Heather Lanier: "Good" and "bad" are incomplete stories we tell ourselves
希瑟•拉尼尔: 塞翁失马焉知祸福并不是故事的全部
Heather Lanier illuminates truths about the human condition that speak to both the head and the heart. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
about a farmer who lost his horse.
"Oh, that's too bad."
说“这太糟糕了。”
"Good or bad, hard to say."
and brings with it seven wild horses.
后面还跟着七匹野马。
"Oh, that's so good!"
and says, "Good or bad, hard to say."
rides one of the wild horses,
"Oh, that's terrible luck."
"Good or bad, hard to say."
knocking on people's doors,
and they pass him by.
断了腿,就没抓他。
"Ooh, that's great luck!"
"Good or bad, hard to say."
looking on the bright side
不是说要看好的一面,
to label a situation,
对一个事情下结论,
incomplete stories that we tell ourselves.
我们自己灌输给自己的。
to the story of good or bad,
to truly see a situation.
and loosen my grip
with curiosity and wonder.
wholeheartedly what was good.
was some version of a superbaby,
who possessed not a single flaw
flying into her superhero future.
成为超级英雄的未来。
had a super-high-functioning,
有着很强的执行能力,
would help me make not just a good baby,
不仅仅让我有个好的宝宝,
she weighed 4 pounds, 12 ounces,
她只有 4 磅 12 盎司重,
two possible explanations
只有两个答案能解释
to lose the thread of his logic:
had an ultra-rare chromosomal condition
一种极其罕见的染色体病症,
of her fourth chromosome.
with her syndrome
有着相同症状的人群,
delays and disabilities.
和残疾的几率非常高,
of the farmer.
unequivocally bad to me.
I felt gripped by despair,
我被绝望笼罩着。
that all of this was tragic.
is much more fluid,
this mysterious person who was my kid,
would bounce her tiny body up and down
把她小小的身子来回摇晃的时候,
最闪亮的湖蓝色,
the most stunning Lake Tahoe blue,
into other people's eyes.
hold her head up like other babies,
像别的宝宝一样把头抬起来,
intent eye contact.
aware baby I've ever seen."
的最有意识的宝宝。”
of her calm, attentive presence,
over to our house to work with Fiona
to wake her neurology up.
去让她的神经醒过来。
my daughter's body,
visit our house that first year,
they thought was bad about my kid.
我的孩子不好的地方。
Fiona started using her right hand
的时候,我很高兴,
on my child's left hand.
not to use this hand very often,
the fingers on that hand.
we should devise a splint,
to actually use those fingers,
into some position that looked normal.
看上去是在正常的位置。
to realize a few things.
碰到了几个坏的理疗师。
my kid had some bad therapists.
选择吃红蓝药丸的其中一个,
a red pill or a blue pill,
my daughter's differences as bad;
that her therapists called,
when they could say about a kid,
他们乐于把自己置身之外,
or 'autistic' or 'different.'"
‘自闭症’还是‘不同’。”
was the path that erased
的人生之路一定是那种
一切差异的道路。
a disastrous pursuit,
my daughter had rare blueprints.
我的女儿就已经与别人不同了。
to be like other people.
I could drop my story
我可以把我的故事,
and developmental delays and disabilities
和发展迟缓以及残疾的
that a more able-bodied life was better.
对生活好坏评判的偏见,
about what made a life good or bad
my daughter's life as it unfolded
out of the side of her mouth
her body onto her belly.
and rolled back onto her back,
to do it all over again,
under a coffee table.
来回翻滚着她 12 磅的身子。
she'd gotten stuck there,
that her eye had been on all along:
一直盯着的东西,
pulling up to stand and toddling around,
一定已经能够站起来,
limber freedom of mobility.
was a baby yanking on an electric cord,
看一个婴儿拉扯着电线,
that when I released my grip
and see what it was.
of the human experience.
是人生经历的另一种体验。
to a new state in America,
batch of therapists.
all that was wrong with my kid.
as problems to fix.
当作是问题去解决。
as normal as possible;
让 Fiona 看上去像个正常人;
be as independent as possible
however that looked for her.
她自己独特的潜能。
this open attitude about disabilities.
并不抱有这样开放的态度。
"birth defects,"
were objects on a factory line.
had a baby with Down syndrome.
可能会表达同情之心。
about a suicidal wheelchair user,
自杀电影喝彩的时候,
wheelchair users tell us
decide what lives are not worth living.
决定了我们的生死。
children's hospital
to a lifesaving kidney transplant
of disabilities as bad manifests
insidious counterstory --
with intellectual disabilities are good
有智力缺陷的人都是好的,
to teach us something magical,
一些不同寻常的事物,
and always sweet.
who's one of God's special children,
是上帝选中的特殊孩子。
and the communication device
和交流设备的女孩儿,
in my daughter's life
见到她天使的装束
in angel's wings and a halo
don't experience the sticky complexities
especially as a baby,
看起来就是个天使,
that any other kid does,
shoved her two-year-old sister.
推倒了她两岁的妹妹。
to annoy the hell out of you,
或是天使般,好的或坏的
and complexity that that title brings,
所带来的复杂性,
教会我,或者我们中
mozzarella cheese sticks
一天可以吃掉多少
can consume in one day --
my culture's beliefs
and iPad app to communicate,
用 iPad 应用软件沟通,
I handed Fiona her iPad,
Fiona 的 iPad 交给她的第一天,
or little square on her iPad app.
或是小方块代表着。
是多么自豪和充满希望,
that my expectations were way too high,
都认为我的期望太高了,
to hit those tiny targets.
这些小目标。
as she gradually learned
带着惊奇慢慢的学会
words she loved,
that her mouth couldn't yet say.
但是暂时说不出的单词。
less-fun words, prepositions --
不那么有趣的词,比如说介词——
at a dining room table
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Heather Lanier - Essayist, poetHeather Lanier illuminates truths about the human condition that speak to both the head and the heart.
Why you should listen
As an essayist and a poet, Heather Lanier's work spans a range of subjects, from parenting and disability to pop culture and religion. She is the author of two award-winning poetry chapbooks, The Story You Tell Yourself and Heart-Shaped Bed in Hiroshima, along with the nonfiction book, Teaching in the Terrordome: Two Years in West Baltimore with Teach For America, which MacArthur Genius Deborah Meier called "a heart-wrenching … much-needed account." She has received an Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Award and a Vermont Creation Grant.
In her viral Vela Magazine essay, "SuperBabies Don't Cry," Lanier chronicles her daughter's diagnosis of a rare chromosomal syndrome and explores the ways pregnant women are pressured to create perfect humans. As a mother and a disability advocate, she shines a light on ableist attitudes, encourages readers to see disability as an aspect of diversity, and marvels at the strange beauty of being human. Her book about raising her daughter is forthcoming from Penguin Press and Piatkus / Little, Brown UK. She writes a related blog here, and teaches writing at Southern Vermont College.
Heather Lanier | Speaker | TED.com