ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Andrew Solomon - Writer
Andrew Solomon writes about politics, culture and psychology.

Why you should listen

Andrew Solomon is a writer, lecturer and Professor of Clinical Psychology at Columbia University. He is president of PEN American Center. He writes regularly for The New Yorker and the New York Times.

Solomon's newest book, Far and Away: Reporting from the Brink of Change, Seven Continents, Twenty-Five Years was published in April, 2016. His previous book, Far From the Tree: Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity won the National Book Critics Circle award for nonfiction, the Wellcome Prize and 22 other national awards. It tells the stories of parents who not only learn to deal with their exceptional children but also find profound meaning in doing so. It was a New York Times bestseller in both hardcover and paperback editions. Solomon's previous book, The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression, won the 2001 National Book Award for Nonfiction, was a finalist for the 2002 Pulitzer Prize and was included in The Times of London's list of one hundred best books of the decade. It has been published in twenty-four languages. Solomon is also the author of the novel A Stone Boat and of The Irony Tower: Soviet Artists in a Time of Glasnost.

Solomon is an activist in LGBT rights, mental health, education and the arts. He is a member of the boards of directors of the National LGBTQ Force and Trans Youth Family Allies. He is a member of the Board of Visitors of Columbia University Medical Center, serves on the National Advisory Board of the Depression Center at the University of Michigan, is a director of Columbia Psychiatry and is a member of the Advisory Board of the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance. Solomon also serves on the boards of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Yaddo and The Alex Fund, which supports the education of Romani children. He is also a fellow of Berkeley College at Yale University and a member of the New York Institute for the Humanities and the Council on Foreign Relations.

Solomon lives with his husband and son in New York and London and is a dual national. He also has a daughter with a college friend; mother and daughter live in Texas but visit often.


