Selected 100 classic TED talks, each 8-15 minutes long, covering innovation, personal growth, and future trends. Provides MP3 streaming, downloads, and English transcripts to improve listening and speaking skills. Ignite your learning passion with the power of ideas! Here is the content of this edition of 【TED】100 classic speech listening materials collection. Consistently accumulating, it will make your English more practical!
How many of you are tired of seeing celebrities adopting kids from the African continent? Well, it's not that old bad. I was adopted. I grew up in Roryuganda. Lost both my parents when I was very, very young. When my parents passed, I experienced all the negative effects of poverty. From homelessness, eating out of trash piles, you name it. But my life changed when I got accepted into an
orphanage. Through one of those sponsors and orphaned programs, I was sponsored and given an opportunity to acquire an education. I started off in Uganda, I went through school, and the way this particular program worked, you finished high school and after high school you go learn a trade. So you become a carpenter, a mechanic, or something along those lines.
My case was a little different. The sponsor family that was sending this $25 a month to this orphanage to sponsor me, which I've never met. I said, well, we would like to send you to college instead. Oh, it gets better. And they said, if you get the paperwork, we send you to school in America instead. So with that help, I went to the
embassy and applied for the visa. I got the visa. I remember this day like it was yesterday. I walked out of the embassy with this piece of paper in my hand, hope in my step, smile on my face knowing that my life is about a change. I went home that night and I slept with my passport because I was afraid that someone might steal it. I couldn't fall asleep. I kept feeling it. I had a good idea for security. I was like, okay, I'm going to put it in a plastic bag and take it outside and dig a hole and put it in there. I did that. Went back in the house. I could not fall asleep. Or maybe someone saw me. I went back. I pulled it out and I put it with me the entire night. I was going to say that it was an anxiety-filled night.
Going to the US was just like another week. I said it was my first time to see a plane, be on one, live alone, sit on it to fly to another country. December 15, 2006, 7 or 8 p.m. I sat in seat 7 on Fly Emirates. One of the most gorgeous beautiful women I've ever seen walked up. Red little hat, the white veil. I'm looking terrified. I have no idea what I'm doing. She handed me this warm towel. Warm, steamy, snow white. I'm looking at this warm towel. I didn't know what to do with my life, live alone with this towel. I looked around to see what everyone else was doing. I did the same. Mind you, I drove about 7 hours from my village to the airport that day. So I grabbed this warm towel, wiped my face. Just like everyone else. I looked at it. Damn. It was all dirt brown. I remember being so embarrassed that when she came by to pick it up, I didn't give mine. I still have it.
Going to America opened doors for me to live up to my full God-given potential. I remember when I arrived, the sponsor family embraced me and they literally had to teach me everything from scratch. This is a microwave. That's a refrigerator. Things I've never seen before. It was also the first time I got
immersed into a new, different culture. These strangers showed me true love. These strangers showed me that I mattered. That my dreams mattered. Thank you. These individuals had two of their own
biological children. When I came in, I had needs. They had to teach me English, teach me literally everything, which resulted in them spending a lot of time with me. That created a little bit of jealousy with their children.
If you're a parent in this room and you have those teenage children who don't want anything to do with your love and affection, in fact they find it repulsive, I got a solution. Adopt a child. It was solved with a problem. I went on top of my two engineering degrees from one of the best institutions in the world. I got to tell you talent is universal, but opportunities are not. I credit this to the individuals who embrace multiculturalism, love, empathy and compassion for others. We live in a world filled with hate, building walls, Brexit, xenophobia here on the African continent. Multiculturalism can be an answer to many of these worst human qualities. Today, I challenge you to help a young child experience multiculturalism. I guarantee you that will enrich their life and in turn it will enrich yours. And as a bonus, one of them may even give a TED Talk. We may not be able to solve the bigotry and the racism of this world today, but certainly we can raise children to create a positive, inclusive, connected world full of empathy, love and compassion. Love wins. Thank you.