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[9:22] How I Understand Myself and Life's Rhythm Through Music

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This article describes how the author understands themselves and the rhythm of life through music, from childhood instrument learning to high school music theory, and then to the confusion and self-discovery in university life. Music not only helped the author build their identity but also became a way to comprehend life and cope with changes. The article connects music with the rhythm of life, offering profound insights.

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Selected 100 classic TED talks, lasting 8-15 minutes, covering innovation, growth, and future trends. Provides MP3 streaming, downloads, and English texts to help improve listening and speaking skills. Ignite your learning passion with the power of ideas! Below is this issue's collection of 【TED】100 classic speech listening materials. Stick to accumulating them to make your English closer to daily life!

The philosopher Plato once said, music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, and life to everything. Music has always been a big part of my life. To create and perform music connects you to people of countries and lifetimes away. It connects you to the people you're playing with, to your audience, and to yourself. When I'm happy, when I'm sad, when I'm bored, when I'm stressed, I listen to and I create music. When I was younger, I played piano. Later I took up guitar, and as I started high school, music became a part of my identity. I was in every band. I was involved with every musical fine arts event. Music surrounded me. It made me who I was, and it gave me a place to belong.

Now, I've always had this thing with rhythms. I remember being young. I would walk down the hallways of my school, and I would tap rhythms to myself, on my leg, with my hands, or tapping my teeth. It was a nervous habit, and I was always nervous. I think I liked the repetition of the rhythm. It was calming. Then in high school, I started music theory, and it was the best class I've ever taken. We were learning about music, things I didn't know, like theory and history. It was a class where we basically just listened to a song, talked about what it meant to us, and analyzed it, and figured out what made it tick. And every Wednesday we did something called rhythmic dictation, and I was pretty good at it.

Our teacher would give us an amount of measures, and a time signature, and then he would speak a rhythm to us, and we would have to write it down with the proper rest and notes. Like this. Ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, ta, and I loved it. The simplicity of the rhythm, a basic two to four measure line, and yet each of them almost told a story, like they had so much potential, and all you had to do was add a melody. Rhythms set a foundation for melodies and harmonies to plant top of. It gives structure and stability. Our music has these parts, rhythm, melody, and harmony, just like our lives, where music has rhythm, we have routines and habits, things that help us to remember what to do and to stay on track, and to just keep going.

And you may not notice it, but it's always there. It's amazingly simple, amazingly dull by itself, but it gives tempo and heartbeat. And then things in your life add on to it, giving texture, that's your friends and your family, and anything that creates a harmonic structure in your life, and in your song, like harmonies, and cadences, and anything that makes it polyphonic. And they create beautiful chords and patterns. And then there's you. You play on top of everything else, on top of the rhythms and the beat, because you're the melody. And things may change and develop, but no matter what we do, we're still the same people. Though the song melodies develop, it's still the same song. No matter what you do, the rhythms are still there, the tempo, and the heartbeat, until I left.

And I went to college and everything disappeared. When I first arrived at university, I felt lost. Don't get me wrong, sometimes I loved it, and it was great, but other times, I felt like I had been left alone, to fend for myself. It's like I'd been taken out of my natural environment and put somewhere new, where the rhythms and the harmonies and the form had gone away. And it was just me. Silence and my melody. And even that began to waver, because I didn't know what I was doing. I didn't have any chords to structure myself, or a rhythm, or a beat to know the tempo. And then I began to hear all these other sounds. And they were off time, and off key. And the more I was around them, the more my melody started to sound like theirs. And slowly I began to lose myself. Like I was being washed away.

But then the next moment, I could hear it. And I could feel it. It was me. And I was here. And it was different. But not worse off. And I was just changed a little. Music is my way of coping with the changes in my life. There's a beautiful connection between music and life. It can bind us to reality at the same time it allows us to escape it. Music is something that lives inside of you. You create it, and you're created by it. Now our lives are not only conducted by music, they're also composed of it. And this makes them like a bit of a stretch, but hear me out.