More profile about the speaker
Andrew Solomon | Speaker | TED.com
TED2014

Andrew Solomon: How the worst moments in our lives make us who we are

Filmed:
6,466,776 views

Writer Andrew Solomon has spent his career telling stories of the hardships of others. Now he turns inward, bringing us into a childhood of adversity, while also spinning tales of the courageous people he's met in the years since. In a moving, heartfelt and at times downright funny talk, Solomon gives a powerful call to action to forge meaning from our biggest struggles.
- Writer
Andrew Solomon writes about politics, culture and psychology. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
As a student of adversity,
0
749
3443
00:16
I've been struck over the years
1
4192
1508
00:17
by how some people
2
5700
1992
00:19
with major challenges
3
7692
1404
00:21
seem to draw strength from them,
4
9096
3052
00:24
and I've heard the popular wisdom
5
12148
1890
00:26
that that has to do with finding meaning.
6
14038
2329
00:28
And for a long time,
7
16367
1655
00:30
I thought the meaning was out there,
8
18022
2509
00:32
some great truth waiting to be found.
9
20531
3013
00:35
But over time, I've come to feel
10
23544
2559
00:38
that the truth is irrelevant.
11
26103
2024
00:40
We call it finding meaning,
12
28127
2589
00:42
but we might better call it forging meaning.
13
30716
4121
00:47
My last book was about how families
14
34837
2076
00:49
manage to deal with various kinds of challenging
15
36913
2924
00:52
or unusual offspring,
16
39837
2075
00:54
and one of the mothers I interviewed,
17
41912
2184
00:56
who had two children with
multiple severe disabilities,
18
44096
3179
00:59
said to me, "People always give us
19
47275
2540
01:02
these little sayings like,
20
49815
1854
01:03
'God doesn't give you any
more than you can handle,'
21
51669
3828
01:07
but children like ours
22
55497
1511
01:09
are not preordained as a gift.
23
57008
4102
01:13
They're a gift because that's what we have chosen."
24
61110
4936
01:18
We make those choices all our lives.
25
66046
4724
01:22
When I was in second grade,
26
70770
2267
01:25
Bobby Finkel had a birthday party
27
73037
2759
01:27
and invited everyone in our class but me.
28
75796
4525
01:32
My mother assumed there
had been some sort of error,
29
80321
2216
01:34
and she called Mrs. Finkel,
30
82537
1897
01:36
who said that Bobby didn't like me
31
84434
2339
01:38
and didn't want me at his party.
32
86773
3147
01:42
And that day, my mom took me to the zoo
33
89920
2927
01:45
and out for a hot fudge sundae.
34
92847
3020
01:48
When I was in seventh grade,
35
95867
1858
01:49
one of the kids on my school bus
36
97725
2325
01:52
nicknamed me "Percy"
37
100050
1933
01:54
as a shorthand for my demeanor,
38
101983
2693
01:56
and sometimes, he and his cohort
39
104676
3099
01:59
would chant that provocation
40
107775
2074
02:02
the entire school bus ride,
41
109849
1869
02:03
45 minutes up, 45 minutes back,
42
111718
3817
02:07
"Percy! Percy! Percy! Percy!"
43
115535
4533
02:12
When I was in eighth grade,
44
120068
1980
02:14
our science teacher told us
45
122048
2647
02:16
that all male homosexuals
46
124695
1649
02:18
develop fecal incontinence
47
126344
2228
02:20
because of the trauma to their anal sphincter.
48
128572
4407
02:25
And I graduated high school
49
132979
1789
02:26
without ever going to the cafeteria,
50
134768
2821
02:29
where I would have sat with the girls
51
137589
1719
02:31
and been laughed at for doing so,
52
139308
2239
02:33
or sat with the boys
53
141547
1688
02:35
and been laughed at for being a boy
54
143235
1635
02:37
who should be sitting with the girls.
55
144870
2815
02:39
I survived that childhood through a mix
56
147685
2873
02:42
of avoidance and endurance.
57
150558
2539
02:45
What I didn't know then,
58
153097
2118
02:47
and do know now,
59
155215
1621
02:49
is that avoidance and endurance
60
156836
2387
02:51
can be the entryway to forging meaning.
61
159223
4687
02:56
After you've forged meaning,
62
163910
2274
02:58
you need to incorporate that meaning
63
166184
2214
03:00
into a new identity.
64
168398
2114
03:02
You need to take the traumas and make them part
65
170512
3368
03:06
of who you've come to be,
66
173880
2220
03:08
and you need to fold the worst events of your life
67
176100
2745
03:11
into a narrative of triumph,
68
