends to tell me what I need to hear, as opposed to what I want to hear.
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So I pushed back. And I said,“I don’t have everything going for me.
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You know, all I have is pressure.
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All I have is people telling me - make sure you keep getting those amazing marks.
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And make sure that you live up to your potential.
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All I feel like I have is an opportunity to disappoint everyone.
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All I feel is like I have an opportunity to be a failure in front of everybody who believes in me.
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And Scott looked at me for what seemed like a really long time.
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And then he said, “Drew, you’ve got to give your friends more credit.”
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He says, “we don’t care about you because the guy that you might be one day.
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We care about you because of the guy that you are now.
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I think you have to start to do the same thing.”
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And that’s a piece of advice that has stuck with me for my entire life:
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never diminish the person that you are in the name of this person that you think you are going to become one day.
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And you know what – give your friends more credit.
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Because they are going to forgive you.
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And the really true friends - I discovered as you get older – the true friends in your life –
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they are the ones who judge you based on the person they know you are on an average Tuesday afternoon.
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Not the person we are sometimes or we’re on Saturday nights.
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But, unfortunately, only after a few weeks after Scott gave me that advice
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He and my other friend, Tim, were actually killed in a car accident.
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just outside of my hometown.
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And Scotty was 18 years old.
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And that was 16 years ago.
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And I’m talking about what he taught me on a stage at a TED event, 16 years later.
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Because he mattered.
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And so do you guys.
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After I’ve said good bye to Scott, I went off to university.
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And I met this amazing guy.
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Not to be stared as a typical Canadian,
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but there is this hockey uniform.
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His name was Jason Abraham.
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Jason was one of the senior staff members at the bar that I ended up working at.
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And everybody loves this guy.
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He was one of the coolest guys on campus.
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And I wanted to be cool, since I was old enough to know that I wasn’t - so like, four.
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When I had to work, I said to Jason
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“How do you connect so easily to people?
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How is it that people seem so drawn to you?”
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And he said, “you know what,
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I just try to keep it simple.
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I think that you life is better the fewer times you put yourself in a position...
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where you might feel forced to say ‘I’m sorry."
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And if you want to pull unnecessary “I’m sorry”’ out of your life.
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The easiest way to do it is this:
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Every time you talk about somebody, act as if they’re standing directly behind you.
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Your life just gets easier.”
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“Every time you talk about somebody, act as if they’re standing directly behind you”
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is may be the best life advice that I’ve ever been given, that I find a way to ignore on an almost daily basis.
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And this how guys talked, and this is how this guy lived.
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And unfortunately just a few weeks after he gave me that advice,
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Jason was diagnosed with adnominal cancer.
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Within five weeks, he was gone.
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Jason Abraham was 23 years old.
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And I stand on stages all over the world.
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And I talked about what he taught me.
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Because he mattered.
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I’m 36 years old and I’ve been to 6 of my friends’ weddings
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And I’ve been to 15 of their funerals.
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And I could do a full talk on what every single one of those individuals taught me, and that has made my life better.
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Not one of them lived to see their 24th birthday.
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But they mattered.
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And I think we need to evict this idea from our minds that...
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impact, and the ability to make an impact is in any way, shape or form...
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related to how old you are, or how well you do in school, or how much money that you were going to make.
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Because honestly, your ability to matter to someone else, and have them talk about what you’ve taught them...
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is absolutely immeasurable.
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I love talking about the lessons that my friends taught me,
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because that’s how I let go of their loss.
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I talk about them in a lot of different places.
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Two years ago, I was talking about Scotty and I was talking about Jason.
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At the end of the presentation, this young woman walked up.
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And she said Drew I really like your presentation.
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But I feel bad for all the pain that you had in your life.
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And then she told me her story.
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And it was filled with so much more courage, and so many more challenges, and so much more pain and loss than mine was.
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I looked at her and said,
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“How in the world can you tell me that you feel bad for the pain I’ve had in my life...
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when yours so obviously dwarfs mine?”