第一篇:我们都不脆弱,演讲稿
我们都不脆弱
我想问一下,我们当中有谁生活在幸福的家庭中有爸妈的关心,一个完整的家庭之中?请举手,谢谢。
首先举手的同学应该感谢你的父母给了你们这样一种安稳的生活,但是,很多人都没有你们那么幸运,包括我在内,这个世界每天都有很多家庭破碎,于是便有了我们被称为单亲家庭的孩子。我在8岁的时候父母就离婚了,之后的日子里痛苦过,挣扎过,但一直都没有放弃什么。其实在这个学校里其实有人和我一样,缺少父亲或是母亲的关爱,隐形人一般生活在这个世界上。
今天我想说的主题是《我们都不脆弱》,我是李萌,站在这里揭开自己的伤疤绝对是需要莫大的勇气,这真的是一段有时候我自己都会想忘记,但是忘不掉每次想起来都是哭个不停尽管我自认为我是一个坚强的人。我来了只是想证明我的勇敢,我敢于面对的勇气,不是逃避。我选的ppt主题是向日葵,它想要追着光,不停旋转,就那么一直温暖着,喜欢向日葵的坚强和执着,希望我们也像向日葵一样。
我实在觉得自己很普通,很平凡的走过自己的小学,初中,高中,大学,一直就这样普通了不能在普通的生活着,表面的平静。中考也许是最伤的一次,3分之差我没有考上重点高中的公费生,于是我去了一所学费和住宿费全免的普通高中,一所文理班一共超不多50个二本的高中,我付出了很多倍的努力才考上大学。
我不敢说自己是多么坚强的,起码我的心不脆弱,每个人的心都不脆弱,坚强的心是一件有韧性的东西。我们的背后都有故事,或悲伤或幸福。
如果一定要我说出什么来的话,那我只能说和你们分享一下我的所珍惜的每个人都有理想,理想也是珍贵的,我么个曾经的理想不知道现在还记不记得,而我的理想很简单就是当一名老师,没有理由的梦想,只是心底里是那么渴望的。我就想当一个老师,这个理想也在我去年暑假让我梦想成真了一次。我再也朝真正实现这个目标不断地努力。
这些你们不认识的小孩子却刻在我的记忆里面,感谢他们,这些小孩子给了我一段最感动,也最充实的日子,同时我挣了我的第一桶金,不到3000元
其实除此之外我也做过一些兼职,我在学校打印室做过一学期的兼职,十一的时候在餐馆打过工,我做的也许不够好,但是我真的努力了。今天我20周岁,向家长开口要钱的时候真的是一件困难的事情,所以我就尽力在我有时间的时候尽自己所能挣一些钱,减轻一下家长的负担。
我说不上自己又多么的坚强,我只是相信,相信这个世界还会有美好在,相信这个世界有哪些美丽的事情在,一直都在。我觉得我是阳光的,过来了之后想想也就没什么那么可怕的。遇到了就去接受,学会慢慢让自己成长,不要去逃避,更不要以此为借口堕落放纵。我们其实可以变得很强大,我们都不脆弱,我们没有想象中那么不幸,那些幸福的人你们更应该努力去珍惜。
好好向着那些阳光,像向日葵一样灿烂。
最后 谢谢你们的到来。
第二篇:脆弱的力量演讲稿(本站推荐)
脆弱的力量演讲稿
今天我要讲一份研究,这份研究从本质上拓宽了我个人的认知,也确确实实改变了我的生活、爱、工作还有教育孩子的方式。
我是个社会学的学士、硕士和博士,我被人所包围,大家都认同:“生活是一团乱麻,接受它。”而我的观点倾向于:“生活是一团乱麻,解开它,把它整理好,再归类放入便当盒里。”我对乱成一团、难以处理的问题感兴趣,我想要把它们弄清楚,我想要理解它们,我想侵入那些我认为重要的东西,把它们摸透,然后用浅显易懂的方式呈献给每一个人。所以我的起点是“关系”。
当你从事了10年的社会工作,你必然会发现,关系是我们活着的原因。它赋予了我们生命的意义。无论你跟谁交流,我们发现,关系是一种感应的能力——生物神经上,我们是这么被设定的。所以我从关系开始。
下面这个场景我们再熟悉不过了,你的上司给你做工作评估,她告诉了你37点你做得相当棒的地方,还有一点——成长的空间?然后你满脑子都想着那一点成长的空间,不是吗?当你跟人们谈论爱情,他们告诉你的是一件让他们心碎的事;当你跟人们谈论归属感,他们告诉你的是最让他们痛心的被排斥的经历;当你和他们谈论关系,他们跟你讲的是如何被断绝关系的故事。终于,在开始研究六周以后,我遇到了这个闻所未闻的东西,它揭示了关系——以一种我不理解也从没见过的方
式。所以我停止了研究,对自己说,我得弄清楚这到底是什么。它最终被鉴定为耻辱感。
