|
이번 주엔 우리에게 일어날 수 있는 가장 끔찍한 것에 대해 얘기해봅시다.
http://www.ted.com/talks/david_hoffman_on_losing_everything
125th TED Talks with Jonathan (2016.06.02.)
Time Table
07:30~07:55 Greeting & Small Talk
07:55~08:00 Break Time (Table changes)
08:00~08:40 Topic Talk (40 minutes)
08:40~08:50 Break Time(Table changes)
08:50~09:30 TED Talk (40 minutes)
09:30~09:50 Wrap up (Share your TED and New Comer Introductions)
Small Talk : Super-hero movies
1. Say hello to each other. How was your weekend and weekday?
2. Talk about the super-hero movies you’ve recently watched. (Avengers, X-men,…)
3. Who is your most favorite hero?
4. If possible, which special ability do you want to have? Why?
5. What’s the downside of the super hero movies?
Topic Talk : Choosing the right place for you
You'll get more from your trip if you work out what you want to gain before you set off. The following pointers should help you plan a break that lives up to your expectations.
Do your research
Is the point of the trip to relax and de-stress, or are you looking for thrills and new experiences? Do you want to make a change in your own life, or would you rather make a difference for other people? Whatever you're looking for, do some research before you go. Look for tourist information on the web, use message boards and buy guidebooks for the countries you want to visit. Decide upfront if you want to travel independently, or join an organized year out program; there are several guidebooks to taking a year out that list useful organizations.
Consider political situations and culture
Check the political situation of any countries you want to visit before you go. The FCO website provides up to date travel advice for every country in the world. Be aware of cultural differences when you travel. Islamic areas, such as the Maldives, have conservative attitudes when it comes to female modesty and alcohol, while in Greece it's insulting to show someone the palm of your hand. Read up about the culture before you go and respect local attitudes and beliefs. Most guidebooks have a comprehensive cultural dos and don'ts section in them.
Go eco-friendly
The environmental affects of travel are another growing issue. Most countries offer eco-friendly tours or activities and your travel money will ensure that the things you've come to see can be preserved for future generations. One of the biggest problems worldwide is discarded plastic drinking water bottles, so consider purifying your own water or bringing a water bottle and filling it at your hotel. Even the smallest efforts help.
RTW tickets
One of the easiest ways to see the world is with a round-the-world (RTW) plane ticket. These tickets allow you to perform a complete circuit of the globe using a specific set of airlines. You can stop as many times as you like along the way as long as you don't double back on yourself.
The big advantage of round-the-world tickets is that you choose where to stop. If you've always wanted to see the Taj Mahal, the Great Wall of China, the Statue of Liberty and Uluru (Ayers Rock), then India, China, America and Australia could all appear on your itinerary.
Alternatively, you could stick to one region that particularly captures your imagination. Africa, Asia and South America offer fantastic opportunities for overland travel. Asia is the obvious choice for spirituality and self-improvement. For unspoiled nature, head to Africa, Australia or South America.
Relaxation or adventure?
Fans of adrenalin and adventure have several options. For a mental and physical challenge, you can't beat trekking in Nepal. Australia, New Zealand and South Africa are also major adrenalin destinations, with tremendous opportunities for bungee jumping, skydiving, surfing and white-water rafting.
If you just want to relax, Europe and America offer all the comforts of home and a huge range of things to see and do. Or you could kick back on a tropical beach in Thailand, Australia or the Indian Ocean. Many tropical destinations offer relaxing therapies like massage, yoga and tai chi to help you unwind.
If you're looking for a challenge on your year out, you could learn a new skill while you travel. Most large cities have language schools where you can study the local language or you could study for a TEFL certificate and become an English teacher yourself; schools in Japan and Korea offer high wages to lure teachers from the UK.
Other popular things to learn include scuba diving, adventure sports, such as surfing and sailing, and
cooking courses in exotic locations like India and Thailand. Or you could set yourself the challenge of a
lifetime and sail across the Atlantic or drive from Cairo to Cape Town.
Topic Questions
1. How often do you travel? And how often and when do you feel like you want to go travel?
2. We have been abroad to study, to work, or to have fun. Now, let’s talk about our experience.
3. Tell us about your best trip and worst trip.
4. Where do you want to go most for your trip? What could be the reason for the trip?
5. Do you have any plan to travel abroad this year? What’s your plan?
6. If your lover has different taste for travel, do you think you can get over it?
TED Talks. David Hoffman : What happens when you lose everything
0:12
I had a fire nine days ago. My archive: 175 films, my 16-millimeter negative, all my books, my dad's books, my photographs. I'd collected -- I was a collector, major, big-time. It's gone. I just looked at it, and I didn't know what to do. I mean, this was -- was I my things? I always live in the present -- I love the present.
