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学会勇敢表达:扩展你的行为边界与影响力

听力内容简介

本文通过精选100篇经典TED演讲,结合真实故事与研究成果,探讨如何突破表达边界,勇敢发声,扩展行为范围与影响力,帮助学习者在英语听力与口语方面全面提升。

小技巧:选中单词后按放大器可以翻译单词哦

文章内容

精选100篇经典TED演讲,时长8-15分钟,内容涵盖创新、成长与未来趋势。提供MP3在线播放、下载及英文文本,助你提升听力与口语。用思想的力量,点燃学习热情!下面是本期【TED】100篇经典演讲口语听力素材合集的内容,坚持积累,让你的英语更贴近生活!

I understood the true meaning of this phrase exactly one month ago when my wife and I became new parents. And it was an amazing moment. It was exhilarating and elating, but it was also scary and terrifying. And it got particularly terrifying when we got home from the hospital. And we were unsure whether our little baby boy was getting enough nutrients from breast feeding. And we wanted to call our pediatrician, but we also didn't want to make a bad first impression or come across as a crazy neurotic parent. So we worried and we waited. When we got to the doctor's office the next day, she immediately gave him formula because he was pretty dehydrated. Now our son is fine now and our doctor has reassured us we can always contact her, but in that moment I should have spoken up, but I didn't.

But sometimes we speak up when we shouldn't. And I learned that over 10 years ago when I let my twin brother down. My twin brother is a documentary filmmaker. And for one of his first films, he got an offer from a distribution company. And he was excited and he was inclined to accept the offer. But as a negotiations researcher, I insisted he make a counter offer and I helped him craft the perfect one. And it was perfect. It was perfectly insulting. The company was so offended, they literally withdrew the offer and my brother was left with nothing. And I've asked people all over the world about this dilemma of speaking up when they can assert themselves, when they can push their interest, when they can express an opinion, when they can make an ambitious ask. And the range of stories are varied and diverse, but they also make up a universal tapestry.

Can I correct my boss when they make a mistake? Can I confront my coworker who's keep stepping on my toes? Can I challenge my friends in sensitive joke? Can I tell the person I love the most, my deepest insecurities? And through these experience, I've come to recognize that each of us have something called a range of exceptional behavior. Now sometimes we're too strong. We push ourselves too much. That's what happened with my brother, even making an offer was outside his range of exceptional behavior. But sometimes we're too weak. That's what happened with my wife and I. And this range of exceptional behaviors, when we stay within our range, we're rewarded, and we step outside that range, we get punished. In a variety of ways, we get dismissed or demeaned or even ostracized or we lose that raise or that promotion or that deal.

Now the first thing we need to know is what is my range? The key thing is our range isn't fixed. It's actually pretty dynamic. It expands and it narrows based on the context. And there's one thing that determines that range more than anything else and that's your power. Your power determines your range. Well what is power? Power comes in lots of forms. In negotiations, it comes in the form of alternatives. So my brother had no alternatives, he lacked power. The company had lots of alternatives, they had power. Or sometimes it's being new to a country like an immigrant or new to an organization or new to an experience like my wife and I as new parents. Sometimes it's at work or someone's a boss and someone's a subordinate. Sometimes it's in relationships where one person's more invested than the other person. And the key thing is that when we have lots of power, our range is very wide. We have a lot of leeway in how to behave. But when we lack power, our range narrows. We have very little leeway.

And the problem is that when our range narrows, that produces something called the low power double bind. And the low power double bind happens when if we don't speak up, we go unnoticed. But if we do speak up, we get punished. Now many of you have heard the phrase the double bind and connected it with one thing and that's gender. The gender double bind is women who don't speak up go unnoticed and women who do speak up get punished. And the key thing is that women have the same need as men to speak up, but they have barriers to doing so. But what my research has shown over the last two decades is that what looks like a gender difference, it's not really a gender double bind, it's really a low power double bind. And what looks like a gender difference are really often just powered differences in the skies.

Oftentimes, we see a difference between a man and a woman or a man and women and we think biological cause. There's something fundamentally different about the sexes. But in study after study, I found that a better explanation for many sex differences is really power. And so it's the low power double bind. And the low power double bind means that we have a narrow range and we lack power, we have a narrow range and our double bind is very large. So we need to find ways to expand our range. And over the last couple decades, my colleagues and I have found two things really matter. The first, you seem powerful in your own eyes. The second, you seem powerful in the eyes of others. And I feel powerful, I feel confident, not fearful, I expand my own range. When other people see me as powerful, they grant me a wider range. So we need tools to expand our range of exceptional behavior. And I'm going to give you a set of tools today.