178845
2193
03:13
evincing a better self
69
181038
1884
03:15
in response to things that hurt.
70
182922
3549
03:18
One of the other mothers I interviewed
71
186471
1745
03:20
when I was working on my book
72
188216
2152
03:22
had been raped as an adolescent,
73
190368
2502
03:25
and had a child following that rape,
74
192870
2983
03:28
which had thrown away her career plans
75
195853
2947
03:31
and damaged all of her emotional relationships.
76
198800
4050
03:35
But when I met her, she was 50,
77
202850
3210
03:38
and I said to her,
78
206060
1216
03:39
"Do you often think about the man who raped you?"
79
207276
2656
03:42
And she said, "I used to think about him with anger,
80
209932
4459
03:46
but now only with pity."
81
214391
2232
03:48
And I thought she meant pity because he was
82
216623
2261
03:51
so unevolved as to have done this terrible thing.
83
218884
3692
03:54
And I said, "Pity?"
84
222576
1559
03:56
And she said, "Yes,
85
224135
1575
03:57
because he has a beautiful daughter
86
225710
2628
04:00
and two beautiful grandchildren
87
228338
2235
04:02
and he doesn't know that, and I do.
88
230573
3778
04:06
So as it turns out, I'm the lucky one."
89
234351
5920
04:12
Some of our struggles are things we're born to:
90
240271
3312
04:15
our gender, our sexuality, our race, our disability.
91
243583
5505
04:21
And some are things that happen to us:
92
249088
2233
04:23
being a political prisoner, being a rape victim,
93
251321
3856
04:27
being a Katrina survivor.
94
255177
2193
04:29
Identity involves entering a community
95
257370
3285
04:32
to draw strength from that community,
96
260655
2381
04:35
and to give strength there too.
97
263036
2405
04:37
It involves substituting "and" for "but" --
98
265441
4485
04:42
not "I am here but I have cancer,"
99
269926
4349
04:46
but rather, "I have cancer and I am here."
100
274275
5289
04:51
When we're ashamed,
101
279564
1804
04:53
we can't tell our stories,
102
281368
1977
04:55
and stories are the foundation of identity.
103
283345
4829
05:00
Forge meaning, build identity,
104
288174
3767
05:04
forge meaning and build identity.
105
291941
3739
05:07
That became my mantra.
106
295680
2301
05:10
Forging meaning is about changing yourself.
107
297981
3720
05:13
Building identity is about changing the world.
108
301701
3446
05:17
All of us with stigmatized identities
109
305147
2640
05:19
face this question daily:
110
307787
1943
05:21
how much to accommodate society
111
309730
2352
05:24
by constraining ourselves,
112
312082
2191
05:26
and how much to break the limits
113
314273
2826
05:29
of what constitutes a valid life?
114
317099
2767
05:32
Forging meaning and building identity
115
319866
3514
05:35
does not make what was wrong right.
116
323380
2767
05:38
It only makes what was wrong precious.
117
326147
4674
05:43
In January of this year,
118
330821
2203
05:45
I went to Myanmar to interview political prisoners,
119
333024
4329
05:49
and I was surprised to find them less bitter
120
337353
2497
05:52
than I'd anticipated.
121
339850
1796
05:53
Most of them had knowingly committed
122
341646
1860
05:55
the offenses that landed them in prison,
123
343506
2624
05:58
and they had walked in with their heads held high,
124
346130
3284
06:01
and they walked out with their heads
125
349414
2350
06:03
still held high, many years later.
126
351764
3792
06:07
Dr. Ma Thida, a leading human rights activist
127
355556
3206
06:10
who had nearly died in prison
128
358762
1763
06:12
and had spent many years in solitary confinement,
129
360525
2887
06:15
told me she was grateful to her jailers
130
363412
3448
06:19
for the time she had had to think,
131
366860
2935
06:21
for the wisdom she had gained,
132
369795
1771
06:23
for the chance to hone her meditation skills.
133
371566
4044
06:27
She had sought meaning
134
375610
1567
06:29
and made her travail into a crucial identity.
135
377177
3883
06:33
But if the people I met
136
381060
1827
06:35
were less bitter than I'd anticipated
137
382887
2183
06:37
about being in prison,
138
385070
1600
06:38
they were also less thrilled than I'd expected
139
386670
2864
06:41
about the reform process going on
140
389534
1983
06:43
in their country.
141
391517
1650
06:45
Ma Thida said,
142
393167
1670
06:47
"We Burmese are noted
143
394837
1645
06:48
for our tremendous grace under pressure,
144
