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  • [MUSIC]

  • [NOISE] Thank you.

  • Whoo.

  • Love it.

  • Love, love love.

  • Tweet, tweet.

  • [SOUND] Whoo!

  • [SOUND] You.

  • [INAUDIBLE] So happy to be in the bubble.

  • Whoo.

  • [LAUGH] Love it.

  • Aren't you all the luckiest people in the world?

  • Oh my God, I envy you.

  • Hi Amanda.

  • >> Hi Oprah.

  • [LAUGH].

  • >> I can't believe I just said that [LAUGH].

  • So we have been so excited and eagerly anticipating this day.

  • This campus has been buzzing since the announce, announcement

  • was made last week that you'd be coming here.

  • And I received.

  • >> Thanks for the buzz.

  • I'm so glad you know I still have buzz.

  • So good.

  • >> I received a lot of support and advice from my

  • friends and that was really great and I just wanted to

  • say I think the best advice I've heard was don't worry

  • Amanda, if you mess up, Oprah can just interview herself [LAUGH].

  • >> [LAUGH] So, if I falter, feel free to

  • ask yourself some questions, and we'll, and we'll be good.

  • [LAUGH] But to get things started, I want, I

  • thought we'd frame today's talk with framing three sections with

  • quotes of yours that you shared after wrapping up your

  • 25th season and final season of the Oprah Winfrey Show.

  • And I thought some of these quotes, I mean you share so much wisdom but, these these

  • really spoke to me, and thought would be a great way to frame our discussion.

  • >> Okay.

  • >> So this first one that I will read for everyone

  • and for you so you don't have to strain your neck

  • is you have to know what sparks the light in you

  • so that you, in your own way, can illuminate the world.

  • So I wanted to take this time to talk

  • about your early career and how you discovered your calling.

  • So lets go back to when you were college age.

  • Did you know that you wanted to get into TV and media specifically?

  • >> No I did not.

  • I thought that I was going to be a teacher.

  • I was in my Sophomore class at Tennessee State University.

  • I'd already been working in radio since I was 16 and my

  • I remember I was in Mr. Cox's drawing class for theatre.

  • And I was terrible drawer.

  • He said, I couldn't draw a straight line with a ruler.

  • [LAUGH] And and I got a call in that class, from a guy at the local

  • station CBS, and he have been calling me several times when I was working in radio.

  • So I started working in radio at 16, and one

  • of them is fire prevention contest, another one story.

  • And so when I went back to the station to pick my

  • prize, some guy said, would you like to hear your voice on tape.

  • I said sure and I started reading this copy on tape.

  • They called everybody in the building, said here this kid read.

  • I was 16 they hired me in radio.

  • So I was in radio at 16.

  • And so I started getting calls about my freshman year to come into television.

  • I had never thought about it.

  • And still was living at home, and couldn't

  • figure out how I'd manage those, I had biology

  • at 1 o'clock, and so I couldn't figure out how I would be able to manage my schedule.

  • [COUGH] And Mr. Cox said to me, the one same, same

  • professor said you can't draw a straight line with a ruler.

  • He said, I came back from, from taking this phone call and

  • he said who was that I said there's this guy at CBS

  • he keeps calling me, he wants me to interview for a job,

  • and Mr. Cox said, that is why you go to school fool.

  • [LAUGHING] So that CBS can call you.

  • [LAUGH] That is why you are in school.

  • So I, he said you, you leave now and go call him back.

  • And, and, I did.

  • And I was hired in television not knowing anything about it.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> Having in mind Barbera Walters but thinking.

  • Oh, okay I can do that.

  • Not knowing how to write or film or anything.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> And I think it was because it was the, it was the times and I literally had

  • somebody who was willing to work with me that I, that I managed to, to find my way.

  • But I had to find my way, because, the reporting

  • never really fit me, and what did work for me.

  • I'm this old, I'm so old that when I

  • started that it was the year of live action cam.

  • [COUGH] And so, it was like video cameras live, and so, the news stations would do

  • a live, a live shot they would throw

  • to somebody live even if nothing was going on.

  • >> Right.

  • >> Just so they could say live action cam.

  • And what I found was I wasn't so good at the writing part but if

  • I was just standing up and talking about what had just happened it was really good.

  • And then I started to feel, so I started

  • at 19 working in television, became an anchor immediately afterwards.

  • My father still had an 11 o'clock curfew.

  • Can you believe such a thing?

  • [LAUGH] That I am, that I am

  • the 10 o'clock anchor [LAUGH] in Nashville Tennessee.

  • I am the woman on the newscast.

  • [LAUGH] Reading the news, and my father would say be home by 11.

  • [LAUGH] And I'd say, dad, the news is on at ten,

  • he goes and it's off at 10:30 so be home by 11.

  • [LAUGH] So I, I, I had a very strict Gracier father.

  • So, anyway, I, I could feel inside myself, that reporting was

  • not the right thing for me even though I was happy to have the job.

  • >> Right.

  • >> I got an offer to go to Atlanta.

  • I was making $10,000 a year in 1971, but still

  • in college, so I was thinking I was doing pretty good.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> I got an offer to go to Atlanta for $40,000 which I thought.

  • It's over.

  • [LAUGH] I'm gonna make $40,000.

  • And my boss at the time said to me you do not know what you don't know.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> And you need to stay here until you can learn to

  • write better until you can can perfect your craft as, as a journalist.

  • And so I, I he said we can't give you 40, but we can give you 12.

  • So [LAUGH] so I stayed and you know the reason why I stayed is cuz I could

  • feel inside myself that even though the 40 was

  • alluring at the time, that he was absolutely right.

  • So to make a long story short, cuz I'd be

  • here all day just talking about how it all came about.

  • I started listening, to what felt like the truth for me.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> A couple of years later I moved to Baltimore.

  • I could feel that as a reporter, and by this time, 22, I'm making 22,000.

  • I met my best friend Gale there who said oh my

  • god, can you imagine when your thirty and your making 30,000.

  • [LAUGH] And then you're 40 and then it's 40,000.

  • [LAUGH] We actually had that conversation in the bathroom.

  • So this is I started to feel that reporting wasn't for me.

  • But I had my father, I had my friends.

  • Everybody was saying, oh my God, you're, you're an anchorwoman, you're on TV.

  • I mean, you can't give up that job.

  • >> Right.

  • >> And when I was, by the time I was

  • making 25, my father goes, you just hit the jackpot.

  • You not gonna make no more money than that.

  • That's just it.

  • So I was torn between what the world was saying

  • to me, and what I felt to be the truth for

  • myself.

  • It felt like an unnatural act for me reporting, although

  • I knew that to a lot of people, it was glamorous.