耻辱感很容易理解,即害怕被断绝关系。有没有一些关于我的事,如果别人知道了或看到了,会认为我不值得交往。我想告诉你们的是:没有体验过耻辱的人,不具有人类的同情或关系。没人想谈论自己的糗事,你谈论得越少,表明你越感到可耻。滋生耻辱感的,是一种“我不够好”的心态。我们都知道这是个什么滋味:我不够苗条、不够有钱、不够漂亮、不够聪明、职位不够高。而支撑这种心态的,是一种刻骨铭心的脆 弱。关键在于,要想产生关系,我们必须让自己被看见,真真切切地被看见。你知道我怎么看待脆弱,我恨它。所以这次我思考着,这次该是我用我的标尺击溃它的时候了。我要闯进去,我要花一年的时间,彻底瓦解耻辱。我要搞清楚脆弱是怎么运作的,然后我要智取胜过它。所以我准备好了,我要胜过它——但事与愿违。在这里我要告诉你,这也许是我十年的研究中学到的最重要的东西。我粗略地把我采访过的人分成——具有自我价值感的人,说到底就是,他们勇于去爱并且拥有强烈的归属感;另一部分则是为之苦苦挣扎的人,总是怀疑自己是否足够好的人。区分二者之间的变量只有一个,就是前者相信他们值得被爱,值得享有归属感,他们相信自己的价值,就是这么简单。
而对于我,那个阻碍人与人之间关系的最困难的部分,是我们对于自己不值得享有这种关系的恐惧,无论是从个人还是职业上,我都觉得我有必要去深入地了解它。于是我找出所有前一种人的采访记录,想知道
这群人有什么共同之处。第一个蹦出我脑子的,是全心全意这个词。这是一群全心全意、靠着一种强烈的自我价值感在生活的人们。这群人的共同之处是,首先他们有勇气。我想在这里先花一分钟跟大家区分一下勇气和胆量。勇气,最初的定义是真心地叙述一个故事,告诉大家你是谁。所以这些人,就具有勇气,承认自己不完美。第二,他们具有同情心,先是对自己的,再是对他人的。因为事实是,我们如果不能善待自己,我们也无法善待他人。然后,他们都能和他人建立关系。这是很难做到的,前提是他们必须坦诚,他们愿意放开自己设定的那个理想的自我,以换取真正的自我。这是赢得关系的必要条件。他们还有另外一个共同之处,就是他们全然接受脆弱。他们相信,让他们变得脆弱的东西,也让他们变得美丽。他们不认为脆弱是寻求舒适,也不认为脆弱是钻心的疼痛——他们只是简单地认为脆弱是必须的。他们会谈到愿意说出“我爱你”;愿意做一些没有担保抵押的事情;愿意在做完乳房X光检查后安心等待医生的电话;他们愿意为情感投资,无论有没有结果——他们觉得这些都是最根本的。有些人,他们发现脆弱和温柔很重要的时候,他们放下所有戒备,欣然接受。有一年的时间,脆弱打我一拳我还它一拳,最后我输了,但我或许赢回了我的生活。我又回到我的研究中,真正试图去理解那些全身心投入生活的人,他们做了怎样的决定,他们是怎样应对脆弱的。为什么我们为之痛苦挣扎?我是独自在与脆弱做斗争吗?不是。
我们生活在一个脆弱的世界里,我们应对的方式之一,就是麻痹脆弱。但是你无法选择性地麻痹感情。你不能说,这是不好的——这是脆弱、悲哀、耻辱、恐惧、失望,我不想要这些情感,我要去喝几瓶啤酒,吃个香蕉坚果松饼。你无法只麻痹那些不好的情感,而不麻痹所有的感官、所有的情感。当我们麻痹那些消极的情感,我们也麻痹了欢乐、感恩、幸福。然后我们会变得痛不欲生,我们继而寻找生命的意义,然后我们感到脆弱,然后我们喝几瓶啤酒,吃个香蕉坚果松饼。危险的循环就这样形成了。
我们麻痹自己的另一个方式是,把不确定的事变得确定。只要确定的就是好的。我们越是害怕,就越脆弱,然后我们变得更加害怕。这就是当今政治的现状。探讨和对话荡然无存,有的只是指责,指责是一种发泄痛苦与不快的方式。我们追求完美,但这行不通。我们想要我们的孩子变得完美——这是最危险的。让我告诉你我们是如何看待孩子的。从他们出生的那刻起,他们就注定要挣扎,我们的任务是告诉他:“你知道吗?你并不完美,你注定要奋斗,但你值得被爱,值得享有归属感。”给我看用这种方式培养出来的一代孩子,我保证我们今天所有的问题会得到解决。
我们假装我们的行为不会影响他人,我们在工作和生活中都这样做,无论是原油泄漏还是产品召回,我们假装我们的行为对他人不会造成什么大影响。我想对这些公司说,这不是第一次牛仔竞技,我们只要你坦诚地、真心地说一句:对不起,我们会处理这个问题。
还有一个方法我要告诉你们,这是我的心得:卸下我们的面具,让我们被看见。深入地被看见,即便是脆弱的一面;全心全意地去爱,尽
管没有任何担保。哪怕是在最恐惧的时候,哪怕我们怀疑:“我能不能爱得这么深?我能不能如此热情地相信这份感情?我能不能如此矢志不渝?”;带着感恩的心,保持快乐。消极的时候打住,而不是一味地幻想事情会如何变得更糟,对自己说:“我已经很感恩了,因为能感受到这种脆弱,这意味着我还活着。”最后,还有最重要的一点,那就是相信我们已经做得够好了。因为我相信当我们在一个让人觉得“我已经够好了”的环境中打拼的时候,我们会停止抱怨、开始倾听,我们会对周围的人更友善、更温和,对自己也会更友善、更温和。
第三篇:ted演讲稿脆弱的力量
ted演讲稿脆弱的力量
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那我就这么开始吧:几年前,一个为我讲演活动的策划人打电话给我,她在电话里说:“我真很苦恼该如何在宣传单上介绍你”。我心想,这有什么苦恼呢?