396482
3472
06:52
but we also have grievance under glamour,"
145
399954
4333
06:56
she said, "and the fact that there have been
146
404287
2406
06:58
these shifts and changes
147
406693
1335
07:00
doesn't erase the continuing problems
148
408028
2314
07:02
in our society
149
410342
1492
07:04
that we learned to see so well
150
411834
2477
07:06
while we were in prison."
151
414311
1934
07:08
And I understood her to be saying
152
416245
2159
07:10
that concessions confer only a little humanity,
153
418404
3456
07:14
where full humanity is due,
154
421860
2258
07:16
that crumbs are not the same
155
424118
2248
07:18
as a place at the table,
156
426366
2036
07:20
which is to say you can forge meaning
157
428402
2596
07:23
and build identity and still be mad as hell.
158
430998
6440
07:29
I've never been raped,
159
437438
1664
07:31
and I've never been in anything
remotely approaching
160
439102
3058
07:34
a Burmese prison,
161
442160
1727
07:36
but as a gay American,
162
443887
1884
07:37
I've experienced prejudice and even hatred,
163
445771
4034
07:42
and I've forged meaning and I've built identity,
164
449805
4542
07:46
which is a move I learned from people
165
454347
2349
07:48
who had experienced far worse privation
166
456696
2522
07:51
than I've ever known.
167
459218
2564
07:53
In my own adolescence,
168
461782
1667
07:55
I went to extreme lengths to try to be straight.
169
463449
3492
07:59
I enrolled myself in something called
170
466941
1949
08:01
sexual surrogacy therapy,
171
468890
2161
08:03
in which people I was encouraged to call doctors
172
471051
3817
08:07
prescribed what I was encouraged to call exercises
173
474868
3839
08:10
with women I was encouraged to call surrogates,
174
478707
3752
08:14
who were not exactly prostitutes
175
482459
2491
08:17
but who were also not exactly anything else.
176
484950
2925
08:20
(Laughter)
177
487875
4483
08:24
My particular favorite
178
492358
1717
08:26
was a blonde woman from the Deep South
179
494075
2305
08:28
who eventually admitted to me
180
496380
1861
08:30
that she was really a necrophiliac
181
498241
2342
08:32
and had taken this job after she got in trouble
182
500583
2802
08:35
down at the morgue.
183
503385
1945
08:37
(Laughter)
184
505330
4156
08:43
These experiences eventually allowed me to have
185
511476
2858
08:46
some happy physical relationships with women,
186
514334
2789
08:49
for which I'm grateful,
187
517123
1518
08:50
but I was at war with myself,
188
518641
2724
08:53
and I dug terrible wounds into my own psyche.
189
521365
4834
08:58
We don't seek the painful experiences
190
526199
3225
09:01
that hew our identities,
191
529424
2676
09:04
but we seek our identities
192
532100
1810
09:06
in the wake of painful experiences.
193
533910
3433
09:09
We cannot bear a pointless torment,
194
537343
2886
09:12
but we can endure great pain
195
540229
2500
09:14
if we believe that it's purposeful.
196
542729
3175
09:18
Ease makes less of an impression on us
197
545904
2256
09:20
than struggle.
198
548160
1483
09:21
We could have been ourselves without our delights,
199
549643
2457
09:24
but not without the misfortunes
200
552100
2276
09:26
that drive our search for meaning.
201
554376
2831
09:29
"Therefore, I take pleasure in infirmities,"
202
557207
3783
09:33
St. Paul wrote in Second Corinthians,
203
560990
2284
09:35
"for when I am weak, then I am strong."
204
563274
4516
09:39
In 1988, I went to Moscow
205
567790
2945
09:42
to interview artists of the Soviet underground,
206
570735
3115
09:46
and I expected their work to be
207
573850
1873
09:47
dissident and political.
208
575723
2454
09:50
But the radicalism in their work actually lay
209
578177
3058
09:53
in reinserting humanity into a society
210
581235
2925
09:56
that was annihilating humanity itself,
211
584160
2183
09:58
as, in some senses, Russian society
212
586343
2788
10:01
is now doing again.
213
589131
1867
10:03
One of the artists I met said to me,
214
590998
2587
10:05
"We were in training to be not artists but angels."
215
593585
4411
10:10
In 1991, I went back to see the artists
216
597996
3155
10:13
I'd been writing about,
217
601151
1478
10:14
and I was with them during the putsch
218
602629
2149
10:16
that ended the Soviet Union,
219
604778
1762
10:18
and they were among the chief organizers
220
606540
2289
10:21