  • And, I started to just inside myself think what, what

  • do I really wanna do, what I really wanna do.

  • And I will say this.

  • Knowing what you don't want to do is the best

  • possible place to be if you don't know what to do.

  • Because knowing what you don't want to do leads you to

  • figure out what it is that you really do wanna do.

  • >> Okay.

  • So you discovered talk then, right?

  • Around that time?

  • >> I didn't discover talk.

  • I was being, I got demoted.

  • >> God.

  • >> They wanted to fire me but I was, I was under contract.

  • They didn't wanna give up the 25,000 so they were

  • trying to keep me on to the end of the year.

  • So they put me on the, this is how life works, [CROSSTALK]

  • they put me on a talk show to try and avoid having

  • to pay me the contract out and the moment I sat on

  • the talk show interviewing the Carvel ice cream man and his multiple flavors.

  • [LAUGH] I knew that I had found home for myself.

  • Because when I was a news reporter, it was so unnatural for me, I, you know, to cover

  • somebody's tragedies and difficulties and then to not to have feel anything for it.

  • And I would go back after a fire.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> And I would take the blankets and then I would get

  • a note from my boss saying, what the hell are you doing?

  • >> Right.

  • >> You're just supposed to report on it.

  • >> Can't be that empathetic.

  • >> Can, cannot be that empathetic.

  • And it felt unnatural for me.

  • So if I were to put it in business terms, if it were were to leave you with a

  • message, that the truth is I have from the very beginning listened to my instinct.

  • All of my best decisions in life have come because I was

  • attuned to what really felt like the next right move for me.

  • And so, it didn't feel right.

  • I knew that I wouldn't be there forever.

  • I never even learned the street in Baltimore, because I thought I was there

  • longer than I thought, I was there eight years I should've learned the streets.

  • [CROSSTALK] I kept saying to myself I'm not gonna be here long, I'm not

  • gonna be here, I'm not gonna be here so I'm not gonna learn the street.

  • So when I got the call to come to Chicago.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> After you know starting with a, with a coanchor and, and working in

  • talk, for several years, I knew that it was the right thing to do.

  • And I knew that if I didn't even if I, didn't succeed cuz

  • at the time, there was a, there was a guy named Phil Donahue.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> Who was the king of talk.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • And was on in Chicago, and every single person,

  • except my best friend Gale, said you are gonna fail.

  • Every single person, [INAUDIBLE] my bosses by this time thought I was

  • terrific, and said, you're gonna, you're, you're waking into a land mine.

  • You're gonna fail.

  • You're gonna fail.

  • Chicago's a racist city.

  • You're black you're not gonna make it.

  • Everything to, to keep me same.

  • Then they offered me a car and apartment and all this stuff, and I said no.

  • If I fail, then I will find out what is the next thing for me.

  • >> Right.

  • >> What is the next true thing for me.

  • >> It felt right to you, so you went for it.

  • >> Cuz it felt like this is now the move I need to make.

  • And I was not one of those people you

  • know, all of my the people who worked with me

  • in the news, they would have their taps and they'd

  • have their stories, and they'd have you know resume's ready.

  • I didn't have any of that, cuz I knew that the time would come.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> Where I would, where what I needed would show up for me.

  • >> Okay.

  • >> And when that showed up, I was ready.

  • Because my definition of luck, is

  • preparation meeting the moment of opportunity.

  • >> Right.

  • >> And I was prepared to be able to step into that, that, that

  • world of talk in a way that I, I knew I could do it.

  • >> Great.

  • So, often in your career I'm sure you were a minority.

  • Perhaps as the only woman.

  • The only black person, the only person from a poor family.

  • Did this pr, affect you on your professional path?

  • And how did you navigate situations in which you might have felt more alone?

  • >> Hm.

  • >> And now how did that impact how you lead and

  • how you might help people who may be feeling that same thing?

  • >> Okay, that's a lot of questions.

  • [LAUGH].

  • >> I'm sorry, all right let's let's-.

  • >> Let me put my glasses on.

  • [LAUGH].

  • >> I figured I had you here, I was gonna, I was gonna ask as much as I can.

  • >> Oh, Amanda went deep on me for a minute there.

  • Whoa.

  • Back up sister girl, c'mon, back up.

  • [LAUGH] So first one is.

  • >> So how did you navigate in which you would have felt more-

  • >> Always the only, only woman walk in the room-

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> Still and there is a room full of white men, usually older thrills me.

  • Just thrills me.

  • [LAUGHING] I just, I just love it.

  • [LAUGHING] Usually the only black person in the room.

  • Also, never really concerned me because I, I don't look at people through color.

  • I didn't get to be where I am by, and,

  • who I am, by looking at the color of people's skin.

  • I really, literally, took Martin Luther King at his word.

  • and, understand that the content of a person's character,

  • and, refuse to let anybody else do that to me.

  • So, I love it, just love it.

  • And there's a wonderful phrase by Maya Angelou, from a poem that she wrote called

  • To Our Grandmothers, that she says, when I come as one but I stand as 10,000.

  • [COUGH] So when I walk into a room and

  • particularly before I have something really challenging to do

  • or I'm gonna be in a circumstance where I

  • feel I'm going to be you know, against some difficulties.

  • I would literally sit, and I would call on the 10,000.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> I would call on back to the ancestors,I would call on

  • those people who come before me, call on those women who forged

  • a path that I might be able to sit in the room

  • with all of those white men, and I love it so much.

  • [LAUGH] I, I call on, I call on that.

  • >> Right.

  • >> Because I know that my being where I am, and first of all, being who I am and

  • where I am didn't come just out of myself that

  • I come from a heritage and so I own that.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> And I step into that room not just as

  • myself but I bring all of that, that, energy with me.

  • So it has never been an issue for me except when

  • I was, I think, 23, still working in, still working in Baltimore.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> I'd gone to my boss and said that the guy who was working with me, co, co,

  • my cohost on the People Are Talking show, was making more money than I.

  • And we were, we were cohosts.

  • So I went to my boss and I said, this was in 1970, I was older than

  • 23, this was 1979, 80, and I said I, I just would like to-.

  • You know how intimidating it is to go to the boss in the first place.

  • [INAUDIBLE] But I'm gonna go, and I'm gonna stand up for myself.

  • [LAUGH] And, I said, Richard's making more money than I am, and I,

  • and I, and I don't think that's fair because we're doing the same job.

  • We sit in the same show.

  • We do the same.

  • And, my general manager said, why, why should you make as much money as he?

  • And I said, cuz we're doing the same job.

  • And he said but he has children.

  • [LAUGH] Do you have children?

