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  • Translator: Queenie Lee Reviewer: Cristina Bufi-Pöcksteiner

  • OK, so first of all,

  • I'd like to thank everybody that set this event up.

  • This is pretty cool.

  • When I was given the invitation to speak,

  • I kind of didn't know what I was going to talk about.

  • But I came to the realization

  • that I really don't have to make anything up.

  • I can just give my story,

  • and hopefully, that'll be inspiring to a lot of people here.

  • So my talk today is going to be on:

  • how to find your passion and inner awesomeness.

  • A lot of people in university, especially if you're students here,

  • you're in that transition point

  • where you really don't know what you want to do,

  • and you kind of have to make changes and decisions

  • that are going to dictate your entire life.

  • So it's kind of daunting, it's kind of scary.

  • But before I go into anything,

  • I want to give you guys a chance to get to know me a little bit

  • and understand a little bit more about me.

  • I was born and raised in Harlem.

  • Now, Harlem is in New York City,

  • and Harlem starts at 110th Street and goes all the way to 159th Street.

  • Now, when I was growing up in Harlem,

  • there were a couple of things that I had to learn quick, right?

  • I had to learn how to be charismatic.

  • I had to learn how to speak fast.

  • I had to learn how to be real quick and witty.

  • But I also learned that it's good to have an imagination.

  • When I was young, I had an awesome imagination.

  • And I'm sure that many of you - think about it,

  • go back, when you were around six, seven, even younger than that -

  • you had a great imagination.

  • So who used to draw? Anybody? Show of hands.

  • Who used to draw when you were younger, right?

  • These are a couple of things I used to draw.

  • But do you remember when you used to draw that a lot of those things sucked, right?

  • But nobody told you they sucked, like you would give your mother the drawing,

  • and she really didn't know what it was, but she would put it on the refrigerator.

  • Nobody ever told you that what you did wasn't good.

  • Nobody never told you that you were -

  • that you were not awesome.

  • So you stuck with it.

  • OK, so me, I used to draw, I used to sketch,

  • I used to do photo manipulation,

  • and right there on the bottom left, that's actually an animation I did.

  • I used to spend hours creating these elaborate stories,

  • coming up with characters, coming up with plots.

  • And nobody never told me that these things weren't cool.

  • So I continued to do them.

  • So I had fun and I took a risk.

  • So if you look at this right here, don't get scared,

  • but on the left, this is a competition that me and my fraternity brothers did.

  • We used to do performances every year for the university.

  • I went to Florida State University,

  • and I'm a member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Incorporated.

  • So on the left, we're doing Resident Evil.

  • We did our kind of reenactment of Resident Evil,

  • it was Zombies versus SWAT.

  • On the right, we did Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory,

  • and we had some sick twisted thing,

  • and all the auto polluters

  • were kidnapped by Willy Wonka and forced to work in a factory.

  • But nobody ever told us that this wasn't cool.

  • And it came to our -

  • people loved the performances we did.

  • We performed in front of thousands of people

  • and won these competitions.

  • So I was always told to be a rebel and question everything.

  • So if you guys look at this picture,

  • this is actually a very funny picture to me

  • because if you see me right there

  • I'm the only one making a really silly face, right?

  • And if you go to my parent's house,

  • you actually see that this is the first picture you see

  • when you come into my mother's house.

  • And what was cool about this picture was,

  • before we actually took the picture, the teacher told me, she said,

  • "Everybody, when the photographer says smile, smile."

  • So I said, "Teacher, why do we have to smile?

  • Is there a reason we have to smile - we're young kids,

  • why do we have to wear suits?

  • Why all the guys in suits, all the women in dresses?

  • We don't want to be adults."

  • She said, "Don't worry about it, just smile."

  • And I said, " OK, if you don't want to tell me why I have to smile,

  • I want to do something funny."

  • So when the photographer said "cheese," said "smile,"

  • I did that face.

  • OK, but something happened.

  • When I grew up,

  • and I started to get older and older,

  • I forgot that I was awesome.

  • I'll get to what this code means in a second.

  • But I was in a Fortune 500 leadership development program

  • when I got out of college, I was "corporate."

  • I had a title; I was an account manager;

  • I was making good money, I was making $60,000 out of college,

  • so I could brag to friends.

  • My mother was proud; my father was proud.

  • I could go on trips once a year.

  • But I realized that this isn't what I wanted.

  • Now back to this code: eh976a.

  • This was the actual code that I was identified by in my company.