of the resistance to that putsch.
221
608829
3026
10:24
And on the third day of the putsch,
222
611855
3419
10:27
one of them suggested we walk up to Smolenskaya.
223
615274
3039
10:30
And we went there,
224
618313
1282
10:31
and we arranged ourselves in
front of one of the barricades,
225
619595
3259
10:35
and a little while later,
226
622854
1758
10:36
a column of tanks rolled up,
227
624612
2261
10:39
and the soldier on the front tank said,
228
626873
2037
10:41
"We have unconditional orders
229
628910
2204
10:43
to destroy this barricade.
230
631114
1606
10:44
If you get out of the way,
231
632720
1655
10:46
we don't need to hurt you,
232
634375
1565
10:48
but if you won't move, we'll have no choice
233
635940
1878
10:50
but to run you down."
234
637818
1713
10:51
And the artists I was with said,
235
639531
1852
10:53
"Give us just a minute.
236
641383
1407
10:54
Give us just a minute to tell you why we're here."
237
642790
4348
10:59
And the soldier folded his arms,
238
647138
2056
11:01
and the artist launched into a
Jeffersonian panegyric to democracy
239
649194
4600
11:05
such as those of us who live
240
653794
1858
11:07
in a Jeffersonian democracy
241
655652
1921
11:09
would be hard-pressed to present.
242
657573
3295
11:13
And they went on and on,
243
660868
1756
11:14
and the soldier watched,
244
662624
2003
11:16
and then he sat there for a full minute
245
664627
1729
11:18
after they were finished
246
666356
1504
11:20
and looked at us so bedraggled in the rain,
247
667860
2785
11:22
and said, "What you have said is true,
248
670645
3677
11:26
and we must bow to the will of the people.
249
674322
3616
11:30
If you'll clear enough space for us to turn around,
250
677938
2471
11:32
we'll go back the way we came."
251
680409
2454
11:35
And that's what they did.
252
682863
2146
11:37
Sometimes, forging meaning
253
685009
2218
11:39
can give you the vocabulary you need
254
687227
2620
11:42
to fight for your ultimate freedom.
255
689847
3258
11:45
Russia awakened me to the lemonade notion
256
693105
3155
11:48
that oppression breeds the power to oppose it,
257
696260
2554
11:51
and I gradually understood that as the cornerstone
258
698814
3426
11:54
of identity.
259
702240
1534
11:55
It took identity to rescue me from sadness.
260
703774
4685
12:00
The gay rights movement posits a world
261
708459
2116
12:02
in which my aberrances are a victory.
262
710575
2851
12:05
Identity politics always works on two fronts:
263
713426
3628
12:09
to give pride to people who have a given condition
264
717054
3055
12:12
or characteristic,
265
720109
1457
12:13
and to cause the outside world
266
721566
1676
12:15
to treat such people more gently and more kindly.
267
723242
3528
12:18
Those are two totally separate enterprises,
268
726770
3518
12:22
but progress in each sphere
269
730288
1825
12:24
reverberates in the other.
270
732113
2359
12:26
Identity politics can be narcissistic.
271
734472
3749
12:30
People extol a difference only because it's theirs.
272
738221
3328
12:33
People narrow the world and function
273
741549
2399
12:36
in discrete groups without empathy for one another.
274
743948
3051
12:39
But properly understood
275
746999
2485
12:41
and wisely practiced,
276
749484
1921
12:43
identity politics should expand
277
751405
1991
12:45
our idea of what it is to be human.
278
753396
2527
12:48
Identity itself
279
755923
1718
12:49
should be not a smug label
280
757641
2549
12:52
or a gold medal
281
760190
2084
12:54
but a revolution.
282
762274
2473
12:56
I would have had an easier life if I were straight,
283
764747
3566
13:00
but I would not be me,
284
768313
1797
13:02
and I now like being myself better
285
770110
2665
13:04
than the idea of being someone else,
286
772775
2053
13:07
someone who, to be honest,
287
774828
1648
13:08
I have neither the option of being
288
776476
2084
13:10
nor the ability fully to imagine.
289
778560
2477
13:13
But if you banish the dragons,
290
781037
2152
13:15
you banish the heroes,
291
783189
2565
13:17
and we become attached
292
785754
1541
13:19
to the heroic strain in our own lives.
293
787295
3128
13:22
I've sometimes wondered
294
790423
1281
13:23
whether I could have ceased
to hate that part of myself
295
791704
2782
13:26
without gay pride's technicolor fiesta,
296
794486
2581
13:29
of which this speech is one manifestation.
297
797067