  • And I said no.

  • He said, well he has to pay for college educations.

  • So he has, he owns his own home.

  • Do you own your home?

  • I said no.

  • He said, he has a mortgage to pay.

  • He has insurance, he has do you have that?

  • No.

  • So, tell me, why, why do you need the same amount of money?

  • And I said, thank you for your time.

  • And I left.

  • I left.

  • I didn't complain about it.

  • I didn't file a, a, a, a suit about it.

  • I knew, that in that moment, it was time for me to go, and that I started the

  • process for myself, of preparing myself for, you will not be here long.

  • You are not gonna be able to get what you need.

  • I had a boss at the time who was African American, and had just been

  • for the first time, made an assistant news director, and was drunk with power.

  • Drunk with power, and felt it his, I think, I don't know, I think

  • he woke up in the morning thinking of things he could do to harass me.

  • I decided not to file a suit against it, cuz I knew, at the time, I would lose.

  • >> Right.

  • >> That no good would come of it, that I would be blackballed in television, that

  • it would turn into a major thing, and I knew, I didn't have long to stay there.

  • I had a vision for what the future was, even though I couldn't place

  • exactly where my future would be, I knew who held the future.

  • Cuz I am really guided by a force that's bigger than myself.

  • I know that my being here on the planet is not just of my own being.

  • >> So you used that as momentum to just leave, cut your losses and go.

  • >> No, I just [INAUDIBLE] and I filed it away.

  • >> [CROSSTALK] Yeah.

  • >> There will come a time.

  • >> [LAUGH] Huh, it's gonna come back.

  • Yeah, you were right.

  • I think you were right.

  • >> When I will be sitting in the same room.

  • And it happened, like, in the late 90s.

  • I had the Oprah show and I ran into that guy.

  • Lord, Jesus, thank you.

  • [LAUGH] [LAUGH] Oh my god.

  • Oh, one of the sweetest moments I've ever happened.

  • [LAUGH] Oh, go ahead.

  • >> Okay.

  • [LAUGH] Here we go.

  • So, right now, as we sit here, we're

  • about five miles from Facebook and Sheryl Sandberg.

  • And last year, she published the book Lean In.

  • And it's gotten incredible traction.

  • It had some, you know, criticism as well.

  • And I was wondering if you were to write a book on women in careers.

  • What would your title be?

  • >> Mine would be, actually.

  • Mine wouldn't be lean in.

  • It would be, step up and into yourself, because, this is the truth.

  • There is no real doing in the world, without being first.

  • For me, being.

  • Your presence, your connection to yourself, and that which is

  • greater than yourself, is far more important than what you do.

  • But also, is the thing that fuels what you do.

  • >> Right.

  • >> And I know that one of the things that is so important for what happens here.

  • At the graduate school, is that you have leaders who are self actualized,

  • and understand what your contribution to change the world can be.

  • You can only do that, if you know yourself.

  • You can only do that, unless you take, unless

  • you, you cannot do it unless you take the time.

  • To actually know who you are, and why you are here.

  • Now, I happen to know, for sure, that every human being comes, comes called.

  • And that the calling goes beyond the definition of what your job is.

  • That there is innate, there is an innate, supreme moment of destiny, for everybody.

  • And, that's why when I was in Baltimore, I could feel, this isn't it.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> This isn't it.

  • And then in Chicago after 25 years of success

  • on the show, I started to feel, this isn't

  • it, there is something more, something more, something more

  • that's calling me to what is the supreme moment.

  • And everybody has that.

  • And you cannot fulfill it, unless you have a level of self awareness, to be connected

  • to what is the inner voice, or the

  • instinct, I call it your emotional GPS system.

  • That allows you to make the best decisions for yourself.

  • And every decision, that has profited me.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> Has come from me listening to that

  • inner voice first, and every deci, every time

  • I've gotten into a situation where I was

  • in trouble, it's because I didn't listen to it.

  • I overrode that voice, that instinct, with my own, with my own head, my own thinking.

  • I tried to rationalize it, I tried to tell myself.

  • But, you know, okay, you're gonna make a lot of money oh, no.

  • And so, I am, I sit here you know, profitable,

  • successful, by all the definitions of the world.

  • But, what really, really, really resonates deeply with me.

  • Is that I live, a fantastic life.

  • My inner life is really intact.

  • My, I live from the inside out.

  • And so, everything that I have, I have because I let it be fueled by who I am.

  • And what I realized my contributions to the planet could be.

  • And what my real contribution is, it looks like I'm a, I was a talk show host.

  • It looks like, you know, I'm in the movies.

  • It looks like, you know, I have a network.

  • But my real contribution, the reason why I'm

  • here, is to help connect people to themselves.

  • And the higher ideas of consciousness.

  • I'm here to help raise consciousness.

  • So my television platform, was to help raise consciousness.

  • At the beginning I didn't realize that.

  • I thought, oh my God, I got a show!

  • [LAUGH] And it wasn't until I was interviewing the Ku Klux Klan one day.

  • And, can you, imagine all the great lessons

  • come from things that are, that are sometimes challenging.

  • I was interviewing Ku Klux Klan, and I

  • thought, as an African American oh, I'm gonna

  • get them, I'm gonna show for every Jewish

  • person, for every person who's been discriminated against.

  • And during the commercial break, I saw the

  • klan exchanging signals and looks at each other.

  • And then something inside, that instinct, I thought, I am doing nobody any good.

  • They are loving this.

  • They are using me.

  • I think I'm doing an interview.

  • They are using me.

  • I did not know it at the time.

  • I brought them on, actually, those same guys back, in for my last year.

  • And they told me, that they used that show, for their recruitment.

  • I could feel that happening.

  • And I made a decision after that show, I'll never do anything like that again.

  • I'll never let my platform be used.

  • >> Right.

  • >> And I will not be used.

  • And, at the time, in the 90s,

  • early 90s, everybody was doing, confrontational television.

  • And I thought I was above the fray, cuz I'm,

  • cuz I'm not like like Jerry Springer, I don't do that.

  • [LAUGH] So in my egoic delusion, I thought because I am not that bad.

  • I'm really not bad.

  • But I was doing confrontational television.

  • I thought I was exposing, men with affairs.

  • We happened to have a guy on who was

  • talking about how he had an affair with his wife.

  • And he was crazy enough to come on, with his wife, and his girlfriend.

  • People ask me, why do people do that.

  • It's because, nobody ever asked him so.

  • [LAUGH] You say, would you come on with your wife and girlfriend?

  • He goes sure >> [LAUGH] He was thinking.

  • >> He was thinking.

  • So, he comes on with the wife and the girlfriend.

