Casey Gerald: Embrace your raw, strange magic
Casey Gerald chronicles the current state of the American Dream and explores ways to sustain it for a new generation. Full bio
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to stage an intervention.
a few snippets of my memoir,
one small change.
doing your hand like a punk.
what I am trying to do with my life
has got to change.
the wrong side of the tracks,
in part by my grandmother
a few years after our mother,
and lasted for five years,
had been my human hiding place.
who seemed as strange as me,
from "A Streetcar Named Desire"
from her imperfections.
for days at a time,
just by walking perfectly
at the top of a steep hill
to my grandmother's house,
in each sidewalk square.
touch the line between the square,
at the last blade of grass
could not bring my mother back,
in charge around me
they wouldn't bother me too much.
a Stasi prison in Berlin,
of teachers and kin, strangers;
big time, it seemed,
showed up at my high school to recruit me
as it may to you now.
that could ever happen to me,
to the whole community.
an excuse for not going.
not to wear my fitted hats on campus ...
do that anymore," she said.
of the small prices
they seemed to pay me back:
on the varsity football team;
and later in Washington.
that I figured naturally
of the United States.
have to start somewhere,
of that great 2008 election:
a serious, moderate senator stressed,
more than any other message
the gold standard of modern politics,
which also seems to demand
to be able to say at the end of our days
"I was just like everybody else."
to my prospective campaign manager.
but first he had one question:
or a dead baby bird.
my job any easier.
say, at a rally, calls you a faggot?
might want to physically harm you.
the boy that I was at that time
at the chance to be harmed,
even life, for a cause.
but there was --
for nothing more than being himself,
to do in the first place.
was what I thought was asked of me.
I was an upstanding citizen.
could not save me after all,
a concentrated dose, no doubt,
that's offered to us all.
of who we are and what we've been through:
to the world can be hard,
of ourselves can be much harder.
to sound like yourself."
that night at 24,
started a successful nonprofit,
on the stage at TED.
a kid is supposed to achieve.
but not too far off,
until I was nearly 23.
is about the only industry
your own problems, so --
about as strange as I felt at that time,
to stage his own intervention
to write an autobiography.
of autobiography in this country,
who write to assert their existence.
and learn from them.
what we are taught --
is the safe direction.
or poor lives are marginal lives.
says on "Section.80.":
looking around."
the direction of myself,
refuse the awful bargains
that are easily digestible;
so that we make sense to others,
so the right people might befriend us
and the right jobs might hire us,
might invite us to the right heaven
forever and ever.
I'll talk to you later."
for many of us in rooms like this
or act like they do.
should remember Lot's wife.
first to his disciples:
read the Bible recently,
his family down in Sodom,
that God decided he had to destroy.
yet still a sap in part,
to warn Lot to gather up his folks
so they grabbed Lot's hands
and his wife's hands,
Whatever you do, don't look back,"
on Sodom and Gomorrah.
got dragged into this.
rains down death,
Lot's wife looks back.
she didn't want to miss the mayhem,
to be sure that her people
to breathe a little easy?
those likely would have been my reasons
with this woman, Lot's wife?
of leaving those people
of a disobedient woman
in all the Bible,
that holds the whole Book together,
on an old rugged cross,
for all time to come.
turn her back on her friends,
the woman's name down.
all of us have to be faggots,
for any of us to be free.
with other vagabonds in the street,
the naked crust of all we are,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Casey Gerald - AmericanCasey Gerald chronicles the current state of the American Dream and explores ways to sustain it for a new generation.
Why you should listen
Casey Gerald has witnessed every facet of the American Dream -- from his harrowing childhood in Texas, to his tenure at the heights of America's elite institutions, to his journeys through the cities and towns of the American heartland where he has spent his recent years as cofounder and CEO of MBAs Across America. Now his work as a writer, speaker, and business leader centers on the question: will the American dream survive another generation?
Gerald began his career in economic policy and government innovation at the Center for American Progress, and he has worked as a strategist with startup social ventures such as The Future Project as well as companies like The Neiman Marcus Group.
Born and raised in Dallas, Gerald received an MBA from Harvard Business School, where he delivered the 2014 commencement address, and a BA in Political Science from Yale College. He has been featured on MSNBC, in The New York Times, Financial Times, The Guardian, and he has appeared on the cover of Fast Company, which also named him one of the "Most Creative People in Business." He currently serves on the advisory board of NPR's Generation Listen.
Casey Gerald | Speaker | TED.com