她继续道:“你看,我听过你的演讲,我觉得我可以称你为研究者。可我担心的是,如果我这么称呼你,没人会来听,因为大家普遍认为研究员是很无趣而且脱离现实。”这说的很对。然后她说:“但是我非常喜欢你的演讲,你的讲演就跟讲故事一样很吸引人。我想来想去,还是觉得称你为讲故事的人比较妥当”。而那个做学术的、感到不安的我脱口而出道:“你要叫我什么?”她说:“我要称你为讲故事的人。”我心想:“为什么不干脆叫魔法小精灵?”我说:“让我考虑一下。”
我试着鼓起勇气。我对自己说,我是一个讲故事的人。我是一个从事定性研究的科研人员。我收集故事,这就是我的工作。或许故事就是有灵魂的数据。或许我就是一个讲故事的人。于是我说:“听着,要不你就称我为做研究兼讲故事的人。”她大笑着说:”哈哈,没这么个说法呀。“
所以我是个做研究兼讲故事的人,我今天想跟大家谈论的:我们要谈论的话题是关于拓展认知。我想给你们讲几个故事是关于我的一份研究工作,这份研究从本质上拓宽了我个人的认知,也确确实实改变了我生活、爱、工作还有教育孩子的方式。我的故事从这里开始:当我还是个年轻的博士研究生的时候,第一年,一位研究教授对我们说:“事实是这样的,如果有一个东西你无法测量,那么它就不存在。”我心想他只是在哄哄我们这些小孩子吧。我说:“真的么?”他说:“这是理所当然的。”
你知道我有一个社会工作的学士文凭,一个社会工作的硕士文凭,我当时在读的是一个社会工作的博士文凭,所以我整个学术生涯都被人所包围,他们大抵相信生活是一团乱麻,接受它。而我的观点则倾向于,生活是一团乱麻,解开它,把它整理好,再归类放入有条理的盒子里。
我当时认为我领悟到了我的方向,找到了我的工作,有能力自己去创一番事业。社会工作的一个重要特征是工作的环境是一团遭的不适环境。我当时想我就是要把这不适环境翻个底朝天,每科都拿到A。这就是我当时的信条。我当时真的是跃跃欲试。我想这就是我的职业生涯,因为我对乱成一团,难以处理的课题很感兴趣。我想要把它们弄清楚,我想要理解它们,我想进入那些我知道是重要的东西,把它们摸个透,然后用浅显易懂的方式呈献给每一个人。
当时我的起点是“人与人之间的连接关系”。这是因为当你从事了10年的社会工作,你必然会发现这种连接关系就是我们活着的原因。它赋予了我们生命的意义,就是这么简单。无论你跟谁交流,工作在社会执法领域的也好,负责精神健康、虐待和疏于看管领域的也好,我们所知道的是,这种连接关系是一种感应的能力,生物神经上的,我们就是这么被设定的,这就是为什么我们在这里。
所以我就从连接关系开始。下面这个场景我们是再熟悉不过了,你的上司给你作工作评估,她告诉了你在37件事上你做得相当棒,但还有一点,有可以进一步提高的空间?然后你满脑子都想着那一点提高的空间,不是么?这也是我当时研究的课题,因为当你跟人们谈论爱情时,他们告诉你的是一件让他们心碎的事;当你跟人们谈论归属感时,他们告诉你的是最让他们痛心地被排斥的经历;当你跟人们谈论人与人的连接关系时,他们跟我讲的是如何被断绝关系的故事。
所以很快,在大约开始研究这个课题6周以后,我遇到了一个前所未闻的东西,它以一种我不理解也从没见过的方式,揭示了人与人之间的连接关系。所以我暂停了原先的研究计划,我对自己说,我得弄清楚这东西到底是什么。它最终被鉴定为耻辱感。
耻辱感这个词很容易理解,即害怕被断绝关系。如果一些关于自己的事被别人知道了或看到了,别人会认为自己是不值得交往的人?我要告诉你们的是:这种现象很普遍;我们都会有这种想法。没有体验过耻辱的人是不会对人产生对爱的向往或希望建立关系。没人想谈论自己的糗事,你谈论的越少,你越感到可耻。滋生耻辱感的是一种“我不够好”的心态,我们都知道这是个什么滋味:“我不够什么:我不够苗条,不够有钱,不够漂亮,不够聪明,职位不够高。” 而支撑这种心态的是一种刻骨铭心的脆弱,而克服这一脆弱感的关键在于要有人与人之间的连系,我们必须让自己被看见,真真切切地被看见。
你知道我怎么看待脆弱?我恨它。所以我思考着,这次是轮到我用我的标尺击溃它的时候了。我要闯进去,把它弄清楚,我要花一年的时间,彻底瓦解耻辱,我要搞清楚脆弱是怎么运作的,然后我要智取胜过它。所以我准备好了,非常兴奋。跟你预计的一样,结果事与愿违。你们知道这个(结果)。
我现在能告诉你关于耻辱的很多东西,但那样我就得占用别人的时间了。但我在这儿可以告诉你,归根到底,这也许是我在从事研究的数十年中学到的最重要的东西。我当时预计的一年变成了六年,我搜集到成千上万的故事,成千上百个采访,焦点集中。有时人们发给我定期报道,发给我他们的故事,不计其数的数据,所有这些都发生在这六年的时间。通过这些数据,我大概掌握了它。