  • This is the life-changing moment for me.

  • The Klan, and this woman.

  • The wife is there.

  • He's in the center, and the girlfriend.

  • And he tells his wife, he announces.

  • We were live television at the time.

  • And he announced that, to, to, to the world

  • and to his wife, that his girlfriend was pregnant.

  • And I did, you see her face?

  • Your mouth's open, right there.

  • [LAUGH] I did exactly that.

  • I went, oh my God!

  • And you could hear the gasp in the audience.

  • And, they're like, and, I literally really, it

  • still makes my eyes water to think about it.

  • I looked at her face, and I felt her humiliation.

  • I felt her shame, I felt it, and I, said never again.

  • [COUGH] I will get outta television, if I have to do this.

  • And I went and I had a meeting with the producers, cuz

  • I just had the Klan before, now I got the adulteress here.

  • [LAUGH] And [LAUGH] some uplifting show, I must say.

  • [LAUGH] And I said to the producers, we are gonna change.

  • We're gonna turn this around.

  • And I am no longer gonna be used by television.

  • I am going to use television.

  • What a concept!

  • I am gonna use television, as a force for, for,

  • I didn't say at the time for good, I said.

  • You know, let's think about what we wanna say to the world.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> And how we wanna use this as a platform, to speak to the world.

  • How do we want to see the world change?

  • How do we wanna impact to the world, and then let

  • all of our shows really, be focused, and seated around that.

  • I then said to the producers exactly what I said to you backstage.

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> Do not bring me a show, unless you have

  • fully thought out what is your intention for doing it.

  • Because, if there is, if, if, if there is a religion, or a mantra, or

  • law that I live by, I live by the third law of motion in physics.

  • Which is Stanford.

  • Which is [LAUGH] for every action, there's an equal and opposite reaction.

  • That is, that is, that is, that is my religion.

  • I know that what I'm thinking, and therefore gonna act on, is going to

  • come back to me, in this, in a, in a, in a circular motion.

  • Just like gravity.

  • Like what goes up comes down.

  • And so, what also propels the action, is the intention.

  • So, I don't do anything, without being fully clear, about why I intend to do it.

  • Because the intention, is going to determine, the

  • reaction, the result, or the consequence in every circumstance.

  • I don't care what it is.

  • So, I said to my producers, come to me

  • with your intention, at whatever it is, whatever shows you're

  • proposing, whatever ideas you're proposing, and then I will decide

  • based upon the intention, do I really wanna do that?

  • >> Right.

  • >> Is his is how we wanna use this platform?

  • And that really is the secret to why we were number one, all

  • those years, is because it was an

  • intention-fueled, intention-based coming out of purposeful programming.

  • [CROSSTALK] Yeah, that's what it was.

  • >> Great, and that's a perfect segue to go to our second section.

  • Which I read this quote, and it just struck me

  • as so true, and I wanted to delve into it.

  • I've talked to nearly 30,000 people on this

  • show, and all 30,000 had one thing in common.

  • They all wanted validation, I will tell you that every

  • single person, you will ever meet, shares that common desire.

  • So, Oprah, you are a true renaissance woman.

  • You know, you have your own network, you

  • had this amazingly successful show for 25 years.

  • You've been in movies.

  • You are one of the most important philanthropists of our time.

  • So, what are the qualities?

  • >> I love hanging around you what else are you gonna say?

  • [LAUGH] I'm just taking it all in.

  • >> I love it too so we [CROSSTALK].

  • >> You know, the part I love the most, is renaissance woman.

  • When she said that, I went, what does that really mean?

  • [LAUGH].

  • >> I don't know but I like it.

  • [LAUGH].

  • >> I was a history major so it seemed like a natural.

  • >> I'm a renaissance woman.

  • [LAUGH] Who knew?

  • Okay, go ahead.

  • >> Good, I'm glad you like it [LAUGH] [COUGH] What are the

  • qualities of your leadership that make you successful at such diverse pursuits?

  • >> Mm.

  • >> And what works for, in one area, that maybe doesn't work in another?

  • [COUGH].

  • >> Well, I tell you.

  • it, it works in all areas because I, my life is fueled by my being.

  • >> Yep.

  • >> And the being fuels the doing, so, I come from a centered place.

  • I come from a focus place, I come from compassion it's just,

  • it's just my nature, I come from a willingness to understand.

  • And to be understood.

  • >> Right.

  • And I come from wanting to, to, to connect.

  • I mean, the secret of that show, for 25

  • years, is that people could see themselves in me.

  • All over the world.

  • They could see themselves in me.

  • And even as I became.

  • More and more financially successful, which was a big surprise to me.

  • I was like, oh my God!

  • This is so exciting!

  • [LAUGH]

  • >> You mean, you got more than that 30,000?

  • >> I got more than 30,000, by the time I was 30, so [LAUGH] so my.

  • [LAUGH] But, what, what I realized is.

  • Through the whole process, because I'm grounded, in my own self,

  • that although I could have more shoes, my feet stayed on the ground.

  • Although I was wearing better shoes, these are kinda cute today too.

  • [LAUGH] So I could keep my feet on

  • the ground, even though I could get more shoes.

  • And I can understand.

  • I could understand that it really was, because I was grounded.

  • I've, I've done the, was doing, and continued

  • to this day, to do the consciousness work.

  • I work at staying awake.

  • And being awakened, is just another word for spirituality, but

  • spirituality throws people off, and they think you mean religion.

  • When I was hiring people for my company, for own looking for presidents.

  • When people would come in, I'd say, tell me what is your spiritual practice?

  • And literally, would throw out, people would [UNKNOWN] well, I'm not religious.

  • I said, I didn't ask you about your religion.

  • I asked you what's your spiritual practice.

  • What do you do, to take care of yourself?

  • What do you do to keep yourself centered?

  • What do you do to let, and, you know one women started crying.

  • You know that's not the person.

  • >> Okay.

  • That's a sign.

  • >> That's a sign.

  • So, so to answer your question.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> Everything is fueled that comes from me

  • really wanting to be a better person on earth.

  • >> And this is what I know to be true, the

  • reason why the show worked is because I understood that that audience.

  • My viewers, the people who watched us everyday,

  • and would come, and just like you all did.

  • Get tickets, and they would come with their,

  • you just came across campus, but that's good, too.

  • But people would come from all over the world, just to be

  • there with their aunts, their mothers, and they'd come with their cousins.

  • And there'd be a few men and they're going, What the hell [LAUGH].

  • Or saying, Well, I went to Oprah with you, I went to Oprah.

  • [LAUGH].

  • At least get me clear for three or four weeks, I went to Oprah.

