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  • Today, I want to ask you:

  • what does it mean to live free?

  • Here in America we all live free. Right?

  • We have the freedom of speech, freedom of religion,

  • right to a fair trial,

  • but is that all that really exists to living free?

  • For me, it's not. There's a whole lot more to it.

  • It means living your life pursuing your passion.

  • It means living a life that makes you truly happy,

  • Not one that makes your friends happy,

  • the celebrities happy,

  • one that makes you happy.

  • It means not letting the small setbacks

  • that are bound to happen

  • get in the way of your day-to-day life.

  • It means not wishing your days away

  • just to get to the weekend.

  • I think that a lot of us aren't living free.

  • We let the day-to-day negativities

  • get in the way of pursuing our dreams and our happiness.

  • I was fortunate enough just recently

  • to be pushed into the lifestyle of living free.

  • It was a very roundabout manner,

  • it was a very inopportune situation,

  • but I'm grateful for it.

  • And I want to share with you today the story

  • of how I was able to break down internal boundaries

  • and build connections with people who supported me

  • and wanted to see me reach my dreams,

  • in order to start living free.

  • It's January 21st 2013,

  • and I've just successfully defended my Ph.D. in chemistry,

  • at Duke University to a roomful of people.

  • As you can imagine I was pretty much on cloud nine then.

  • 5 years of 6.5 day workweeks,

  • long hours, and I will admit,

  • a few tears along the way, were finally over.

  • And not only were they over, but I was proud.

  • I was proud of the work that I had completed,

  • I felt like I had made a contribution

  • to the scientific community.

  • Also, I had a job lined up,

  • which is becoming more and more rare these days

  • with an advanced degree,

  • but that's another topic for another day.

  • In mid-February, I was starting a job

  • at Redstone Arsenal with the army.

  • And I was excited.

  • I was going to be pursuing what I thought was my dream

  • in helping our nation defend itself.

  • I had everything set for my transition

  • from graduate school to the real world.

  • We sold our house in North Carolina,

  • and my husband, Taylor, was able to find a new job,

  • here in Huntsville, with a financial institution.

  • We made the move, we got settled in

  • in our little rental house here in Huntsville.

  • Now it's Friday, and I'm set to start work

  • first thing early Monday morning.

  • Now, mind you, this is mid-February,

  • you guys know what was going on,

  • when an email pops up and it reads,

  • "We're sorry, your start date has been delayed.

  • and at this time, we are unsure

  • as to when we'll be able to hire you."

  • Wait a minute, you're kidding, right?

  • The job that brought us to Huntsville,

  • the only reason that we moved here,

  • has now fallen through.

  • And I'm left unemployed.

  • What do we do?

  • We could go back to North Carolina,

  • we have our friends there.

  • But we have no house, we have no jobs,

  • wherever we go, we have to start over.

  • In our short amount of time here in Huntsville,

  • we realized that we liked the city,

  • and we thought that we could really enjoy it here

  • and make this a home.

  • So, we decided, "We're young,

  • why not stay, give it a try?"

  • Fortunately, Taylor had a job here

  • and so we had some income coming in

  • to support us for a while,

  • until I figured out what I was going to do.

  • I enjoyed, initially, staying at home,

  • the house was clean, dinner was on the table every night.

  • It was very different from graduate school life.

  • I enjoyed relaxing -- for about two weeks.

  • I found out that staying at home

  • does not suit my personality very well.

  • I needed to have a purpose.

  • I needed to be challenged.

  • I needed to be happy, and I needed to be free.

  • So, what did I do?

  • I started a business.

  • Now, if you ask any of our friends back in North Carolina

  • if I was the type of person

  • to ever launch out and start my own business,

  • they would laugh, probably pretty hysterically.

  • Not that I'm not creative or driven;

  • I am not a risk taker.

  • I have a huge fear of the unknown,

  • and I like to micromanage,

  • I like to have everything planned out,

  • know all the steps along the way.

  • I am a chemist, after all.

  • Launching a new business requires substantial risk,

  • and this just wasn't any business --

  • I wanted to open a dedicated gluten-free bakery,

  • here in Huntsville, Alabama,

  • in the South, home of fried food.

  • Hmm, let's see, that might not go over so well.