我以为我理解了耻辱,它的运作方式。我于是写了一本书,我出版了一个理论,但我总觉得哪里不对劲,这么来说吧,如果我粗略地把我采访过的人分析一下,他们可以分成两种,一种是具有自我价值感的人,说到底就是自我价值感,他们勇于去爱并且拥有强烈的归属感;另一部分则是为之苦苦挣扎的人,总是怀疑自己是否足够好的人。
区分那些敢于去爱并拥有强烈归属感的人和那些为之而苦苦挣扎的人的变量只有一个。那就是,那些敢于去爱并拥有强烈归属感的人相信他们值得被爱,值得享有归属感。就这么简单。他们相信自己的价值。而对于我来说,最困难的一点是有一种东西使得人们对这种关系感到恐惧,他们认为他们不值得有这种爱和归宿感的关系,无论从个人,还是职业上我都觉得我有必要去更深入地了解这个秘诀。所以接下来我找出所有的采访记录,找出那些体现自我价值的,那些持有这种观念的记录,集中研究它们。第一群人有什么共同之处?我对办公用品有点痴迷,但这是另一个话题了。我拿起一个牛皮纸文件夹,还有一个三福记号笔,我心想,我该怎么给这项研究命名呢?第一个蹦入我脑子的是全心专注这个词。这是一群全心专注、靠着一种强烈的自我价值感在生活的人们。所以我在牛皮纸夹的上端正地写上这个词,而后我开始查看数据。
事实上,我开始用了四天时间集中分析数据,我从头翻出那些采访,找出其中的故事和事件:主题是什么?有什么规律?我丈夫带着孩子离开了小镇,因为我老是陷入像杰克逊.波洛克(美国近代抽象派画家)似的疯狂状态,我一直在写,完全沉浸在研究的状态中。
下面是我的发现:这些人的共同之处在于有勇气。我想在这里先花片刻跟大家区分一下勇气和胆量。勇气,最初的定义,当它刚出现在英文里的时候,词源来自从拉丁文的cor,意思为心,是由此演变过来的,其最初的定义是真心地叙述一个故事,告诉大家你是谁的。
所以这些人就具有勇气承认自己不完美。他们具有爱心,先是对自己的,再是对他人的。因为,事实就是这样:我们如果不能善待自己,我们也无法善待他人。最后一点,他们都能和他人建立关系,这是很难做到的,前提是他们必须坦诚,他们愿意放弃自己设定的那个理想的自我以换取真正的自我,这是赢得关系的必要条件。他们还有另外一个共同之处:他们欣然接受脆弱。他们相信,让他们变得脆弱的东西也会让他们变得美丽。他们不认为脆弱是一种容易的事,但也不认为脆弱是一种钻心的疼痛,这应验了我之前在关于耻辱的采访中听到的。他们只是简单地认为脆弱是必须的。在采访中他们谈到,他们愿意先说出“我爱你”;愿意做那些具有风险性的事情;在做完乳房X光检查之后,他们有勇气等待医生的电话结果;无论有没有结果,他们愿意为关系情感投资。他们觉得这些都是最根本的。
我当时认为那是自欺欺人。我无法相信我尽然对科研的方式曾宣誓效忠,研究的定义是控制(变量)然后预测,去研究现象,为了一个明确的目标,进行控制并预测。而我当时这一通过控制与预测方式进行的科研任务,却出现了这样一个结果:要想与脆弱共存就得停止控制,停止预测,于是我崩溃了。
我称它为崩溃,我的心理医生称它为灵魂的觉醒。灵魂的觉醒当然比精神崩溃要好听得多,但我跟你说那的确是一种精神崩溃。然后我不得不暂且把数据放一边,去求助心理医生。让我告诉你:你很清楚知道你自己是谁,当你打电话跟你朋友说:“我觉得我需要跟人好好谈谈。你有什么好的建议吗?”
我大约有五个朋友这么回答:“喔!我可不想当你的心理医生。”我说:“你是什么意思?”他们说:“我只是想说,别带上你的标尺鞭子来见我。”我说:“行。”就这样我找到了一个心理医生,她叫黛安娜。我跟她的第一次见面时,我带去了一份表单,这些人都是那些全身心投入生活的生活方式,见到黛安娜,我坐下了。她说:“你好吗?”我说:“我很好。还不赖。”她说:“发生了什么事?” 这是一个治疗心理医生的心理医生,我们不得不去看这些心理医生,因为他们的废话测量仪很准(知道你什么时候在说真心话)。我说:“事情是这样的。我很纠结。”她说:“你纠结什么?”我说:“嗯,我跟脆弱过不去。事实上,我知道脆弱是耻辱和恐惧的根源,是我们为自我价值而挣扎的根源。但它同时又是欢乐、创造性、归属感、爱的源泉。所以我觉得我有困惑,我需要帮助指导。”我补充道:“但是,这跟家庭无关,没有童年那些乱七八糟的事”。“我只是需要一些策略”,我接着说。戴安娜的反应是这样的,(她学着医生那样,慢慢地点着头)。我接着说:“这很糟糕,对么?”她说:“这不算好,但也不算坏”。“事情本身就是这样”,她接着说。我说:“哦!我的天,事情全要更为混乱了!”