  • I had such regard for that, and I just

  • had a conversation with John Mackey who runs Whole Foods.

  • And has written this fabulous book,

  • you should get it, called Conscious Capitalism.

  • Hm.

  • >> And he was talking about how the

  • investment in the stakeholders, the people you are serving.

  • That connection between the people who you're trying to serve and sell

  • to is equally as important as the people who you're buying from.

  • >> Right.

  • >> Equally as important as the people who are, you know, supporting you financially.

  • As your stockholders if you were, you know, you know a public company.

  • So, I always understood that there really

  • was no difference between me and the audience.

  • At times, I might have had better shoes.

  • But at the core, the core of, of what really matters, that we are the same.

  • You know how I know that?

  • Cuz all of us are seeking the same thing.

  • You're here at this fabulous school and will go out into the world.

  • And each pursue, based upon what you believe your talents are, what your

  • skills are, maybe your gifts are, but you're seeking the same thing.

  • Everybody wants to fulfill the highest, truest

  • expression of yourself as a human being.

  • That's what you're looking for.

  • The highest, truest expression of yourself as a human being.

  • And because I understand that.

  • I understand that if you're working in a bakery and that's where you want to be.

  • And that may be the, that may be what you always wanted to do is to bake.

  • >> Mh-hm.

  • >> Pies for people, or to offer your gift.

  • Then, then that's, that's for you.

  • And there's no difference between you and me, except that's your platform.

  • >> Mh-hm.

  • >> That's your show everyday.

  • So my understanding of that has allowed me to, you know.

  • >> Reach everyone.

  • >> To reach everyone.

  • And, and there's no way that you wouldn't.

  • Because that, that's what I truly feel.

  • And when I sit down to talk to somebody, whether I'm talking to a murderer.

  • I sat down and I interviewed a guy who, killed his twin daughters.

  • I've interviewed child molesters.

  • Trying to figure out what, what it is, what is,

  • what it is they do and why they do it.

  • Obviously lots of people who have been victimized through molestation.

  • Presidents, politicians, Beyoncé herself [LAUGH].

  • >> Ha Beyoncé.

  • >> At the end of every interview the murderer to Beyoncé.

  • The question

  • everybody asks that you mentioned is, was that okay, how was that.

  • Everybody says that and I, and I know just wait for it.

  • Was that okay, was I okay, and when I finish I'll say to you, was I okay.

  • >> I'm gonna ask you too.

  • >> Okay.

  • You're very okay.

  • You're doing very okay, very okay.

  • >> Whew!

  • >> Very okay, so, what I started to feel, feel, sense,

  • is that there's a common thread that runs through every interview.

  • It doesn't matter what is, or what it is about, everybody wants to know.

  • And this is the truth, all of your arguments are really about the same thing.

  • It's about.

  • Did you hear me?

  • Did you see me?

  • And did what I said mean anything to you?

  • That's what everything's about.

  • So the reason why I left my boss's office, when I was asking

  • for a raise, I, I knew he didn't hear nor see me neither.

  • And that I was not going to get the validation that I needed.

  • Now I couldn't articulate that at the time, but

  • I just knew let met get out of here.

  • But now, I know, I can feel it inside of myself.

  • I'm not going to get the validation that I'm looking for.

  • I also know, that that's what every human being is looking for.

  • They are looking to know, are you fully here with me.

  • Are you fully here, or are you distracted?

  • That's what your, that's what your children want to know, that's your, what

  • the people you work for want to know, that's what you want to know.

  • Is did, did, did you hear me?

  • And every argument isn't about what you think your arguing about.

  • It's really about, but can you hear me?

  • >> Yes ma'am.

  • >> And many people have even said it.

  • >> Yes.

  • >> Have you not said it?

  • You're not hearing me.

  • [LAUGH].

  • >> Yes.

  • >> You're not hearing me.

  • So, having, having that understanding.

  • And I would have to say that the show, one of the reasons why

  • I live such a fantastic life, is because I pay attention.

  • I pay attention to my life.

  • And your life is your greatest teacher.

  • Every single thing that's happening to you every day.

  • Your, your joys, your, your, your sadnesses, your challenges, your worries,

  • your, everything is happening to bring you closer to in here.

  • Everything is trying to take you home to yourself.

  • And when you're at home with yourself, when

  • you're solidly there, connected to whatever you call creation.

  • Even if you don't call it anything, connected to an energy force that is.

  • That has unlimited power for you.

  • You could connect to, to that.

  • You, you, you are your best.

  • My greatest, one of my greatest lessons came from a

  • guy who wrote a book called Seed of the Soul.

  • I was doing him on the show and I started talking this

  • consciousness spiritual talk, you know, two months after I started the, the show.

  • And my producers will all be like, oh God, there she goes again.

  • But I knew that even though masses of people were not tuning in for that.

  • That the whole purpose of that platform was to try to lift people up.

  • And now, I have a network and I can articulate what it is I'm trying to do.

  • I'm trying to bring little pieces of light into people's lives.

  • Because what is my job?

  • My job is not to be an interviewer.

  • My job is not to be a talk show host or just to own a network.

  • I am here to raise the level of consciousness, to connect people to ideas

  • and stories, so that they can see themselves and live better lives.

  • >> Thank you.

  • I want to switch gears and focus a bit on philanthropy.

  • >> Are you worried about getting all of your stuff in?

  • >> no, we're doing great.

  • We're just going to keep going.

  • I think everyone likes this, right?

  • We're good?

  • [SOUND].

  • >> Okay.

  • >> So, I watched your interview with the Forbes conference on philanthropy.

  • And you said something really interesting.

  • Which is that early on some of your biggest

  • mistakes in giving were because you made emotional decisions.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> And yet we learn here at the GSB like,

  • one of the crucial messages that we take away from us.

  • Is that it is really important to be,

  • as you said before, self aware, to be understanding.

  • Often to share our emotions with others.

  • You yourself have been the master of you know,

  • harnessing vulnerability, with yourself and your guests over the years.

  • So, how do you strike a balance between emotion and logic.

  • How do you make sure that you're making logical decisions when you're giving.

  • >> These are so well thought out.

  • >> Thank you.

  • >> Okay, let me think about that for a moment.

  • [SOUND].

  • Very good.

  • >> Thank you.

  • >> Okay.

  • Well I would have to say, that, you need both.

  • You need emotion and you need logic.

  • So, in the beginning, I was purely emotional.

  • Made a lot of mistakes.

  • I happened to be sitting.

  • I was sharing this story with Dean Saloner just before he came on.

  • I was sitting in Nelson

  • Mandela's living room.

  • And I'm not just saying that to name drop.

  • >> [LAUGH].