4501
13:33
I used to think I would know myself to be mature
298
801568
2897
13:36
when I could simply be gay without emphasis,
299
804465
2854
13:39
but the self-loathing of that period left a void,
300
807319
3909
13:43
and celebration needs to fill and overflow it,
301
811228
3735
13:47
and even if I repay my private debt of melancholy,
302
814963
3694
13:50
there's still an outer world of homophobia
303
818657
2756
13:53
that it will take decades to address.
304
821413
2889
13:56
Someday, being gay will be a simple fact,
305
824302
3315
13:59
free of party hats and blame,
306
827617
2849
14:02
but not yet.
307
830466
1518
14:04
A friend of mine who thought gay pride
308
831984
2749
14:06
was getting very carried away with itself,
309
834733
1914
14:08
once suggested that we organize
310
836647
1564
14:10
Gay Humility Week.
311
838211
2022
14:12
(Laughter) (Applause)
312
840233
4467
14:18
It's a great idea,
313
846643
2195
14:21
but its time has not yet come.
314
848838
2429
14:23
(Laughter)
315
851267
1985
14:25
And neutrality, which seems to lie
316
853252
2199
14:27
halfway between despair and celebration,
317
855451
2754
14:30
is actually the endgame.
318
858205
3186
14:33
In 29 states in the U.S.,
319
861391
2520
14:36
I could legally be fired or denied housing
320
863911
3262
14:39
for being gay.
321
867173
2166
14:41
In Russia, the anti-propaganda law
322
869339
2621
14:44
has led to people being beaten in the streets.
323
871960
2977
14:47
Twenty-seven African countries
324
874937
2056
14:49
have passed laws against sodomy,
325
876993
2898
14:52
and in Nigeria, gay people can legally
326
879891
2239
14:54
be stoned to death,
327
882130
1458
14:55
and lynchings have become common.
328
883588
2690
14:58
In Saudi Arabia recently, two men
329
886278
3090
15:01
who had been caught in carnal acts,
330
889368
1905
15:03
were sentenced to 7,000 lashes each,
331
891273
4667
15:08
and are now permanently disabled as a result.
332
895940
3399
15:11
So who can forge meaning
333
899339
1871
15:13
and build identity?
334
901210
2780
15:16
Gay rights are not primarily marriage rights,
335
903990
3327
15:19
and for the millions who live in unaccepting places
336
907317
2936
15:22
with no resources,
337
910253
2177
15:24
dignity remains elusive.
338
912430
2480
15:27
I am lucky to have forged meaning
339
914910
3012
15:30
and built identity,
340
917922
2066
15:32
but that's still a rare privilege,
341
919988
2297
15:34
and gay people deserve more collectively
342
922285
2829
15:37
than the crumbs of justice.
343
925114
3436
15:40
And yet, every step forward
344
928550
3051
15:43
is so sweet.
345
931601
2066
15:45
In 2007, six years after we met,
346
933667
3654
15:49
my partner and I decided
347
937321
2057
15:51
to get married.
348
939378
1734
15:53
Meeting John had been the discovery
349
941112
2182
15:55
of great happiness
350
943294
1856
15:57
and also the elimination of great unhappiness,
351
945150
3100
16:00
and sometimes, I was so occupied
352
948250
2614
16:03
with the disappearance of all that pain
353
950864
2501
16:05
that I forgot about the joy,
354
953365
2352
16:07
which was at first the less
remarkable part of it to me.
355
955717
3747
16:11
Marrying was a way to declare our love
356
959464
2701
16:14
as more a presence than an absence.
357
962165
3986
16:18
Marriage soon led us to children,
358
966151
2452
16:20
and that meant new meanings
359
968603
1607
16:22
and new identities, ours and theirs.
360
970210
4252
16:26
I want my children to be happy,
361
974462
2927
16:29
and I love them most achingly when they are sad.
362
977389
3781
16:33
As a gay father, I can teach them
363
981170
2680
16:36
to own what is wrong in their lives,
364
983850
2677
16:38
but I believe that if I succeed
365
986527
1793
16:40
in sheltering them from adversity,
366
988320
2320
16:42
I will have failed as a parent.
367
990640
2890
16:45
A Buddhist scholar I know once explained to me
368
993530
3068
16:48
that Westerners mistakenly think
369
996598
1969
16:50
that nirvana is what arrives
370
998567
2355
16:53
when all your woe is behind you
371
1000922
2743
16:55
and you have only bliss to look forward to.
372
1003665
3239
16:59
But he said that would not be nirvana,
373
1006904
2165
17:01
because your bliss in the present
374
1009069
1510
17:02
would always be shadowed by the joy from the past.