0:44
I cherish the future. And I was taught some strange thing as a kid, like, you've got to make something good out of something bad. You've got to make something good out of something bad. This was bad! Man, I was -- I cough. I was sick. That's my camera lens. The first one -- the one I shot my Bob Dylan film with 35 years ago. That's my feature film. "King, Murray" won Cannes Film Festival 1970 -- the only print I had. That's my papers.
1:12
That was in minutes -- 20 minutes. Epiphany hit me. Something hit me. "You've got to make something good out of something bad," I started to say to my friends, neighbors, my sister. By the way, that's "Sputnik." I ran it last year. "Sputnik" was downtown, the negative. It wasn't touched. These are some pieces of things I used in my Sputnik feature film, which opens in New York in two weeks downtown. I called my sister. I called my neighbors. I said, "Come dig." That's me at my desk. That was a desk took 40-some years to build. You know -- all the stuff. That's my daughter, Jean. She came. She's a nurse in San Francisco.
1:51
"Dig it up," I said. "Pieces. I want pieces. Bits and pieces." I came up with this idea: a life of bits and pieces, which I'm just starting to work on -- my next project. That's my sister. She took care of pictures, because I was a big collector of snapshot photography that I believed said a lot. And those are some of the pictures that -- something was good about the burnt pictures. I didn't know. I looked at that -- I said, "Wow, is that better than the --" That's my proposal on Jimmy Doolittle. I made that movie for television. It's the only copy I had. Pieces of it. Idea about women.
2:24
So I started to say, "Hey, man, you are too much! You could cry about this." I really didn't. I just instead said, "I'm going to make something out of it, and maybe next year ... " And I appreciate this moment to come up on this stage with so many people who've already given me so much solace, and just say to TEDsters: I'm proud of me. That I take something bad, I turn it, and I'm going to make something good out of this, all these pieces. That's Arthur Leipzig's original photograph I loved. I was a big record collector -- the records didn't make it. Boy, I tell you, film burns. Film burns. I mean, this was 16-millimeter safety film. The negatives are gone.
3:05
That's my father's letter to me, telling me to marry the woman I first married when I was 20. That's my daughter and me. She's still there. She's there this morning, actually. That's my house. My family's living in the Hilton Hotel in Scotts Valley. That's my wife, Heidi, who didn't take it as well as I did. My children, Davey and Henry. My son, Davey, in the hotel two nights ago.
3:34
So, my message to you folks, from my three minutes, is that I appreciate the chance to share this with you. I will be back. I love being at TED. I came to live it, and I am living it. That's my view from my window outside of Santa Cruz, in Bonny Doon, just 35 miles from here. Thank you everybody.
3:53
(Applause)
TED Talks 데이빗 호프만 : 모든 것을 잃어버렸을 때 일어나는 일
0:12
9일 전에 화재가 있었습니다. 저의 애장품: 175편의 영화, 16-밀리 네거티브필름, 모든 책들, 아버지의 책들, 제가 모아왔던-- 저는 수집가였습니다. 중요하고 야심찬 것이었죠 다 사라졌습니다. 저는 단지 그 현장을 바라보고 있었습니다. 그리고 무엇을 해야할지 몰랐구요. 진정 이것들이 -- 나의 물건들이었는가? 전 항상 현실에 살고 있고 -- 전 현재를 사랑합니다.
0:44
전 항상 미래를 간직하며 살고 있습니다. 그리고 어릴 때부터 다소 이상한 것을 배웠습니다. 말하자면, 나쁜 것에서 좋은 것을 찾아야 한다는 것이죠. 나쁜 일을 겪어도 좋은 면을 찾아야 하는 거죠. 하지만 제게 이번 일은 정말 힘들었습니다. 기침을 하고 시름시름 앓아 누을 정도였습니다. 저것은 제 카메라렌즈인데, 첫 번째였죠 -- 저 렌즈로 35년 전 밥 딜런 영화를 찍었습니다. 저것은 장편영화 "King, Murray"입니다. 1970년 칸영화제에서 수상한 작품입니다 -- 제가 가지고 있던 유일한 현상본이었습니다. 저것은 신문들입니다.