  • >> I was actually sitting there.

  • >> You stayed with him, right.

  • >> I stayed with him for, stayed with him for ten days.

  • And as I said to the dean [UNKNOWN] I could

  • have, I literally could have written a book called 29 meals.

  • Cuz I had 29 meals with him at that particular time.

  • I wish I had.

  • >> Yeah you should.

  • >> I should've.

  • >> You should do it now.

  • >> [LAUGH].

  • >> I didn't record it so some things I

  • think was that the 2nd meal or the 12th meal.

  • Anyway, so I was sitting in Nelson, sitting with Adiva and.

  • We were talking about how, how do you really make an impact in the world.

  • And we were reading the paper and we, I'd reached the point where

  • I was no longer like, oh my God what am I gonna say.

  • Cuz we were just sitting in silence reading the paper.

  • And there was an article in the paper about, you know, some tragic situation.

  • And we both started talking about the way to end poverty is through education.

  • And I said to him, I really at some point would like to build a school over there.

  • And then, he got up and called the minister to education,

  • and said get over here now, Oprah wants to build a school.

  • [LAUGH].

  • And I was like well I was thinking about it.

  • [LAUGH].

  • I didn't say I wanted to do it today.

  • [LAUGH].

  • But so we literally started the process then.

  • It was an emotional decision for me in that I think philanthropy

  • should come out of you, your doing should come out of your being.

  • Everybody knows my story as a poor negro child growing up in apartheid Mississippi.

  • And if it were not for education and being born at the right time.

  • Cuz I was literally born in the year of desegregation.

  • Five years before, three years before, two years before, nobody would of

  • even had the hope that my life could of been any different.

  • So because I was born at that time, and literally moved out of

  • Mississippi by the time I was in my first classroom.

  • I was in Kindergarten.

  • Wrote my kindergarten teacher a letter, Ms. New.

  • I said, dear Ms. New, I do not belong here.

  • >> Oh.

  • >> Cuz I know a lot of big words.

  • And then, I wrote every big word I knew.

  • Elephant [LAUGH], hippopotamus, Mississippi, Nicodemus.

  • Shadrackmeshackinthebindigo from the bible, so, and

  • then Ms News says, who did this?

  • I said, I did.

  • So,they marched me off to the principals office, the only time I was ever in there.

  • Principals

  • office, principal made me write those words again and

  • I got myself out of kindergarten, into first grade.

  • >> Oh my god.

  • >> First grade, skipped second grade, hellerher.

  • [LAUGH].

  • The Renaissance began.

  • >> Yea.

  • [LAUGH].

  • >> Yes.

  • Yea, yea.

  • >> You've always had this conviction.

  • You've always, it seems like you've always known who you are, even if you were.

  • >> Well I knew I didn't belong there with those kids.

  • >> You knew that.

  • >> In kindergarten, you're sitting there, that's

  • what I'm talking about listen to your instincts.

  • You're looking around and say these kids [LAUGH]

  • they are playing with some blocks [CROSSTALK].

  • And I know Nicodemus [LAUGH].

  • I do not think I belong in here, I do not belong in here so my point is,

  • [LAUGH] my point is education really opened the door as we all know.

  • I'm not gonna give you the education speech.

  • How do you change a person's life.

  • I had prior to starting my school in South Africa,

  • I had this big idea that I was going to, emotional.

  • That I was gonna take all, 100 families out of the projects, in Cabrini Green.

  • And I was gonna give them a new life and I

  • was gonna buy them homes and stuff and that did not work.

  • It failed miserably.

  • I had a Big Sister program that I started, failed miserably.

  • So I realized that for me.

  • First of all, I realize you don't change,

  • as you all are recognizing through the seed program.

  • You first have to change the way a person thinks and see themselves.

  • So you've gotta to create a sense of aspiration, a sense of hopefulness so

  • a person can see, can begin to even have a vision for a better life.

  • And if you can't connect to that, then, then, then, then you, then you lose.

  • You lose and they lose.

  • And it's just money after money after money.

  • So, for me it's using my philanthropy to do what I have found to be

  • enormously, helpful.

  • You know, the light in my life was education.

  • So for me, in the beginning when I started to make

  • money, especially when it's published, everybody and your brother calls you.

  • And then you've got to make a decision.

  • Am I going to do what everybody else wants me to do?

  • Or, am I going to be led by who I really am?

  • And I learned, as will happen to anybody who's successful in

  • your family, people start treating you like the First National Bank.

  • And, you've got to decide.

  • You've got to draw the boundaries for yourself.

  • And decide, how are you gonna use, your money, your talent, your

  • time, in such a way that it's going to serve you first.

  • Because if you, if it doesn't allow you to be filled up.

  • Then you get depleted and you no longer, you can't keep doing it.

  • So my decisions are now emotional and logical.

  • Meaning I choose education, but I do it in such a

  • way that's actually going to benefit the person that I'm serving.

  • Then it's not just, oh I want to help people.

  • >> Thank you.

  • So to move on to our last part, you said at the end of your 25 years, gratitude

  • is the single greatest treasure I will take with me from this experience.

  • So now, you started your own network and you continue

  • to be very involved in your philanthropy and your school.

  • Is

  • there anything left that you're scared to try?

  • >> [LAUGH].

  • >> Whoa, Amanda.

  • You must have been up all night long.

  • >> I've prepared a little bit.

  • Just a little.

  • >> Oh, my goodness.

  • Anything left that I'm scared to try?

  • no.

  • [LAUGH] No, and I'm just trying to think what, I'm just

  • trying to think, well, is there something that I haven't thought of.

  • >> Well, there's not much you haven't done so.

  • >> Well, but I stay in my lane.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> I stay, I know where my lane is.

  • I know what my lane is.

  • I know that my real calling is what I said earlier.

  • I know what it looks like to the rest of the world.

  • Oh, she's a talk show celebrity but I really know what I'm here

  • to do, which is the number one thing I would say to you.

  • First let me answer your question.

  • So no, there's nothing, I'm not scared to try?

  • I haven't even, I had hit my stride but I haven't done what I ultimately came to do.

  • There still is a supreme moment of destiny that awaits

  • me and I also knew that during the Oprah Show.

  • I've kept a journal since I was 15 years old.

  • It's so pitiful when you go back and

  • see how pathetic you were as a person, sometimes.

  • [LAUGH].

  • But I always knew even during that show, that the show, we live

  • in a fame culture, we lived in a fame centered world, you know.

  • Had this literally been during the

  • Renaissance, people would have valued different things.

  • We've been doing the Transcendentalist period, people valued

  • different things but in our culture we value fame.