  • So when they wanted to email me,

  • they didn't email me at Eugene Hennie,

  • they emailed me at eh976a.

  • When they wanted to look up my sales records,

  • they looked up eh976a.

  • I started to think why don't you guys just call me eh976a.

  • Because that's how you identify me anyway.

  • So I realized I was a part of a system,

  • I was no longer a person, I was no longer Eugene.

  • So this is what society wanted;

  • they wanted the clean-cut Eugene,

  • they wanted Eugene that wore suits,

  • that wore glasses, that wore specs;

  • I was all proper, but this is what I wanted.

  • I wanted to do flips; I wanted to travel; I wanted to hang out with cool people;

  • I wanted to experience life.

  • I had to escape life's cubicle.

  • I was working nine-to-five, I was young and I hated it.

  • I was putting on something that I didn't want to carry, every day.

  • And I will come home emotionally drained, spiritually drained

  • because I was trying to please everybody else

  • instead of pleasing myself.

  • But then I got an email from an angel,

  • and she's going to be mad at me, be mad at me for doing this.

  • This was from my girlfriend, Jasmine, sitting right there.

  • You guys give Jasmine a round of applause.

  • (Applause)

  • And because of that she sent me an email for the world's most awesome job.

  • So I came home from work, I was kind of pissed off,

  • but she sent me an email.

  • So I opened the message, and I clicked on the email.

  • It took me to a website,

  • and the website said,

  • "Do you want to work in the world's most awesome workplace?

  • Do you want to be the world's most awesome people?

  • Do you want to travel?

  • Do you want to work on projects you love?"

  • And I was, like, this is a scam.

  • That can't be true,

  • because I make $60,000 out of college, right?

  • You're telling me I can make money, travel, do cool things, meet cool people,

  • go to all these cool places and still be happy.

  • That's not true.

  • So I deleted the email.

  • What happened next was something pretty cool.

  • A buddy of mine, he worked for a bank.

  • He sent me an email, he said, "Hey Eugene,

  • we want to go to South America.

  • We want to go on a cool trip to South America."

  • And he said, "Hey, do you want to go?" I said, "Yeah, man, I'll go."

  • So I went home, booked the ticket.

  • Fast forward a couple of weeks,

  • I'm sitting on a plane, and I am petrified when the plane is about to take off;

  • this is the first time I've ever been out of the country by myself.

  • Every negative thought in the world started going through my mind.

  • What if I go there?

  • I don't speak Spanish, what if I get lost?

  • What if they kidnapped me? What if the plane doesn't take off?

  • All these just thoughts started going through my mind.

  • So I sucked it up, down on the plane, took off,

  • and the result was something amazing to us, it was beautiful.

  • I had the best time in my life.

  • So I saw beautiful cities, I hung out with the locals,

  • we white-water rafted, ATVed the volcanoes,

  • ziplined across jungles,

  • and we did all this cool stuff.

  • I look at this picture, like, those are me and all my friends,

  • and you see the lady right there, she has a baby, and she's [inaudible] with us;

  • like that was cool, very awesome.

  • So what I decided to do was I quit - I quit my job.

  • This's me in the parking lot after I quit.

  • That's me putting up pictures of my actual travel ticket on Instagram.

  • I was so excited.

  • I said, my life is about to change

  • and all these cool things are about to happen.

  • So needless to say that when I came to Kuala Lumpur,

  • I was mind-blown,

  • because the company that I was around was amazing.

  • Over 30 different nationalities were represented

  • in the company that I worked for.

  • I had people that loved art; people that loved music;

  • people that loved the design; people that loved business.

  • Everybody was embracing their passion,

  • and I said, this is cool, this is awesome.

  • So something happened, a side effect happened,

  • and I started to do awesome things again.

  • I enjoyed entrepreneurs; I enjoyed talking to entrepreneurs.

  • The guy in this picture right here,

  • his name is Justin Harrell,

  • I had a chance to meet him.

  • He started a company with $50

  • and eventually sold it for $80 million.

  • And so now I can see guys like this and be inspired by guys like this

  • every month, when we organized these events.

  • The first time I actually spoke since being in Kuala Lumpur

  • was at an assignment event.

  • My buddy, ZeiKrew, he is going to be talking about that a little later.

  • They gave me an opportunity to speak,

  • and that was my first time speaking in about three years.

  • I started a website AntiWantrepreneur.com,

  • and that was pretty cool because we created an online community

  • where entrepreneurs can come

  • and listen to interviews with other entrepreneurs,

  • download how to guides and get all this awesome cool stuff.

