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  • I'm a filmmaker, and I love to tell stories about adversity.

  • When an animal or human being shares their story with you

  • about survival or resilience,

  • it's a really big responsibility,

  • because then you have to carry that story with you the rest of your life.

  • It's both a blessing and a burden.

  • But we really live, I think, in a very unique time right now.

  • We're going through what I think is called "breakdown or breakthrough".

  • The environment is being damaged,

  • but technology and creativity are offering really exciting solutions.

  • And I think we all chose to be born here at this particular time and place

  • in order to make a change.

  • And a change we need is a shift in consciousness

  • in order to change our behavior.

  • The big question I think is going to be: will it happen in time?

  • So let me share a journey with you through the lens of my camera.

  • ["Live the actual moment.

  • Only this moment is life." - Thich Nhat Hanh]

  • (Video) (Soft music)

  • Louie Schwartzberg: Mindfulness:

  • it's like film inside of a camera,

  • sitting in the dark,

  • waiting for light to strike,

  • without judgment

  • and preconceived notions to any subject.

  • People who are mindful are more patient and willing to help others.

  • They look for greater life experiences over material products

  • and greater life satisfaction.

  • Whether you're a scientist, teacher, or artist, or child,

  • we need to develop the sense of wonder.

  • Curiosity in nature

  • makes us take risks,

  • go exploring,

  • take on new challenges to improve our skills.

  • We look back at these challenges as blessings in disguise.

  • It's these blessings that the heart remembers

  • that engenders gratitude.

  • ["Mindfulness is about love and loving life.

  • When you cultivate this love,

  • it gives you clarity and compassion for life." - Joh Kabat-Zinn]

  • (Video ends)

  • LS: I learned a lot by observing nature.

  • But growing up, I observed gratitude from a whole different lens.

  • These are my parents.

  • They were born in Poland, and they were both Holocaust survivors.

  • They met in a relocation camp after the war in Germany,

  • and after knowing each other for two weeks,

  • they decided to get married.

  • And they had friends who'd only met for a couple of weeks, who they wrangled

  • to be their stand-in parents to walk them down the aisle.

  • They came to America with dreams and hopes of starting a family.

  • When we talk about resilience, from the ashes comes rebirth.

  • And this is me in New York.

  • I didn't get to experience nature

  • because when my parents were in camps, they didn't experience nature either.

  • But I did send popsicle sticks down the gutter,

  • which was an amazing white-water rafting experience for me.

  • (Laughter)

  • But I did learn to appreciate the little things in life,

  • like food on the table, a roof over your head,

  • the miracle to have children, a steady job.

  • That was heaven on earth to my parents.

  • So I went to UCLA, and I wanted to be involved as a lawyer

  • [to fight for] social justice.

  • There was a revolution going on right outside my door.

  • The police would sweep the campus, and they'd crack heads,

  • and the only way to fight back was to pick up a camera,

  • and I documented the police brutality that was occurring on campus.

  • And I found out that handing in a photo essay

  • was a lot easier than writing a term paper.

  • (Laughter)

  • And that's when I found my voice.

  • I fell in love with photography, I fell in love with filmmaking.

  • And I'm really attracted to stories of people who've overcome adversity,

  • both people and the nature.

  • So I got involved in doing a film about the bees, Colony Collapse Disorder,

  • I'm sure you all know about how the bees are disappearing.

  • Bees and their pollinating partners, the flowers, are responsible

  • for one-third of the food we eat:

  • fruits, nuts, vegetables, and seeds.

  • But why are they dying?

  • Well, it's got a lot to do with environmental factors

  • that affect us as well as them,

  • the spraying of pesticides and GMOs.

  • These chemicals are brought back to the hive,

  • and the EPA might test like one chemical, and say,

  • "Well, yeah, that's safe, you know, five parts per million."

  • But in the hive, they've got 16 different chemicals,

  • and it's killing the brood.

  • Loss of habitat, that's a big problem as well.

  • And imagine: living in a box, traveling on the back of a truck,

  • 50,000 miles a year from one monoculture to another.

  • How would you feel?

  • This keystone event between flowers and pollinators

  • is really a mystical moment,

  • where the animal world and the plant world get together billions of times every day,

  • for DNA to move forward, and life to flourish.

  • So I'm super grateful for the bees and the flowers,

  • because they give us food, shelter, and medicine.

  • And after learning so much about the plants, I wondered,

  • "Well, what do plants need in order to survive?"

  • We know they need water, and they need sunshine,

  • but most importantly, they need soil.

  • So where does soil come from?

  • What can decompose rock and organic matter?

  • It's the largest organism on the planet.

  • It can heal you, it can feed you,

  • it can clean up an oil spill, it can even shift your consciousness.

  • It's mycelium.

  • Mycelium is the root structure of budding mushrooms, and it's everywhere.

  • There's a patch in Oregon that's 2,000 acres and 2,400 years old.

  • I want to share a clip with you right now

  • from the film I'm working on called "Fantastic Fungi".

  • (Video starts) (Music)

  • Paul Stamets: Mushroom mycelium represents rebirth, rejuvenation, regeneration.

  • Fungi generate soil that gives life.

  • The task that we face today is to understand the language of nature.

  • My mission is to discover the language of nature

  • of the fungal networks that communicate with the ecosystem.

  • I believe nature is intelligent.

  • The fact that we lack the language skills to communicate with nature

  • does not impugn the concept that nature's intelligent,

  • it speaks to our inadequacy for communication.

  • If we don't get our act together and come in commonality and understanding

  • with the organisms that sustain us today,

  • not only will we destroy those organisms but we will destroy ourselves.

  • We need to have a paradigm shift in our consciousness.

  • What will it take to achieve that?

  • If I die trying, but I'm inadequate to the task

  • to make it a course change in the evolution of life on this planet,

  • OK, I tried.

  • The fact is I tried.

  • How many people are not trying?

  • If you knew that every breath you took could save hundreds of lives in the future

  • had you walked down this path of knowledge,

  • wouldn't you run down that path of knowledge as fast as you could?

  • I believe nature is a force of good.

  • Good is not only a concept, it is a spirit,

  • and so hopefully, this spirit of goodness will survive.

  • LS: So Paul is really an amazing scientist.

  • Right now, he's working with Washington State University

  • on an experiment where he discovered

  • that bees like to kind of, you know, burrow in rotting wood,

  • picking up the fungi which might be a cure for Colony Collapse Disorder.

  • And those same mushrooms are also being tested for herpes and Ebola,

  • so we'll wait to see what happens with that.

  • But what a miracle!

  • Fungi and people actually share a lot in common;

  • we evolved from fungi.

  • Mushrooms have protein that's even better than beans,

  • they can also build up your immune system.

  • They found out that Turkey Tail, for example, is a wonderful supplement

  • for women that are having breast cancer.

  • And Lion's Mane Mushroom helps eliminate the amyloid plaque on the brain,

  • so it's really beneficial for people with Alzheimer's and with memory loss.

  • There are great studies happening right now

  • at NYU, UCLA, and Johns Hopkins,

  • where psilocybin is being administered to patients with severe depression,

  • post-traumatic stress syndrome, as well as terminally ill cancer patients,

  • so they can enable themselves to feel connected,

  • perhaps having an epiphany experience

  • by stimulating the natural [serotonin] that is inside of all of our brains.

  • Mushrooms can also clean up toxic oil spills,

  • they're the great disassemblers of nature.

  • They can break down oil, toxic waste,

  • into their basic elements of carbon.

  • And guess what?

  • Scientists now believe

  • that perhaps the greatest natural solution to climate change could be mushrooms.

  • In cooperation with their plant partners and photosynthesis,

  • what we can do is take a natural solution,

  • which is let the plants and the trees take the CO2 out of the air,

  • give us the oxygen to breathe,

  • and the carbon that has been tested with radioisotopes

  • goes down through the roots, into the ground,

  • and touches the mycelium.

  • And the mycelium takes the carbon, sequesters it underground,

  • and gives the plants and the trees

  • the nutrients they need in order to flourish.

  • We share so much with fungi, which is very weird.

  • (Laughter)

  • There are more fungi in the world than there are plants.

  • Actually, they're only second to insects.

  • They're 25% of the biomass on our planet.

  • So, you might be wondering what's the connection

  • between mindfulness, and mushrooms, and my parents?

  • (Laughter)

  • I think that we all have a desire to be connected,

  • and maybe because I grew up realizing I had no family,

  • I'm looking for a connection.

  • I never even had photographs of grandparents or other relatives.

  • So I know we all yearn for that, we yearn to be connected to something

  • that celebrates life, that we can feel good about.

  • And I really believe that life wants to flourish.

  • We just need to get out of the way and make it unstoppable.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

I'm a filmmaker, and I love to tell stories about adversity.

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TEDx】Saving Our Planet.レンズを通して明らかにする自然の神秘|Louie Schwartzberg|TEDxJacksonHole (【TEDx】Saving Our Planet: Nature’s Mysteries Revealed Through a Lens | Louie Schwartzberg | TEDxJacksonHole)

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    John に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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