  • So I always understood that that was the

  • basis for me being known, in the world because

  • people wouldn't be able to hear you, unless

  • you came with some swag or swagger, you know?

  • And I also understood that that was just the foundation

  • to be heard but that there was a lot more to be said.

  • So for me, owning a network or being a part of a network is

  • about continuing to use that platform to raise the consciousness.

  • I do a show on Sundays, which you can see live called Super Soul Sunday,

  • where I literally talk to thought leaders

  • from around the world and ask the questions.

  • Not as good as you, I'm gonna consult with you.

  • >> [LAUGH].

  • >> Ask the questions in life that really matter to

  • get people thinking about what really matters in their lives

  • and the responses that I get from people, just regarding

  • that show let me know that I'm on the right track.

  • I'm moving in the right direction and so, I'm not afraid

  • because I know that all of us have limited time here but the

  • real question is who are you and what do you want to do with it?

  • And how are you going to use who you are?

  • My favorite line from Seed of the Soul is when the personality, comes

  • to serve the energy of your soul, that is authentic empowerment.

  • So as graduates of this great school, to take what

  • you've learned here, to take what is a part of your

  • nature and what you've developed as skills and

  • what really feeds your passion, to take that and to

  • align that with the deeper potential impossibility

  • of your soul's coming.

  • If you align your personality with what your soul

  • came to do, and everybody has it, align your

  • personality with your purpose and nobody can touch you

  • and you wake up everyday and you are fired up.

  • You're just like oh, my God, another day!

  • It's so great!

  • Because everybody has a purpose.

  • So you're whole thing is to figure out what that is.

  • Your real job is to figure out why you're really here and then

  • get about the business of doing that.

  • >> Okay.

  • >> That's it.

  • >> So we all know now what we have to do, right?

  • Only wait.

  • [LAUGH] >> Yeah.

  • >> So Oprah, thank you so much.

  • >> Are we gonna take some questions?

  • >> Well, yeah, so that's what I wanted to say.

  • I'd love to put it up.

  • >> Everybody has a class at 1:15, right?

  • Okay, I'll get you out of here.

  • [Laugh] They told me hard out.

  • One o'clock.

  • Yeah.

  • But so we think we have, do we

  • have a first question from Twitter, coming forward?

  • Throughout the session, the first question asked

  • today was Matt Sucedo who asked, will you marry me?

  • [LAUGH].

  • >> Oh, it looks like he's up there.

  • >> Matt, where's the ring?

  • >> Matt, do

  • we need marriage?

  • Oh my god, that's gonna be such a pre-nup between us, I've gotta say.

  • [LAUGH] >> What else you got, Andre?

  • >> And then we had Javier Hernandez, who asked,

  • Oprah who has been your favorite interviewee and why?

  • >> Well, actually, I would have to say, there's so

  • many over the years and the truth is that the

  • people whose names that I can't even remember and you

  • probably wouldn't remember, have been the most revelatory, the most impactful.

  • I mean, watching people step out of tragedies

  • and define triumph for themselves.

  • Those people, really, have been the ones that really

  • shaped me and made me a better human being.

  • I did an interview once with a woman and actually with Doctor Phil, where

  • she had come to the show and then was planning to kill herself afterwards she

  • said because her daughter had been murdered

  • eight years before and she couldn't get past

  • it and she just wanted to come on the Oprah show and talk about it.

  • And Phil said to her, why do you spend all your time lamenting, all

  • these years lamenting the death, instead of celebrating the life?

  • You've let the one day define your

  • daughter's entire life and she looked up at

  • him and she said you know, I never thought about it that way before with tears.

  • I could feel that, the shift in her.

  • So the most important moments for me have been

  • when literally, I can see that somebody has made a

  • shift in the way they see themselves in the world

  • or you know, what we call now, an aha moment.

  • Those, I live for that, those are my favorite

  • interviews but most recently, I just last week interviewed Pharrell.

  • Oh, my god.

  • I was so happy.

  • >> But you made him cry.

  • I didn't make him cry.

  • I didn't make him cry, Amanda.

  • >> But he cried but it was happy tears.

  • >> Yeah, I would have to say.

  • I don't actually try to make people cry and if I think,

  • literally, we cut a lot of it because he went into the ugly cry.

  • [LAUGH] He went into the ugly cry.

  • >> You could tell it was real.

  • >> Yeah, it was very real and so we said, we gotta save the brother.

  • The brother cannot walk out into the world with the ugly cry.

  • It's okay to have a little sniffle sniffle but then just don't go [SOUND].

  • But I could also feel him.

  • I mean, I understand, you know why?

  • Because I just loved him.

  • I just loved him.

  • Anybody who, and anybody who saw that interview if you liked him a little bit

  • before, you really loved him afterwards because

  • that's a person who's absolutely connected to here.

  • >> And he, yeah, he knows his purpose.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> Yeah, he does.

  • >> Oh, he's very much connected to it and when he saw, he started crying when

  • he saw the videos of people all over the world dancing to the happy song.

  • >> There is a version made here too.

  • >> Here?

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> You guys did one too?

  • >> Yeah, I think some of the MBA ones right?

  • Raise your hand if you are in it.

  • >> Yeah!

  • >> Didn't it make you happy to do it?

  • Yeah, so he saw that video, like 30 seconds of video from people

  • in all these different countries and the name of the countries were up.

  • He just felt the emotion and the impact of using his life

  • in such a way that you're able now to touch all of those

  • people, which is really what we're all looking to do and all

  • of us have the ability to do it, at whatever level you are.

  • At whatever level, and I always say to people, oh, I have a big stage.

  • Some people have a smaller stage.

  • Some people have you know, what's your stage?

  • We're going to take one from the audience now.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> Let's do it.

  • All right.

  • Here we go.

  • >> Introduce yourself.

  • >> Hi, I'm Kirsten.

  • I'm a second year MBA student here at the JSB.

  • So this week at the JSB we're hosting something called Climate

  • Week to raise awareness about climate change among the business students here.

  • So you've interviewed people like Leo to Al

  • Gore, President Obama on this really important issue.

  • So I want to get a sense from you, how do you navigate raising the level of

  • consciousness around issues like climate change that are important, but are

  • also very complex and politicized?

  • [LAUGH] We came prepared.

  • We came prepared today, huh?

  • Wow.

  • >> I do not know the answer to that question.

  • I do not know.

  • [SOUND] If i knew that, we would have, I would have like, made it a club and we

  • would have, I would have had every body come join my environmental club.

  • Now, I don't know that is such a complex, beautiful

  • question and the fact that you are even asking it or

  • engaged in the process of trying to figure out the

  • answer thrills me, cuz that's what would happen here at Stanford.