  • Even after that, I started a podcast,

  • and that was kind of ironic because I was this guy from New York,

  • this guy from Harlem, that came to Kuala Lumpur;

  • and now, I'm doing a podcast.

  • I never thought that I would do a podcast.

  • OK, I started traveling.

  • When I'm in America,

  • the only time I've been out of the country was when I was around 23.

  • But within six months of being here in Kuala Lumpur,

  • I went to four, five different countries.

  • So I had to ask myself why?

  • When I took a chance, and I just stepped back,

  • and I decided to ask myself why.

  • Why did all these cool things happen?

  • What decisions did I make?

  • What principles, what code, what commandments?

  • What was I following that made all these things happen?

  • So the first thing I would ask you guys -

  • tell you guys to do - is to know yourself.

  • Who are you?

  • What are the things that you like, the things that you dislike?

  • What pisses you off? What makes you smile?

  • A lot of people don't know this.

  • I'm sure that if you were to ask your neighbor,

  • you know, "Who are you? What do you like?"

  • A lot of people, they have a hard time,

  • they don't know what it is that they like.

  • Number two, embrace yourself!

  • And I love this picture

  • because if you're a nerd, embrace that you're a nerd.

  • If you're an athlete, embrace it,

  • because once you embrace it, everything in life becomes easier.

  • It's easy for me to come up here

  • and speak to you guys without getting all shaky

  • because I've embraced who I am.

  • I'm a guy from New York that came to Malaysia to do great things.

  • And so, my talking about it makes it a little easier

  • because I've embraced it.

  • Surround yourself with encouraging people.

  • I love this photo because this photo shows you that the company you keep

  • is going to kind of dictate where you go in life.

  • This is Barack Obama with Steve Jobs, with Mark Zuckerberg,

  • the CEO of Netflix, the CEO of Twitter,

  • Yahoo!, Oracle.

  • Imagine what they're talking about, must be talking about cool stuff.

  • A quote says, "You're the average in the five people you keep around you."

  • So if you surround yourself with cool people,

  • successful people, inspiring people,

  • you're going to be inspired, cool, successful, motivated.

  • And if you surround yourself with people that suck,

  • that people that always want to put their negative energy on you,

  • you're kind of going down spiral.

  • Number four: Know what you want.

  • Now you have to know yourself, but you have to know what you want, right?

  • Some people think that they want $1 million,

  • when in all reality, they don't want $1 million,

  • they want to be able to travel, they want to buy their mothers a house,

  • they want security, they want some freedom.

  • So know what you want.

  • Number five: Work your ass off.

  • And this is cool

  • because if you guys don't know Gary Vaynerchuk,

  • he is kind of like the king of social media.

  • And he started when he was really young to sell online,

  • and his advice, he calls it Hustle 2.0.

  • If you like something, work hard.

  • That's all you have to do. Lose sleep.

  • I have a couple buddies, they are my age,

  • they're about to be best-selling authors.

  • I have buddies that have products online

  • that make thousands of dollars because they work their ass off.

  • They put in the time, when everybody else is out partying,

  • they are in the house, they are in the lab working on things.

  • Now make the impossible the new possible.

  • Now, what do I mean by this?

  • To me growing up in Harlem,

  • it was impossible that I would go to college.

  • But it happened.

  • It was impossible that I will get a job working for Fortune 500 Company

  • but it happened.

  • It was impossible that I would live in another country

  • and work with cool people

  • and start a podcast and meet millionaires.

  • But it all happened.

  • It became possible,

  • so my standard went from here to here.

  • The question became -

  • it wasn't how could I do this, it was how could I not do this?

  • So every time I look at a new task, on a new goal, and a new obstacle,

  • I ask myself: Eugene, you're capable.

  • You've made it this far, how could you not do this?

  • Number seven: Fail hard and fail often.

  • People don't like to fail.

  • Think about it guys, how many times have you failed?

  • You had a lot of fails today, but you don't remember your fails.

  • You remember all your successes, right?

  • So you have to fail.

  • Think about coders,

  • I love to use coders as an analogy, because coders fail all day.

  • They're at the computers, just coding away, coding away.

  • And they have bugs, breaks, and code,

  • but they just try to fix it, fix it, fix it.

  • At the end of ten hours, or however long it takes coders to do things,

  • they have a perfect product,

  • they have a perfect application, because they failed.

  • If you fail a lot, the successes will be greater.

  • Number eight: Beat on your craft.

  • Will Smith said before,

  • he said that he doesn't feel he's particularly talented at anything.