  • Having a severe gluten sensitivity myself,

  • I was surprised with how little awareness,

  • and how many baked goods there were

  • available here in Huntsville.

  • I've always loved to bake,

  • and my husband's always dreamed of owning a business.

  • Now a bakery, probably, had never crossed his mind --

  • but the things you do for the people you love, right?

  • So, I knew that in order to launch this business,

  • I needed to take a risk.

  • Sometimes I think that the biggest boundaries that we face

  • are the ones that we set for ourselves.

  • We build up walls that limit us,

  • and they're completely self-imposed.

  • Since I like to micromanage,

  • Taylor and I sat down and started looking at all the numbers.

  • We looked at, you know, the sales that we would have to do

  • to simply pay rent on a commercial kitchen,

  • let alone equipment, utilities, insurance, all of the other stuff.

  • I said, "There's no way.

  • There can't be that many people in Huntsville

  • that either need to be gluten-free

  • or are interested in a cleaner lifestyle."

  • I wanted to throw in the towel.

  • I said, "There's no way, it won't work."

  • My fear of the unknown was getting in the way.

  • I wasn't willing to take that risk.

  • One of the other crucial pieces to living free,

  • besides breaking your own boundaries,

  • is building connections with people

  • who support you and help build you up.

  • Taylor, my husband,

  • he knew that this would make me happy,

  • he knew that it was one of my dreams.

  • He said, "Let's do it."

  • I resisted, I resisted for a long time.

  • He said, "No, let's do it. Let's give it a shot.

  • If it fails, it fails. We can say that we tried."

  • And so we did.

  • We started out small,

  • within the means that I was comfortable,

  • started out the farmers' markets,

  • to kind of gauge the interest in the area,

  • before we launched a full storefront.

  • We got great feedback,

  • everything was going well,

  • we were planning for the opening of our storefront,

  • when I get a phone call:

  • "Your job has become re-available,

  • and you're required to take it."

  • I was under a service for scholarship contract,

  • and, even though I have been left unemployed for 6 months,

  • I was required to come back and take the job.

  • We're at a crossroads again. What do we do?

  • I'm happy, I'm loving the bakery, I've found my passion,

  • I am living my dream, I am living free.

  • I didn't know what to do. I thought we had to walk away.

  • How can I run a bakery and work full-time?

  • At the time, my husband, he wasn't really happy with his job.

  • It wasn't fulfilling him. He wasn't living free.

  • Here comes Superman again, saving the day.

  • He says, "I'll quit my job,

  • I'll run the bakery."

  • "You, baking cupcakes!?"

  • You're Superman at home, you wear a cape.

  • But wearing an apron, that's a whole nother thing.

  • He says, "I know it makes you happy.

  • I'm not happy right now.

  • Maybe I can find the same passion that you have.

  • Maybe I can start living free."

  • So, he quits his job.

  • Me, not being a risk taker,

  • it's a lot of sleepless nights.

  • Now, for six months in to the business,

  • things are going great.

  • Taylor's running the bakery during the day.

  • I work the early shift on the Arsenal,

  • and then go and bake in the evenings.

  • We're happy.

  • Are we where we thought we would be?

  • If you would have asked us this a year ago, well, no.

  • Are we making the money

  • that we had planned on making here in Huntsville?

  • Oh, by no means, no.

  • But does that matter? Because we're happy,

  • and we're living free.

  • Taylor will tell you he gets up

  • every morning over two hours earlier,

  • but he's excited to start his day.

  • That passion, that excitement, that's how we should live

  • every day of our life.

  • So, I want to ask you:

  • Are you living free?

  • A lot of the speakers that have been up here today,

  • I can tell that they are.

  • You can see the passion,

  • you can feel the joy of what they do,

  • and that joy is contagious.

  • So, if you are living free, I commend you,

  • keep up the good work and continue spreading the joy.

  • But if you're not, I challenge you.

  • It's going to require breaking some of your boundaries.

  • You have to find your passion,

  • and it might require taking a risk.

  • But build connections with those that build you up,

  • and that support your dreams,

  • and start living free.

  • Tomorrow is almost here.

  • Do you want to waste another day?

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

Today, I want to ask you:

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    Hhart Budha に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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