纠缠不清的事果然发生了,但又没有发生。大概有一年的时间。你知道的,有些人当他们发现脆弱和温柔很是重要的时候,他们放下所有戒备,欣然接受。我要声明,一,这不是我,二,我朋友里面也没有这样的人。对我来说,那是长达一年的斗争。是场激烈的混战,脆弱打我一拳,我又还击它一拳。最后我输了,但我或许赢回了我的生活。
然后我再度投入到了我的研究中,又花了几年时间真正试图去理解那些全身心投入生活的人,他们做了怎样的决定?他们是如何应对脆弱的?为什么我们为之痛苦挣扎?我是独自在跟脆弱斗争吗?不是。这是我学到的:我们对脆弱开始麻痹了,(例如)当我们等待(医生)电话的时候。好笑的是,我在Twitter微博和Facebook上发布了一条信息:“你怎样定义脆弱?什么会让你感到脆弱?”在一个半小时内,我收到了150条回复。因为我想知道大家都是怎么想的。
当时我不得不请求丈夫帮忙,因为我病了,而且我们刚结婚。跟丈夫提出要做爱;跟妻子提出要做爱;被拒绝;约某人出来;等待医生的答复;被裁员;裁掉别人,这就是我们生活的世界。我们活在一个脆弱的世界里。
我们应对的方法之一是麻痹脆弱。我觉得这不是没有依据,这也不是依据存在的唯一理由。我认为我们当代问题的一大部分都可以归咎于它。在美国历史上,我们是欠债最多、肥胖、毒瘾、用药最为严重的一代。问题是,我从研究中认识到,你无法选择性地麻痹感情。你不能说,这些是不好的。这是脆弱,这是悲哀,这是耻辱,这是恐惧,这是失望,我不想要这些情感。我要去喝几瓶啤酒,吃个香蕉坚果松饼。我不想要这些情感。我知道台下传来的是会意的笑声。别忘了,我是靠“入侵”你们的生活过日子的。天哪,我的上帝.你无法只麻痹那些痛苦的情感而不麻痹所有的感官,所有的情感。你无法有选择性地去麻痹。当我们麻痹那些(消极的情感),我们也麻痹了欢乐,麻痹了感恩,麻痹了幸福。然后我们会变得痛不欲生,我们继而寻找生命的意义,然后我们感到脆弱,然后我们喝几瓶啤酒,吃个香蕉坚果松饼。危险的循环就这样这形成了。我们需要思考的一件事是我们是为什么、怎么样麻痹自己的?这不一定是指吸毒。我们麻痹自己的另一个方式是把不确定的事变得确定。宗教已经从一种信仰、一种对不可知的相信变成了确定。我是对的,你是错的。闭嘴。就是这样。只要是确定的就是好的。我们越是害怕,我们就越脆弱,然后我们变得愈加害怕,这件就是当今政治的现状。探讨已经不复存在。对话已经荡然无存。有的仅仅是指责。你知道研究领域是如何描述指责的吗?一种发泄痛苦与不快的方式。
我们追求完美。如果有人想这样塑造他的生活,那个人就是我,但这行不通。因为我们做的只是把屁股上的赘肉挪到我们的脸上。这真是,我希望一百年以后,当人们回过头来会不禁感叹:“哇!”这是最危险的,我们想要我们的孩子变得完美。让我告诉你我们是如何看待孩子的。从他们出生的那刻起,他们就注定要挣扎。当你把这些完美的宝宝抱在怀里的时候,我们的任务不是说:“看看她,她完美的无可挑剔”。而是确保她保持完美:保证她五年级的时候可以进网球队,七年级的时候稳进耶鲁。那不是我们的任务!我们的任务是注视着她,对她说,“你知道吗?你并不完美,你注定要奋斗,但你值得被爱,值得享有归属感”,这才是我们的职责。让我看来,用这种方式培养出来的一代孩子,我保证我们今天所有的问题会得到解决。
我们假装我们的行为不会影响他人。不仅在我们个人生活中我们这么做,在公司中也一样:无论是提供紧急资助避免公司倒闭,石油泄漏事故,还是有疵产品的召回。我们假装我们做的事对他人不会造成什么大影响。我想对这些公司说:嘿,这不是我们第一次牛仔式的野蛮竞技。我们只要你坦诚地,真心地说一句:“对不起,我们会很好处理这个问题”。
但还有一种方法,我把它留给你们。这是我的心得:卸下我们的面具,让我们被看见,深入地被看见,即便是脆弱的一面;不管有多大的风险,全心全意地去爱,这是最困难的。
我也可以告诉你,我作为一名孩子的父母,这个非常非常困难的:带着一颗感恩的心,保持快乐,哪怕是在最恐惧的时候,哪怕我们怀疑:“我能不能爱得这么深?我能不能如此热情地相信这份感情?我能不能如此矢志不渝?”在消极的时候能够扛得住,而不是一味地幻想事情会如何变得更糟。对自己说:“我已经很感恩了,因为能感受到这种脆弱,这意味着我还活着。”
最后,还有最重要的一点,那就是相信我们已经做得够好了。因为我相信当我们在一个让人觉得“我已经足够了”的环境中打拼的时候,我们会停止抱怨,开始倾听,我们会对周围的人会更友善,更温和,对自己也会更友善,更温和。
这就是我演讲的全部内容。谢谢大家。
第四篇:生命如此脆弱安全演讲稿
尊敬的各位领导,各位评委,各位来宾:
大家好!
我是来自***酒店的前台***,在演讲前我先霸占大家几分钟时间讲述一个当下牵动亿万中国人的大事件。20XX年6月1日21时30分,隶属于重庆东方轮船公司的东方之星轮,在从南京驶往重庆途中突遇龙卷风,在长江中游湖北监利水域沉没。截至20XX年6月8日上午,“东方之星”沉船事件已搜救遇难者遗体434具,生还14人,失踪8人。有人要问了:“是什么原因导致东方之星发生了灾难性的横尸推挤?”“怎么预防灾难?”“怎么逃生?”“如何救援?”一系列的问题都反应着人们对生命延续的渴望。
据气象雷达监测资料分析,引起长江船舶倾覆是由龙卷风引起,风力在12级以上。专家表示,我国发生龙卷风的几率很小,水面龙卷风的情况更少,强风致船倾覆是小概率事件,由于龙卷风“生命周期”很短,目前针对龙卷风预报属于天气预报中最难之一。
关于这次沉船事件,我内心深感沉重,为死去的四百多名同胞们惋惜,请允许我在这里默哀3秒钟。
有些事是难以预料的,我们防不胜防。例如我们阻止不了大自然的电闪雷鸣,狂风暴雨。但有些事是可以预防的,我们就一定要做到方方面认真,例如不用电时,随时关掉电源,避免发生火灾。我今天演讲的题目是《生命如此脆弱》
一个餐饮酒店不仅要为客人提供色香味俱全的菜肴,还要让客人在消费的同时产生愉悦感和满足感。让客人高高兴兴的来,开开心心的走是我们的宗旨,确保酒店的各个角落安全无隐患,一直是我们高度重视的细节。倘若没有安全保障作为基石,或者缺少安全的酒店产品,不仅满足不了客人的需求,还会对客人的安全造成威胁。
6月10日,东方之星游轮被拖离事发水域,人们已无心欣赏那几经改造的华丽丽的外壳,它如同一座海上坟墓,慢慢移向岸边。为什么船长是暴风雨中前行?太多的疑问我回答不了,目前我想做的就是酒店的安全。所谓“前车之鉴,后事之师”,安全无小事。安全工作只有起点,没有终点。从事酒店餐饮管理行业的我们,如果没有“安全第一”的意识,那么,不仅没有“安、稳、长、满、优”的可能,而且还是失职,是对酒店和客人的不负责任,甚至是犯罪。安全保障,是酒店诚信的彰显,也是品牌与声誉的标杆。作为餐饮酒店的前台工作者,不仅仅是餐厅的窗口,保持良好的礼仪和规范,维护酒店的利益与形象这么简单的工作。卫生与健康息息相关,苍蝇不叮无缝的蛋,清洁迎宾区的卫生,严格要求自己做到干净无死角。
采菊东篱下,悠悠见南山。优雅的环境给人一种悠闲自得的心境,酒店装修侧重环境的同时我们更是把安全镶嵌到每一个细节。
听不进安全第一的劝告,是耳朵的幼稚;不懂得防范为重,责任重于泰山是心灵的幼稚;不深入细节,排除各种安全隐患,还他人以安全则是行为的幼稚。每一年,我们或许都会针对安全问题反复督促、强调,可以说,“安全”是一个年年讲,月月讲,天天讲,常讲常新,永不过时的话题。“重视安全”是一种态度、是一种责任、更是一种境界。酒店之所以花那么大的力气开展多层次、全方位的安全宣传,目的就是通过这些安全警示教育,安全知识的普及,增强全体员工的安全意识和素养,唤起每一位热爱生活、有仁爱之心的社会公民,担负起为家庭幸福、社会稳定、行业发展的这份神圣责任,使人人重视安全、时时事事做到安全,不因自己的过错给社会、家庭和他人带来不可挽回的经济损失和无法弥合的心灵创伤。
我们不做华丽丽的外壳,安全才是幸福的缔造者。在物价上涨的今天,更多的商家注重效益,忽略了安全。试想一下,一味的追求效益,把每个员工的工资都直接跟效益挂钩,哪儿来的精力把安全放在首位?安全是酒店服务大众的保障,是执行各个服务环节和搞好经济效益的前提基础。试想,如果酒店的各项安全要求得不到有力保障,防火装置不全、电网裸露交错、气体管道泄露、食品出现问题、食客发生意外等等,等等。这些事故或隐患想想就让人发怵。人身安全得不到保障,客人又怎么会安心消费呢?由于安全问题造成人心惶惶而不安于工作,又怎么能谈得上提高经济效益呢?由此可见,没有安全,就没有稳定人心,也就没有团结战斗的队伍,更没有创造效益的推动力和环境保障,从这个意义上讲,安全意味着效益,它是提高经济效益的前提保证。
社会在进步,人们的生活水平也越来越好。消费观也千姿百态,但唯一不变的是对生命的珍惜。无论去哪里,安全都是首要考虑的。
在餐厅吃饭,吃的数不舒心不仅是实物放到嘴里刺激味蕾的效果,安全问题越来越受到消费者的重视。特别是我们酒店管理这一服务广泛消费者的行业,更要特别加大安全管理的力度。作好各项安全防范措施,定期或不定期做安全检查,发现隐患,及时处理整改,决不放松任何安全问题,才能杜绝安全事故的发生、避免不必要的麻烦,才不会给他人和家庭带来过多的困难和压力。
酒店管理离不开安全保障,安全更离不开我们去不折不扣地执行。既然是一种责任,就要真真切切地落在实处,将防范措施加强到位。当我们迎着新一天明媚的阳光时,我们将会为我们取得的成绩而鼓舞。生命如此脆弱,安全缔造幸福。所谓安全责任大于天,落实到位才心安。
我的演讲完毕,谢谢大家!
第五篇:Ted 演讲稿 脆弱的力量
Brene Brown: The power of vulnerability So, I'll start with this: a couple years ago, an event planner called me because I was going to do a speaking event.And she called, and she said, “I'm really struggling with how to write about you on the little flier.” And I thought, “Well, what's the struggle?” And she said, “Well, I saw you speak, and I'm going to call you a researcher, I think, but I'm afraid if I call you a researcher, no one will come, because they'll think you're boring and irrelevant.”(Laughter)And I was like, “Okay.” And she said, “But the thing I liked about your talk is you're a storyteller.So I think what I'll do is just call you a storyteller.” And of course, the academic, insecure part of me was like, “You're going to call me a what?” And she said, “I'm going to call you a storyteller.” And I was like, “Why not magic pixie?”(Laughter)I was like, “Let me think about this for a second.” I tried to call deep on my courage.And I thought, you know, I am a storyteller.I'm a qualitative researcher.I collect stories;that's what I do.And maybe stories are just data with a soul.And maybe I'm just a storyteller.And so I said, “You know what? Why don't you just say I'm a researcher-storyteller.” And she went, “Haha.There's no such thing.”