375
1010579
3999
17:06
Nirvana, he said, is what you arrive at
376
1014578
2830
17:09
when you have only bliss to look forward to
377
1017408
2382
17:11
and find in what looked like sorrows
378
1019790
2483
17:14
the seedlings of your joy.
379
1022273
2853
17:17
And I sometimes wonder
380
1025126
1711
17:19
whether I could have found such fulfillment
381
1026837
2393
17:21
in marriage and children
382
1029230
1462
17:22
if they'd come more readily,
383
1030692
2053
17:24
if I'd been straight in my youth or were young now,
384
1032745
4025
17:28
in either of which cases this might be easier.
385
1036770
3422
17:32
Perhaps I could.
386
1040192
1579
17:33
Perhaps all the complex imagining I've done
387
1041771
2337
17:36
could have been applied to other topics.
388
1044108
2133
17:38
But if seeking meaning
389
1046241
1640
17:40
matters more than finding meaning,
390
1047881
1857
17:41
the question is not whether I'd be happier
391
1049738
3363
17:45
for having been bullied,
392
1053101
1546
17:46
but whether assigning meaning
393
1054647
1672
17:48
to those experiences
394
1056319
1735
17:50
has made me a better father.
395
1058054
2416
17:52
I tend to find the ecstasy hidden in ordinary joys,
396
1060470
4008
17:56
because I did not expect those joys
397
1064478
1959
17:58
to be ordinary to me.
398
1066437
2528
18:01
I know many heterosexuals who have
399
1068965
1817
18:02
equally happy marriages and families,
400
1070782
2266
18:05
but gay marriage is so breathtakingly fresh,
401
1073048
2861
18:08
and gay families so exhilaratingly new,
402
1075909
3304
18:11
and I found meaning in that surprise.
403
1079213
4259
18:15
In October, it was my 50th birthday,
404
1083472
3438
18:19
and my family organized a party for me,
405
1086910
3218
18:22
and in the middle of it,
406
1090128
1489
18:23
my son said to my husband
407
1091617
1417
18:25
that he wanted to make a speech,
408
1093034
1666
18:26
and John said,
409
1094700
994
18:27
"George, you can't make a speech. You're four."
410
1095694
4622
18:32
(Laughter)
411
1100316
1514
18:34
"Only Grandpa and Uncle David and I
412
1101830
2336
18:36
are going to make speeches tonight."
413
1104166
2049
18:38
But George insisted and insisted,
414
1106215
2905
18:41
and finally, John took him up to the microphone,
415
1109120
3003
18:44
and George said very loudly,
416
1112123
3056
18:47
"Ladies and gentlemen,
417
1115179
2444
18:49
may I have your attention please."
418
1117623
2582
18:52
And everyone turned around, startled.
419
1120205
2715
18:55
And George said,
420
1122920
2107
18:57
"I'm glad it's Daddy's birthday.
421
1125027
2331
18:59
I'm glad we all get cake.
422
1127358
3441
19:02
And daddy, if you were little,
423
1130799
3158
19:06
I'd be your friend."
424
1133957
3267
19:09
And I thought — Thank you.
425
1137770
2831
19:12
I thought that I was indebted
426
1140601
2299
19:15
even to Bobby Finkel,
427
1142900
1795
19:16
because all those earlier experiences
428
1144695
2737
19:19
were what had propelled me to this moment,
429
1147432
2368
19:22
and I was finally unconditionally grateful
430
1149800
2532
19:24
for a life I'd once have done anything to change.
431
1152332
3775
19:28
The gay activist Harvey Milk
432
1156107
2045
19:30
was once asked by a younger gay man
433
1158152
2528
19:32
what he could do to help the movement,
434
1160680
2216
19:35
and Harvey Milk said,
435
1162896
1411
19:36
"Go out and tell someone."
436
1164307
2414
19:38
There's always somebody who wants to confiscate
437
1166721
2624
19:41
our humanity,
438
1169345
1605
19:43
and there are always stories that restore it.
439
1170950
2788
19:45
If we live out loud,
440
1173738
1578
19:47
we can trounce the hatred
441
1175316
1666
19:49
and expand everyone's lives.
442
1176982
3414
19:52
Forge meaning. Build identity.
443
1180396
3624
19:56
Forge meaning.
444
1184020
2073
19:58
Build identity.
445
1186093
2747
20:01
And then invite the world
446
1188840
1798
20:02
to share your joy.
447
1190638
1696
20:04
Thank you.
448
1192334
3246
20:07
(Applause)
449
1195580
1426
20:09
Thank you. (Applause)
450
1197006
3077
20:12
Thank you. (Applause)
451
1200083
4099
20:16
Thank you. (Applause)
452
1204182
4000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Andrew Solomon - Writer
Andrew Solomon writes about politics, culture and psychology.