  • So I really do not have an answer to that question.

  • >> [LAUGH].

  • >> Thank you.

  • Thank you, do we have time for one more?

  • >> You have to because you can't end on a question without an answer.

  • >> We got one.

  • >> I came here to get stumped, yeah.

  • >> Hi Oprah, my name is Melissa and I wanted

  • to know, how do you think about balancing selflessness with selfishness?

  • Selflessness with selfishness.

  • Why are you asking me that question?

  • [LAUGH] It's kind of the tension between putting

  • yourself first and also, taking care of others.

  • Okay.

  • Well, I would say this.

  • There is no, you have no, well,

  • everybody's heard the whole oxygen mask thing.

  • The truth is, you don't have anything to give that you don't have.

  • So you have to keep your own self full.

  • That's your job.

  • You know, one of my daughters is

  • here today from Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy.

  • Stand up Shenay, so everybody can see you.

  • [SOUND] You're going to end your first year soon.

  • Oh my god, it's your first year.

  • I say to my girls all of the time, that you're

  • real work is to figure out where your power

  • base is and to work on the alignment of your

  • personality, your gifts that you have to

  • give with the real reason why you're here.

  • That's the number one thing you have to do, is to work

  • on yourself and to fill yourself up and keep your cup full.

  • Keep yourself full.

  • I used to be afraid of that.

  • I used to be afraid, particularly, from people

  • who'd say, oh, she's so full of herself.

  • Mm, she's so full of herself and now, I embrace it.

  • I consider it a compliment that I am full of myself because only when you're full.

  • I'm full, I'm overflowing.

  • My cup runneth over.

  • I have so much.

  • I have so much to offer and so much to

  • give and I am not afraid of honoring myself, you know.

  • It's miraculous when you think about it.

  • First of all, for me, my father and mother never married.

  • They had sex one time underneath an oak tree

  • because she was wearing a poodle skirt in 1953.

  • >> [LAUGH].

  • >> And my dad to this day says, I wanna know what was under that skirt.

  • That's what I wanna know.

  • [LAUGH]

  • He wanted to know what was under the skirt.

  • They didn't really have a relationship.

  • She wanted one but you know, he went under the skirt

  • and that was it and one time, under the oak tree, bam.

  • Renaissance.

  • >> [LAUGH] >> Woman is born.

  • >> That's why I know my life is bigger than that.

  • My life has to be bigger, as your is, bigger than a moment, than a poodle skirt.

  • It's much bigger.

  • The design, the reason why I'm here is much bigger

  • than oh, I think I wanna see what's under there.

  • So the ability to take care of that, to honor that, to honor yourself and that

  • which is greater than yourself, that which was the reason for your being here.

  • There's no selflessness in that.

  • Only through that do you have the ability to offer yourself, your whole

  • self, your full expression of who you are, to the rest of the world.

  • So I remember the very first time I had a life coach.They weren't called

  • that at the time but an expert on who shared with our audience, the women.

  • She did a list and say where are you on the list?

  • And literally, in that audience, women booed her,

  • when she said put yourself top of the list.

  • This was in 1992.

  • In 1992, the idea of being top of your own list, was people like, how dare she?

  • She doesn't have children.

  • I said, she didn't say abandon your children and go running in the streets.

  • She just said, put yourself at the top of the list.

  • Nurture yourself.

  • Honor yourself.

  • Stop the crazy mind chatter in your head that tells you all the time that

  • you're not good enough because that's the

  • number one, I've found too, issue with everybody.

  • The reason people say, you know, how is that?

  • How is that?

  • >> It's cuz you wanna know how do you measure up.

  • Well, to know that your just being here, your just being

  • here, however that sperm, bam, hit that egg, however that occurred for

  • you, that your being here is such a miraculous thing and

  • that your real job is to honor that, is to honor that.

  • And the sooner you figure that out, oh wow, wow, I'm one of the lucky ones.

  • I got to be here.

  • So how do you continue to prepare yourself to live out the highest,

  • fullest, truest expression of yourself as a human being?

  • I jst wanna end with this: there are no mistakes.

  • There really aren't any, cuz you have a supreme destiny.

  • When you're in your little mind, in

  • your little personality mind or you're not centered,

  • you really don't know who you are but you come from something greater and bigger.

  • We really all are the same.

  • You don't know that, you get all flustered, you get

  • stressed all the time, wanting something to be what it isn't.

  • There's a supreme moment of destiny calling on your life.

  • Your job is to feel that, to hear that, to know

  • that and sometimes, when you're not listening, you get taken off track.

  • You get in the wrong marriage, the wrong relationship, you take the wrong job.

  • Yeah, but it's all leading to the same path.

  • There are no wrong paths.

  • There are none.

  • There's no such thing as failure really, because failure is

  • just that thing, trying to move you in another direction.

  • So you get as much from your losses, as you do from

  • your victory cuz the losses are there to wake you up.

  • The losses are to say, fool, that is why

  • you go to school, so that CBS can call you.

  • So when you understand that you don't allow yourself to be completely thrown

  • by a grade or by a circumstance because your life is bigger than

  • any one experience and if I had, I always ask people on Super

  • Soul Sunday to tell me, what would you say to your younger self?

  • Every person says in one form or another, I would have said, relax.

  • >> [COUGH] >> Relax.

  • It's gonna be okay.

  • It really is gonna be okay because even if you're on

  • a detour right now and that's how you know, when you're

  • not at ease with yourself, when you're feeling like [SOUND], that

  • is the cue that you need to be moving in another direction.

  • Don't let yourself get all thrown off, continue to be thrown off course.

  • When you're feeling off course, that's the key.

  • How do I turn around?

  • So when everybody was talking about, when I started this network,

  • if I had only known, good lord, how difficult it would be.

  • The way through the challenge is to get still

  • and ask yourself what is the next right move?

  • Not think about oh, I got all of this to, what is

  • the next right move and then from that space make the next

  • right move and the next right move and not to be overwhelmed by

  • it because you know your life is bigger than that one moment.

  • You know you're not defined by what somebody

  • says is a failure for you because failure is

  • just there to point you in a different direction

  • and that's all the time I got right now.

  • >> Thank you.

  • Yeah.

  • >> Thank you.

  • [applause] >> Good job!

  • >> Thank you.

  • >> Yeah!

  • >> Thank you.

  • >> Yeah!

  • Good job!

  • [applause] Yeah!

  • Good job!

  • Wow!

  • [applause]

[MUSIC]

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A2 初級

キャリア、人生、リーダーシップについてのオプラ・ウィンフリー (Oprah Winfrey on Career, Life and Leadership)

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    Shirley に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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