(Laughter)So I'm a researcher-storyteller, and I'm going to talk to you today--we're talking about expanding perception--and so I want to talk to you and tell some stories about a piece of my research that fundamentally expanded my perception and really actually changed the way that I live and love and work and parent.And this is where my story starts.When I was a young researcher, doctoral student, my first year I had a research professor who said to us, “Here's the thing, if you cannot measure it, it does not exist.” And I thought he was just sweet-talking me.I was like, “Really?” and he was like, “Absolutely.” And so you have to understand that I have a bachelor's in social work, a master's in social work, and I was getting my Ph.D.in social work, so my entire academic career was surrounded by people who kind of believed in the “life's messy, love it.” And I'm more of the, “life's messy, clean it up, organize it and put it into a bento box.”(Laughter)And so to think that I had found my way, to found a career that takes me--really, one of the big sayings in social work is, “Lean into the discomfort of the work.” And I'm like, knock discomfort upside the head and move it over and get all A's.That was my mantra.So I was very excited about this.And so I thought, you know what, this is the career for me, because I am interested in some messy topics.But I want to be able to make them not messy.I want to understand them.I want to hack into these things I know are important and lay the code out for everyone to see.So where I started was with connection.Because, by the time you're a social worker for 10 years, what you realize is that connection is why we're here.It's what gives purpose and meaning to our lives.This is what it's all about.It doesn't matter whether you talk to peoplewho work in social justice and mental health and abuse and neglect, what we know is that connection, the ability to feel connected, is--neurobiologically that's how we're wired--it's why we're here.So I thought, you know what, I'm going to start with connection.Well, you know that situation where you get an evaluation from your boss, and she tells you 37 things you do really awesome, and
one
thing
--
an
“opportunity
for growth?”(Laughter)And all you can think about is that opportunity for growth, right? Well, apparently this is the way my work went as well, because, when you ask people about love, they tell you about heartbreak.When you ask people about belonging, they'll tell you their most excruciating experiences of being excluded.And when you ask people about connection, the stories they told me were about disconnection.So very quickly--really about six weeks into this research--I ran into this unnamed thing that absolutely unraveled connection in a way that I didn't understand or had never seen.And so I pulled back out of the research and thought, I need to figure out what this is.And it turned out to be shame.And shame is really easily understood as the fear of disconnection: Is there something about me that, if other people know it or see it, that I won't be worthy of connection? The things I can tell you about it: it's universal;we all have it.The only people who don't experience shame have no capacity for human empathy or connection.No one wants to talk about it, and the less you talk about it the more you have it.What underpinned this shame, this “I'm not good enough,”--which we all know that feeling: “I'm not blank enough.I'm not thin enough, rich enough, beautiful enough, smart enough, promoted enough.” The thing
that
underpinned
this was
excruciating vulnerability, this idea of, in order for connection to happen, we have to allow ourselves to be seen, really seen.And you know how I feel about vulnerability.I hate vulnerability.And so I thought, this is my chance to beat it back with my measuring stick.I'm going in, I'm going to figure this stuff out,I'm going to spend a year, I'm going to totally deconstruct shame, I'm going to understand how vulnerability works, and I'm going to outsmart it.So I was ready, and I was really excited.As you know, it's not going to turn out well.(Laughter)You know this.So, I could tell you a lot about shame, but I'd have to borrow everyone else's time.But here's what I can tell you that it boils down to--and this may be one of the most important things that I've ever learned in the decade of doing this research.My one year turned into six years: thousands of stories,hundreds of long interviews, focus groups.At one point, people were sending me journal pagesand sending me their stories--thousands of pieces of data in six years.And I kind of got a handle on it.I kind of understood, this is what shame is, this is how it works.I wrote a book, I published a theory, but something was not okay--and what it was is that, if I roughly took the people I interviewed and divided them into people who really have a sense of worthiness--that's what this comes down to, a sense of worthiness--they have a strong sense of love and belonging--and folks who struggle for it, and folks who are always wondering if they're good enough.There was only one variable that separated the people who have a strong sense of love and belonging and the people who really struggle for it.And that was, the people who have a strong sense of love and belonging believe they're worthy of love and belonging.That's it.They believe they're worthy.And to me, the hard part of the one thing that keeps us out of connection is our fear that we're not worthy of connection, was something that, personally and professionally, I felt like I needed to understand better.So what I did is I took all of the interviews where I saw worthiness, where I saw people living that way, and just looked at those.What do these people have in common? I have a slight office supply addiction, but that's another talk.So I had a manila folder, and I had a Sharpie, and I was like, what am I going to call this research? And the first words that came to my mind were whole-hearted.These are whole-hearted people, living from this deep sense of worthiness.So I wrote at the top of the manila folder, and I started looking at the data.In fact, I did it first in a four-day very intensive data analysis, where I went back, pulled these interviews, pulled the stories, pulled the incidents.What's the theme? What's the pattern? My husband left town with the kids because I always go into this Jackson Pollock crazy thing, where I'm just like writing and in my researcher mode.And so here's what I found.What they had in common was a sense of courage.And I want to separate courage and bravery for you for a minute.Courage, the original definition of courage,when it first came into the English language--it's from the Latin word cor, meaning heart--and the original definition was to tell the story of who you are with your whole heart.And so these folks had, very simply, the courage to be imperfect.They had the compassion to be kind to themselves first and then to others, because, as it turns out, we can't practice compassion with other people if we can't treat ourselves kindly.And the last was they had connection, and--this was the hard part--as a result of authenticity, they were willing to let go of who they thought they should be in order to be who they were, which you have to absolutely do thatfor connection.The other thing that they had in common was this: They fully embraced vulnerability.They believed that what made them vulnerable made them beautiful.They didn't talk about vulnerability being comfortable, nor did they really talk about it being excruciating--as I had heard it earlier in the shame interviewing.They just talked about it being necessary.They talked about the willingness to say, “I love you” first, the willingness to do something where there are no guarantees, the willingness to breathe through waiting for the doctor to call after your mammogram.They're willing to invest in a relationship that may or may not work out.They thought this was fundamental.I personally thought it was betrayal.I could not believe I had pledged allegiance to research, where our job--you know, the definition of research is to control and predict, to study phenomena, for the explicit reason to control and predict.And now my mission to control and predict had turned up the answer that the way to live is with vulnerability and to stop controlling and predicting.This led to a little breakdown--(Laughter)--which actually looked more like this.(Laughter)And it did.I call it a breakdown;my therapist calls it a spiritual awakening.A spiritual awakening sounds better than breakdown, but I assure you it was a breakdown.And I had to put my data away and go find a therapist.Let me tell you something: you know who you are when you call your friends and say, “I think I need to see somebody.Do you have any recommendations?” Because about five of my friends were like, “Wooo.I wouldn't want to be your therapist.”(Laughter)I was like, “What does that mean?” And they're like, “I'm just saying, you know.Don't bring your measuring stick.” I was like, “Okay.” So I found a therapist.My first meeting with her, Diana--I brought in my list of the way the whole-hearted live, and I sat down.And she said, “How are you?” And I said, “I'm great.I'm okay.” She said, “What's going on?” And this is a therapist who sees therapists, because we have to go to those, because their B.S.meters are good.(Laughter)And so I said, “Here's the thing, I'm struggling.” And she said, “What's the struggle?” And I said, “Well, I have a vulnerability issue.And I know that vulnerability is the core of shame and fear and our struggle for worthiness, but it appears that it's also the birthplace of joy, of creativity, of belonging, of love.And I think I have a problem, and I need some help.” And I said, “But here's the thing: no family stuff, no childhood shit.”(Laughter)“I
just you.So
need she
goes
some like strategies.”(Laughter)(Applause)Thank this.(Laughter)And then I said, “It's bad, right?” And she said, “It's neither good nor bad.”(Laughter)“It just is what it is.” And I said, “Oh my God, this is going to suck.”(Laughter)And it did, and it didn't.And it took about a year.And you know how there are people that, when they realize that vulnerability and tenderness are important, that they surrender and walk into it.A: that's not me, and B: I don't even hang out with people like that.(Laughter)For me, it was a yearlong street fight.It was a slugfest.Vulnerability pushed, I pushed back.I lost the fight, but probably won my life back.And so then I went back into the research and spent the next couple of years really trying to understand what they, the whole-hearted, what choices they were
making, and
what
are
we
doing with vulnerability.Why do we struggle with it so much? Am I alone in struggling with vulnerability? No.So this is what I learned.We numb vulnerability--when we're waiting for the call.It was funny, I sent something out on Twitter and on Facebook that says, “How would you define vulnerability? What makes you feel vulnerable?” And within an hour and a half, I had 150 responses.Because I wanted to know what's out there.Having to ask my husband for help because I'm sick, and we're newly married;initiating sex with my husband;initiating sex with my wife;being turned down;asking someone out;waiting for the doctor to call back;getting laid off;laying off people--this is the world we live in.We live in a vulnerable world.And one of the ways we deal with it is we numb vulnerability.And I think there's evidence--and it's not the only reason this evidence exists, but I think it's a huge cause--we are the most in-debt, obese, addicted and medicated adult cohort in U.S.history.The problem is--and I learned this from the research--that you cannot selectively numb emotion.You can't say, here's the bad stuff.Here's vulnerability, here's
grief,here's
shame, here's
fear,here's disappointment.I don't want to feel these.I'm going to have a couple of beers and a banana nut muffin.(Laughter)I don't want to feel these.And I know that's knowing laughter.I hack into your lives for a living.God.(Laughter)You can't numb those hard feelings without numbing the other affects, our emotions.You cannot selectively numb.So when we numb those, we numb joy, we numb gratitude, we numb happiness.And then we are miserable, and we are looking for purpose and meaning, and then we feel vulnerable, so then we have a couple of beers and a banana nut muffin.And it becomes this dangerous cycle.One of the things that I think we need to think about is why and how we numb.And it doesn't just have to be addiction.The other thing we do is we make everything that's uncertain certain.Religion has gone from a belief in faith and mystery to certainty.I'm right, you're wrong.Shut up.That's it.Just certain.The more afraid we are, the more vulnerable we are, the more afraid we are.This is what politics looks like today.There's no discourse anymore.There's no conversation.There's just blame.You know how blame is described in the research? A way to discharge pain and discomfort.We perfect.If there's anyone who wants their life to look like this, it would be me, but it doesn't work.Because what we do is we take fat from our butts and put it in our cheeks.(Laughter)Which just, I hope in 100 years, people will look back and go, “Wow.”(Laughter)And we perfect, most dangerously, our children.Let me tell you what we think about children.They're hardwired for struggle when they get here.And when you hold those perfect little babies in your hand, our job is not to say, “Look at her, she's perfect.My job is just to keep her perfect--make sure she makes the tennis team by fifth grade and Yale by seventh grade.”That's not our job.Our job is to look and say, “You know what? You're imperfect, and you're wired for struggle, but you are worthy of love and belonging.” That's our job.Show me a generation of kids raised like that, and we'll end the problems I think that we see today.We pretend that what we do doesn't have an effect on people.We do that in our personal lives.We do that corporate--whether it's a bailout, an oil spill, a recall--we pretend like what we're doing doesn't have a huge impact on other people.I would say to companies, this is not our first rodeo, people.We just need you to be authentic and real and say, “We're sorry.We'll fix it.” But there's another way, and I'll leave you with this.This is what I have found: to let ourselves be seen, deeply seen, vulnerably seen;to love with our whole hearts, even though there's no guarantee--and that's really hard, and I can tell you as a parent, that's excruciatingly difficult--to practice gratitude and joy in those moments of terror, when we're wondering, “Can I love you this much? Can I believe in this this passionately? Can I be this fierce about this?” just to be able to stop and, instead of catastrophizing what might happen, to say, “I'm just so grateful, because to feel this vulnerable means I'm alive.” And the last, which I think is probably the most important, is to believe that we're enough.Because when we work from a place, I believe, that says, “I'm enough,” then we stop screaming and start listening, we're kinder and gentler to the people around us, and we're kinder and gentler to ourselves.That's all I have.Thank you.(Applause)