1:12
순식간이었습니다. 20분도 채 안 된 일이었죠. 순간적으로 무엇인가 떠올랐죠. "나쁜 일이 있더라도 좋은 면을 찾아야 한다." 저는 친구들, 이웃, 여동생과 대화를 시작했습니다. 그나저나, 저것은 "Sputnik"인데 작년에 찍은 거죠. "Sputnik"은 아직 손도 대지 않은 네거티브 필름이었죠. 이것은 제가 나만의 Sputnik 특선영화 제작에 사용했던 것의 일부분입니다. 2 주 뒤면 뉴욕에서 상영될 예정입니다. 중심가에서 말이죠. 저는 여동생과 이웃들에게 전화해서 "파보자"고 말했습니다. 접니다. 책상과 앞에 있습니다. 40년 남짓 걸려 만든 책상이었습니다. 잘 아시겠지만 -- 모든 것들입니다. 제 딸, Jean 입니다. 샌프란시스코에서 간호사로 일하는 제 딸도 왔죠.
1:51
"파내자," "조각이라도 건져야지, 한 조각이나 일부분이라도 좋겠다"고 말했습니다. 이런 생각이 떠올랐습니다: 조각과 일부분의 삶, 막 작업하기 시작한 - 나의 다음 프로젝트 제 여동생입니다. 사진을 관리했습니다. 왜냐면 제가 스냅샷 사진 수집가였기 때문이죠. 스냅샷은 많은 것을 말해준다고 생각했습니다. 여기 몇 장의 사진들이 있습니다 -- 타버린 사진들에도 무엇인가 좋은 것이 있었습니다. 몰랐죠. 나는 그저 바라 보았습니다 -- 전 "와우, 이건 훨씬 더 좋자나"라고 말했습니다. 저 것은 Jimmy Doolittle에 대한 제안서입니다. TV 방영을 목표로 만든 영화죠. 그게 가지고 있던 유일한 복사본이었죠. 여자들에 대한 생각이었습니다.
2:24
그래도 저는 "이봐, 이건 정말 너무하군"이라고 말했습니다. 당신이라면 울었을 지도 모르겠습니다만, 전 울지 않았죠. 대신 전 말했습니다, "나는 무엇인가를 얻어내고야 말 것이다. 그리고 아마도 내년에.." 전 이 순간을 감사히 여기고 있습니다. 이 많은 사람들과 이러한 무대에 서있다는 것이 많은 사람들이 충분히 많은 위안을 주었고, TED에서 이야기를 전하고 있습니다. 전 제 자신이 자랑스럽습니다. 비록 힘든 일을 겪더라도, 생각을 전환해서, 무엇인가 좋은 것을 얻으려 할 것입니다. 이 모든 조각들에서 말이죠. 이것은 제가 좋아했던 Arthur Leipzig의 원본 사진입니다. 전 열렬한 레코드 수집가였습니다. 레코드는 사라졌죠. 여러분께 이 말을 하고자 합니다. 필름은 탑니다. 당연히 타지요. 이게 불에 타지않는 16-밀리 단연필름이었다는 뜻입니다. 네거티브 필름은 사라졌습니다.
3:05
이것은 아버지께서 쓴 편지입니다. 제가 20살 때 처음으로 결혼했던 여자와 결혼하라는 내용입니다. 저의 딸과 접니다. 제 딸은 여전히 거기에 있고 오늘 아침에도 있었습니다, 정말로요. 저것은 제 집입니다. 가족들은 Scotts Valley에 있는 힐튼 호텔에서 머무르고 있습니다. 와이프, Heidi입니다. 제가 심각하게 생각하는 만큼 힘들어하지 않는 아이들, Davey와 Henry입니다. 이틀 전 호텔에서 본 아들 Davey입니다.
3:34
결국 제가 여러분께 하고 싶은 말은 이 경험을 여러분과 나눌 수 있었던 3 분에 감사드린다는 것입니다. 저는 다시 돌아 올 것입니다. TED에 참여하는 것은 정말 좋습니다. 저는 살기 위해 여기 왔으며, 살고 있습니다. Bonny Doon에 있는 Santa Cruz 외곽의 집에서 내려다 본 광경입니다. 여기서 불과 35 마일 떨어진 곳이죠. 감사합니다. 여러분.
3:53
(박수)
TED Questions
1. Talk about the stuffs you’ve been keeping and cherishing for the long time. Why do you keep them?
2. Suppose that you’d get fire on your house and you’d have only ten minutes to escape. What would you take out with you?
3. What do you feel if you’d lose everything you possess with fire or any other disaster? Can you make something good out of that lost?
4. Talk about the instances when you thought you lost everything. How could you overcome them?
5. Knowing that you could lose your cherished thing sometimes, what can you do for that now?
6. Some say ‘when you lose your health, you lose everything.’ What would make you feel lose everything when you lose it?
첫댓글 negative
(필름)음화
Epiphany
공현절
come up with
To bring forth, discover, or produce
solace
위안, 위로
TEDsters
테드스터