Why you should listen

Andrew Solomon is a writer, lecturer and Professor of Clinical Psychology at Columbia University. He is president of PEN American Center. He writes regularly for The New Yorker and the New York Times.

Solomon's newest book, Far and Away: Reporting from the Brink of Change, Seven Continents, Twenty-Five Years was published in April, 2016. His previous book, Far From the Tree: Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity won the National Book Critics Circle award for nonfiction, the Wellcome Prize and 22 other national awards. It tells the stories of parents who not only learn to deal with their exceptional children but also find profound meaning in doing so. It was a New York Times bestseller in both hardcover and paperback editions. Solomon's previous book, The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression, won the 2001 National Book Award for Nonfiction, was a finalist for the 2002 Pulitzer Prize and was included in The Times of London's list of one hundred best books of the decade. It has been published in twenty-four languages. Solomon is also the author of the novel A Stone Boat and of The Irony Tower: Soviet Artists in a Time of Glasnost.

Solomon is an activist in LGBT rights, mental health, education and the arts. He is a member of the boards of directors of the National LGBTQ Force and Trans Youth Family Allies. He is a member of the Board of Visitors of Columbia University Medical Center, serves on the National Advisory Board of the Depression Center at the University of Michigan, is a director of Columbia Psychiatry and is a member of the Advisory Board of the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance. Solomon also serves on the boards of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Yaddo and The Alex Fund, which supports the education of Romani children. He is also a fellow of Berkeley College at Yale University and a member of the New York Institute for the Humanities and the Council on Foreign Relations.

Solomon lives with his husband and son in New York and London and is a dual national. He also has a daughter with a college friend; mother and daughter live in Texas but visit often.


More profile about the speaker
Andrew Solomon | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee