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I know it's a bit hot,
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I know it's a bit hot,
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but I've got a couple of questions.
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Yeah, do it.
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I want to end on.
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We end on with every episode.
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Yes.
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These are your final five.
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Okay.
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They have to be answering one word to one sentence maximum,
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but I will probably ignore that rule, as I always do.
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Amazing.
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So question number one is,
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we ask these to everyone who's ever been on the show,
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what is the best advice you've ever heard or received?
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I'm going to cheat slightly, if you'll allow it.
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Yeah.
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I read Emergent Strategy by Adrienne Marie Brown.
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It was given to me as a gift by my friend Anne-Marie for my 30th birthday.
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And I think that being a good,
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pious, Protestant English girl, I really believed that if I worked hard enough
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and if I was kind of saintly enough that someone would see my good deeds and all of my hard work and,
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like, give me the sticker,
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you know, give me the star.
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And so a kind of martyrdom was part of my,
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sort of, I understood was important in my,
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and I think reading her book and reading about pleasure activism,
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which is sort of the idea that like,
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anything that you want to sustain,
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e.g. justice, e.g. you need it to be easy and you need it to be pleasurable in a way,
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because that's what's going to mean that you'll be able to do it for a long time.
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Part of my burnout was that I wasn't prioritizing pleasure
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and joy as kind of like underpinning for even some of the harder,
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more somber, cerebral things that I was doing.
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And I think that changed my life.
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And I think we also have a model,
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particularly within activism and lots of spaces,
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that like this kind of sole, individual, charismatic leader.
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And I like you, you know,
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my hero is always Martin Luther King and Gandhi,
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and you just saw this sort of like solitary person
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that was doing that and i think if i could go back and do anything differently it would be
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that when i embarked on some of the public activism
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that i did i wouldn't go in the way i did i would go in with what i have now
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which is not just like an activist community like i have friends who can give me feedback
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and who i can talk to and who i feel that i'm not doing the work alone,
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solo, however heroic that might look.
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Yeah, I guess heroism and martyrdom,
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the way that it was looked,
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maybe I just don't believe that's how we'll get the job done anymore.
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Anything good will get done.
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So I think that book and I think that idea,
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that revolutionized my approach.
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I love that.
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Yeah, that's a great answer.
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It's beautiful.
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I want to read that book now.
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Yeah, you should have her on the podcast.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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Question number two, what is the worst advice you've ever heard or received?
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Oh, so much.
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How long have you got?
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God, mostly just like, I think a lot of stuff around toughen up,
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bottle it up, deal with that later.
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You know, just like subtle versions of like,
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well, maybe tell the truth,
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but just not all of it.
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Just maybe like, maybe just like tell like a little bit of it,
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but not like the whole thing, you know?
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Because like the truth is,
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the problem with like telling three quarters of the truth is that then you're sort of in this like constant
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peeling and unpeeling of yourself where you sort of like,
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you're sort of trying to do it,
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but you're not quite doing it.
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And I don't know, I think a lot of advice around that.
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Also, anyone that tells you not to do what you love,
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terrible advice
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doing what you love will lead you where you need to go even if you can't see it at the time yeah
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yeah terrible
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terrible beauty tips
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and advice I've been given around like I don't know just
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like oh god again like back to our previous conversation all the ridiculous things
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that you are encouraged to try and do as a woman like fake tan
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and and i mean it's hilarious i actually right now i i it might be like well covered up
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but i accidentally have a bottle of fake tan in my bathroom
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and in my jet lag state last night i thought i was putting moisturizer on
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but now i have like these like horrific uh fake tan marks on my legs and feet
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I guess I'm just thinking about just like, oh my God.
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And recently I was like,
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okay, I want to get my teeth whitened.
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And I looked like Ross from Friends when he'd had that awful fake tanning accident because they were just way too white.
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And then I had to spend,
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go back for two other visits to get the dentist to put my teeth back to my normal teeth.
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So I guess I was just laughing,
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thinking about like worse advice is just like don't ever listen to beauty technicians
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or anyone advising you to do anything weird to your body
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face appearance just just don't don't listen don't don't take the bait just don't do it
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so good question number three how are you how are you now going to choose
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work projects or activism differently does the person that's asking me to do something with them
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can they confidently look at me and say that they care about me far more than what we're producing?
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And do I care about them that way?
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One of my favourite people I worked with,
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Steve Chbosky, I remember him leaving what was a very productive rehearsal or script meeting with Logan Lerman,
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Ezra Miller and I, and he was like,
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I need to go and be with my wife now.
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And we were like, I don't think I've ever heard.
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I mean, at that point,
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I certainly hadn't ever heard a director in my career say they needed to leave for a personal reason
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or for a personal relationship.
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But I worked far harder for Steve than I worked for any other director
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because I think I was able to give a far more vulnerable performance in
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that film because I felt that he really cared about me beyond the product of the film.
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And I want to work with people like that,
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for whom the process is as important as the outcome.
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And the people that are part of it are more important than whatever the outcome is.
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I think this is a really difficult thing that I see everywhere in the world right now,
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is that we treat objects and things like they're sacred.
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And we don't treat people like they're the sacred thing.
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And that switch, yeah, I think it causes a lot of pain.
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Emma, something that you told me when we were speaking on the phone was
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that you've been working with the young people on helping them with some of the challenges
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that you've faced in your own career, in your own life.
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Yeah.
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And I remember being so touched by that.
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I wanted to learn more and for you to share it because I just think it's really special.
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And I was sharing it with some of my team before you arrived and everyone was quite drawn to it.
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So...
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As a young person, as I basically shared over however long it's been that we've been speaking,
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I just really needed to be having more conversations with people my own age and people that were older than me.
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I feel like I tried to navigate so many problems on my own
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and I just didn't know who to really speak to.
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And I was speaking to such a narrow group of people about what I was trying to navigate
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and I think that working with young people and giving them each other and also the space,
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the reason, the excuses to talk about the things
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that we don't talk about or create spaces for has been the most gratifying,
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the most purposeful and of service I've felt in a long time
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because it turns out pretty often that a lot of the things that we're struggling with,
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other people are struggling with as well.
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And so in a way,
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going back around and trying to put out into the world a lot of the things
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that I knew I needed as a young person and didn't get,
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it's been the best, most,
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the best, most gratifying thing.
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And I feel really lucky to be in a position and in a place where I can say a no,
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Like I've kind of done this treacherous journey and I think
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that I might have some ideas about what might be needed for someone to come out the other side of that safely.
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So it feels good to be of use.
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Yeah, I love that.
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Fifth question we ask is to every guest who's ever been on the show.
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If you could create one law that everyone in the world had to follow,
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what would it be?
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Oh, wow.
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One law.
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Okay, there's a couple of contenders.
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I'm gonna run you through one.
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One is gonna be- We'll vote on them.
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Okay, great.
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Perfect.
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One would be around the importance of telling the truth
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or like speaking your truth or just because I feel like
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so much chaos is caused by people not being sure whether or not they should or it's a good idea to or...
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I think that would be a pretty amazing one.
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Another contender, I mean, the obvious one is treat other people as you would like to be treated.
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That would obviously solve a lot of problems as well.
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I like that one you gave.
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The last one?
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Yeah, the first one.
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Oh, the first one.
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Yeah, the truth.
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Yeah.
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I guess it took me a long time and probably through doing my yoga teacher training,
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speaking truth with kindness is one of the first Niyamas, right?
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Mm-hmm.
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Very disappointed.
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I can't remember what the word is in… Not sattva?
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Maybe, yeah.
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Speaking the truth with kindness.
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Yeah, trying to think of the sattva.
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There's an amazing quote, which actually is given to me recently by a friend,
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which is like, the truth without kindness is brutality,
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and kindness without truth is manipulation.
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Say that again.
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Truth without kindness is brutality,
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and kindness without truth is manipulation.
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And so when I say,
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tell your truth, I don't mean going around like,
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just being awful to everyone.
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I mean, like, telling the microscopic truth and,
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like, having those, being willing to have a tolerance for those conversations.
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One of my favorite metaphors,
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I actually wrote about this recently for being in a relationship with anyone,
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is, like, you're in, it's,
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in a way, it's a dance, it's a fight.
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Like, I think about boxing in the sense of,
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like, who is going to go down to the mat with you and,
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like, not tap out?
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Because being honest about what's really going on is uncomfortable and it's risky.
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As we talked about earlier,
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you risk every time you tell the truth of maybe losing someone
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that you love because you don't know how they're going to respond to whatever your truth is.
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But I think to live that way creates the intimacy
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and connection that I think we long for and also sets people free in a way,
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you and them.
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Truth, yeah, truth with kindness.
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I think that's going to have to be my choice,
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my factor of deduction.
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Yeah, the Bhagavad Gita gives four principles for truth and kindness.
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The first is what you speak should be truthful.
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Yes.
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The second is it should be beneficial to all.
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The third is it shouldn't agitate the minds of others.
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Wow.
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And the fourth is it should be aligned with eternal wisdom and timeless wisdom.
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that's beautiful and perfect because yeah i think there's truths
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which are if they're not beneficial that do just agitate i think that's
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and it's not about not saying it it's the idea
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that you've thought so much about how you say it yes it's not
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that you've sanitized it
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because that's the modern day version the gita is not telling you to sanitize
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or be silent right it's telling you to filter your thought to make sure
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that the way you say it is digestible for everyone who's going to hear it.
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And therefore it actually has transformative power.
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It's not that it's not provocative or that it doesn't.
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It's just that you're not saying it in a way to trigger or get a reaction.
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You're saying it in a way that hits someone like an arrow of truth.
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It goes, I have to change because that person has been so mindful of how they spoke.
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Oh my God, that's incredible that's like that's everything i've just been trying to say about yeah
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if if we god if everyone was mindful enough about how they spoke their truth
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that it could just go straight to the heart
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oh yeah um rather than hit the ego along the way yeah that's why we can't talk
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because everything we say triggers someone's mind or their ego
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and then everything we say does it back and
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so now we're having a mind and ego debate
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which isn't the one that goes all the way to tap you know in your we're
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so focused on defending whatever the thing is that we feel
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that we need to defend
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that we just can't can't let no you can't hit the heart um
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so good yeah
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so good emma thank you for thank you the longest recorded
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conversation in on purpose history we had to change the cards
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the cameras we had to like and we haven't paused just
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so everyone knows just everyone knows me and emma have not moved
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so we didn't take a break there was no bathroom break
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no there was no break of whatever kind there was no
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coffee break we have sat in these seats for the entire duration
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that you watch this show or listen to it and
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so emma you have the uh you know to your competitive
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and winning spirit you have the uh award for longest ever
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podcast recording i i i don't know whether to be mortified
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or like seriously embarrassed or uh
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or like think feel like this is some kind of victory
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of some kind i guess you sat here for like
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and not moved for more than three hours really yeah surely
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it's amazing um that's amazing well thank you for thank you so much this has been such an amazing conversation