Music is a fundamental part of what we are and of everything around us. Now music is my passion, but physics also used to be an interest of mine. And the more I learned, the more I saw connections between the two, especially regarding string theory. Now I know this is only one of many theories, but it spoke to me. So one aspect of string theory at its simplest form is this. Matter is made up of atoms, which are made up of protons and neutrons and electrons, which are made up of cork. And here's where the string part comes in. This cork is supposedly made up of little coiled strings. And it's the vibrations of these strings that make everything what it is. Michoukaka wants to explain this in a lecture called The Universe in a Nutshell, where he says, string theory is the simple idea that the four forces of the universe, gravity, the electromagnetic force, and the two strong forces can be viewed as music, the music of tiny little rubber bands. In this lecture, he goes on to explain physics as the laws of harmony between these strings, chemistry as the melodies you can play on these strings. Many state that the universe is a symphony of strings.

These strings dictate the universe. They make up everything we see and everything we know. They're musical notes, but they make us what we are and they hold us together. So you see, everything is music. When I look at the world, I see music all around us. When I look at myself, I see music. My life has been defined by music. I found myself through music. Music is everywhere and it is in everything. And it changes and it builds and it diminishes. But it's always there supporting us, connecting us to each other and showing us the beauty of the universe. So if you ever feel lost, stop and listen for your song. Thank you. Music.

Listening Comprehension

  • identity

    noun

    1. the distinct personality of an individual regarded as a persisting entity

    e.g. you can lose your identity when you join the army

    Synonym: personal identityindividuality

    2. exact sameness

    e.g. they shared an identity of interests

    Synonym: identicalnessindistinguishability

    3. the individual characteristics by which a thing or person is recognized or known

    e.g. geneticists only recently discovered the identity of the gene that causes it
    it was too dark to determine his identity
    she guessed the identity of his lover

    4. an operator that leaves unchanged the element on which it operates

    e.g. the identity under numerical multiplication is 1

    Synonym: identity elementidentity operator

  • melody

    noun

    1. the perception of pleasant arrangements of musical notes

    Synonym: tonal pattern

    2. a succession of notes forming a distinctive sequence

    e.g. she was humming an air from Beethoven

    Synonym: tuneairstrainmelodic linelinemelodic phrase

  • rhythm

    noun

    1. natural family planning in which ovulation is assumed to occur 14 days before the onset of a period (the fertile period would be assumed to extend from day 10 through day 18 of her cycle)

    Synonym: rhythm method of birth controlrhythm methodcalendar method of birth controlcalendar method

    2. recurring at regular intervals

    Synonym: regular recurrence

    3. the arrangement of spoken words alternating stressed and unstressed elements

    e.g. the rhythm of Frost's poetry

    Synonym: speech rhythm

    4. the basic rhythmic unit in a piece of music

    e.g. the piece has a fast rhythm
    the conductor set the beat

    Synonym: beatmusical rhythm

    5. an interval during which a recurring sequence of events occurs

    e.g. the never-ending cycle of the seasons

    Synonym: cycleround

  • structure

    noun

    1. a thing constructed
    a complex entity constructed of many parts

    e.g. the structure consisted of a series of arches
    she wore her hair in an amazing construction of whirls and ribbons

    Synonym: construction

    2. the manner of construction of something and the arrangement of its parts

    e.g. artists must study the structure of the human body
    the structure of the benzene molecule

    3. a particular complex anatomical part of a living thing

    e.g. he has good bone structure

    Synonym: anatomical structurecomplex body partbodily structurebody structure

    4. the complex composition of knowledge as elements and their combinations

    e.g. his lectures have no structure

    5. the people in a society considered as a system organized by a characteristic pattern of relationships

    e.g. the social organization of England and America is very different
    sociologists have studied the changing structure of the family

    Synonym: social organizationsocial organisationsocial structuresocial system

  • symphony

    noun

    1. a long and complex sonata for symphony orchestra

    Synonym: symphonic music

    2. a large orchestra
    can perform symphonies

    e.g. we heard the Vienna symphony

    Synonym: symphony orchestraphilharmonic

  • coiled

    adj

    1. curled or wound (especially in concentric rings or spirals)

    e.g. a coiled snake ready to strike
    the rope lay coiled on the deck