  • He doesn't feel that he was like a natural talent.

  • But he does feel that he has an uncanny ability to work hard.

  • He has a crazy work ethic.

  • So I like to use the analogy of - I like a lot of computer games.

  • I play Elder Scrolls a lot,

  • and in Elder Scrolls,

  • you have to build swords,

  • but you start with the raw material, you start with iron ore;

  • and you have to make an iron sword.

  • So think of your talent, your God-given ability

  • as that raw material.

  • You have to take it and beat on it.

  • You have to perfect it, you have to sharpen it;

  • you spend hours doing this;

  • and soon, you'll have a weapon you can use to go out and conquer the world.

  • Number nine: Learn to embrace confrontation.

  • Now, how many of you guys want a raise at work?

  • You guys want something from somebody,

  • but you're afraid to go confront them about it.

  • A lot of people hate confrontation,

  • they try to go around it, they go the opposite way.

  • They'll try everything that they can do to try to avoid confrontation.

  • But it's when you meet confrontation face-to-face, great things happen.

  • I had to embrace confrontation coming here today.

  • I thought, what if I slipped on stage,

  • what if the projector stuff didn't work, right?

  • But when I got here,

  • I embraced it,

  • and all that fell off me, I kind of left it down there.

  • So learn to embrace confrontation

  • because we start taking these risks and meet confrontation head on,

  • great things are going to happen.

  • And number ten: Do what's right.

  • I don't believe there's a grey area when it comes to doing what's right.

  • I believe there is a right way and a wrong way.

  • I can go to somebody from another country, that doesn't speak my language,

  • approach him, say something;

  • whether it be negative, I can tell how they takes it,

  • if I said something right, or something wrong.

  • We all have innate human sixth sense to know what's right and what's wrong.

  • When you do the right things, good things happen to you.

  • So when I started this presentation, I wanted to -

  • I asked you guys a question: How do you find your inner awesomeness?

  • How do you find it?

  • The answer is: you don't have to find it, you always had it;

  • it's inside you.

  • But the media, television, your friends, your loved ones,

  • they want to mold you to be something that you're not,

  • when deep down inside you already have all the tools that you need.

  • There was a point in time where we wanted to fit in,

  • remember everybody wanted to fit in, wanted to dress alike?

  • But now we have to come to that transition and go to standing out as an individual,

  • because when we find our inner awesomeness,

  • great things are going to happen.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

Translator: Queenie Lee Reviewer: Cristina Bufi-Pöcksteiner

字幕と単語

A2 初級

TEDx】情熱と内なるアオウメンの見つけ方|ユージーン・ヘニー|TEDxMMU (【TEDx】How to find your passion and inner awesomenes | Eugene Hennie | TEDxMMU)

  • 325 24
    Raymond Lin に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語

重要英単語

stuff

US /stʌf/

UK /stʌf/

  • n.
  • v. フィリング
awesome

US /ˈɔsəm/

UK /'ɔ:səm/

  • adj. 素晴らしい
material

US /məˈtɪriəl/

UK /məˈtɪəriəl/

  • n. 衣料;原材料;原料 : 材料 : 素材
  • adj. 関連な,重要な;世俗的な : 物質的な : 物質でできた
embrace

US /ɛmˈbres/

UK /ɪm'breɪs/

  • n. 抱擁
  • v. 抱擁 : 抱きしめること
negative

US /ˈnɛɡətɪv/

UK /'neɡətɪv/

  • n. マイナスの電極;否定文の;「いや」という返事;写真や映画のネガ
  • adj. 否定的な : 嫌な;負の数の;悲観的な
applause

US /əˈplɔz/

UK /ə'plɔ:z/

  • n. 拍手
drain

US /dren/

UK /dreɪn/

  • n. 排水溝、排水管
  • v. 排出する;(エネルギー・金・力を)消耗する;減らす:減る;疲れさせる:弱くさせる
suck

US /sʌk/

UK /sʌk/

  • v. 最悪である;最悪である;吸引する、引っ張り取る;魅了する;吸う;しゃぶる
  • n. 吸うこと
  • phrasal v. 人を騙す
dictate

US /ˈdɪkˌtet/

UK /dɪk'teɪt/

  • v. 口述する : 要件を書き取らせる;決定づける;指示する : 命令する
draw

US /drɔ/

UK /drɔ:/

  • v. 引く;近づく;引き込む;引っ張る;線を引く : 描く;引き出す;引き分けになる
  • n. 引きつけるもの;くじで引き当てたもの;引き分け

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