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이 비디오에서 에마 왓슨은 인생을 바꾼 최고의 조언에 대해 이야기합니다. 그녀의 경험을 통해 우리는 단순히 영어 발음이나 어휘력을 향상시키는 것을 넘어, 삶의 가치와 목표를 이야기하는 상황에서 어떻게 효과적으로 의사소통할 수 있는지를 배울 수 있습니다. 영어 쉐도잉을 통해 그녀의 말하기 방식을 따라 하고, 감정을 담아 전달하는 연습을 함으로써, 더욱 자연스러운 스피킹 능력을 기를 수 있습니다. 유튜브 영어 공부의 비디오를 활용하면 실제 대화 상황에서도 자신감을 갖고 말할 수 있게 됩니다.

문맥 속의 문법 및 표현

  • "It's a bit hot." - 상황에 맞는 표현을 사용하는 것이 중요합니다. 이는 간단하지만 친근한 인사말로, 대화 시작에 유용합니다.
  • "I think reading her book changed my life." - 이 구문은 개인적인 소감을 표현하는 데 적합합니다. 'changed my life'라는 표현은 얼마나 큰 영향을 받았는지를 강조합니다.
  • "I wouldn't go in the way I did." - 과거의 행동을 돌아보며 후회하는 표현입니다. 이런 형태의 문장은 반성하고 성장하는 데 중요한 역할을 합니다.
  • "You need it to be easy and pleasurable." - 어떤 일이나 목표를 이루기 위해서는 '쉬움'과 '즐거움'이 필요하다는 메시지를 전달하는 데 효과적입니다.

일반적인 발음 함정

비디오 속에서는 몇 가지 발음이 도전이 될 수 있습니다. 특히, "pleasure"라는 단어는 종종 잘못 발음될 수 있으므로 주의가 필요합니다. '플레저'가 아닌 '플레저'의처럼 발음하여 유창성을 높이는 것이 중요합니다. 또한, "heroism""martyrdom" 같은 단어들은 발음이 복잡하여 처음 듣는 사람에게 어려울 수 있습니다. 이 단어들도 유튜브 영어 공부의 쉐도잉을 통해 반복 연습함으로써 익숙해질 수 있습니다. 이러한 발음을 자연스럽게 소화하면 IELTS 스피킹 시험에서도 높은 점수를 받을 가능성이 커집니다.

쉐도잉이란? 영어 실력을 빠르게 키우는 과학적 방법

쉐도잉(Shadowing)은 원래 전문 통역사 훈련을 위해 개발된 언어 학습 기법으로, 다언어 학자인 Dr. Alexander Arguelles에 의해 대중화된 방법입니다. 핵심 원리는 간단하지만 매우 강력합니다: 원어민의 영어를 들으면서 1~2초의 짧은 지연으로 즉시 소리 내어 따라 말하는 것——마치 '그림자(shadow)'처럼 화자를 따라가는 것입니다. 문법 공부나 수동적인 청취와 달리, 쉐도잉은 뇌와 입 근육이 동시에 실시간으로 영어를 처리하고 재현하도록 훈련합니다. 연구에 따르면 이 방법은 발음 정확도, 억양, 리듬, 연음, 청취력, 말하기 유창성을 크게 향상시킵니다. IELTS 스피킹 준비와 자연스러운 영어 소통을 원하는 분들에게 특히 효과적입니다.

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