Now speaking up is risky, but these tools will lower your risk of speaking up. So the first tool, I'm going to give you, got discovered in negotiations and an important finding. On average, women make less ambitious offers and get sports outcomes than men at the bargaining table. But Hannah Rally-Balls and Emily Montetoula have discovered there's one situation where women get the same outcomes as men and are just as ambitious. That's when they advocate for others. And when they advocate for others, they discover their own range and expand it in their own mind. They become more assertive. Now this is sometimes called the mama bear effect. Like a mama bear defending her cubs, when we advocate for others, we can discover our own voice. But sometimes we have to advocate for ourselves. How do we do that? And one of the most important tools we have to advocate for ourselves is something called perspective taking. And perspective taking is really simple. It's simply looking at the world through the eyes of another person. And it's one of the most important tools we have to expand our range.

When I take your perspective and I think about what you really want, you're more likely to give me what I really want. But here's the problem. Perspective taking is hard to do. So let's do a little experiment. I want you all to hold your hand just like this, your finger, put it up. And I want you to draw a capillette or e on your forehead as quickly as possible. Okay. It turns out that we can draw this e in one of two ways. And this was originally designed as a test of perspective taking. I'm going to show you two pictures of someone with an e on their forehead, my former student, Erica Hall. And you can see over here, that's the correct e. I drew the e so it looks like an e to another person. That's the perspective taking e because it looks like an e from someone else's vantage point. But this e over here is the self-focusty. And we often get so focused and we particularly get so focused in a crisis. I want to tell you about a particular crisis. A man walks into a bank in Watsonville, California. And he says, give me $2,000 on below in the whole bank up with a bomb. Now the bank manager didn't give him the money. She took a step back. She took his perspective. And she noticed something really important. He has for a specific amount of money. So she said, why did you ask for $2,000? And he said, my friend's going to be evicted unless I get him $2,000 immediately. And she said, oh, you don't want to rob the bank. You want to take out a loan? Why don't you come back to my office and we can have you fill out the paperwork? Now her quick perspective taking diffused a volatile situation.

So when we take someone's perspective, it allows us to be ambitious and assertive, but still be likeable. Here's another way to be assertive, but still be likeable. And that is to signal flexibility. Now imagine your car salesperson and you want to sell someone a car. You're going to more likely make the sale if you give them two options. Let's say option A, $24,000 for this car and a five year warranty. Or option B, $23,000 and a three year warranty. My research shows that when you give people a choice among options, it lowers their defenses and they're more likely to accept your offer. But this doesn't just work with salespeople. It works with parents. When my niece was four, she resisted getting dressed and rejected everything. But then my sister-in-law had a brilliant idea. What if I gave my daughter a choice? This shirt or that shirt? Okay, that shirt. This pant or that pant? Okay, that pant. And it worked brilliantly.

She got dressed quickly and without resistance. When I've asked the question around the world when people feel comfortable speaking up, the number one answer is when I have social support in my audience. When I have allies. So we want to get allies on our side. How do we do that? Well, one of the ways is be a mama bear. When we advocate for others, we expand our range in our own eyes and the eyes of others, but we also earn strong allies. Now another way that we can earn strong allies, especially in high places, is by asking other people for advice. Because when we ask others for advice, they like us because we flatter them and we're expressing humility. And this really works to solve another double bind. And that's the self-promotion double bind. The self-promotion double bind is that if we don't advertise our accomplishments, no one notices, and if we do, we're not likeable. But if we ask for advice about one of our accomplishments, we are able to be competent in their eyes, but also be likeable. And this is so powerful. It even works when you see it coming. There have been multiple times in my life where I have been forewarned that a low power person has been given the advice to come ask me for advice. And I want to notice three things about this. First, I knew they were going to come ask me for advice. Two, I've actually done research on the strategic benefits of asking for advice. Three, it still works. I took their perspective. I became more invested in their calls. I became more committed to them because they asked for advice.

Now, another time we feel more confident speaking up is when we have expertise. Expertise gives us credibility. Now when we have high power, we already have credibility. We only need good evidence. When we lack power, we don't have the credibility. We need excellent evidence. And one of the ways that we can come across as an expert is by tapping into our passion. I want everyone in the next few days to go up to a friend of theirs and just say to them, I want you to describe a passion of yours to me. I've had people do this all over the world and I asked them, what did you notice about the other person when they described their passion and the answers are always the same? Their eyes lit up and got big. They smiled a big, beaming smile. They used their hands all over. I had to duck because their hands were coming at me. They talk quickly with a little higher pitch. And they leaned in as if telling me a secret. And then I said to them, what happened to you as you listened to their passion? And they said, my eyes lit up. I smiled. I leaned in. When we tap into our passion, we give ourselves the courage and our own eyes to speak up. We also get the permission from others to speak up. And tapping into our passion even works when we come across as two weeks. Both men and women get punished at work when they shed tears. But Lizzy Wolf has shown that when we frame our strong emotions as passion, the condemnation of our crying disappears for both men and women.

I want to end with a few words from my late father that he spoke of my twin brothers wedding. And here's a picture of us. My dad was a psychologist like me, but his real love and his real passion was cinema, like my brother. And so he wrote a speech from my brothers wedding about the roles we play in the human comedy. And he said, the lighter you touch, the better you become at improving and enriching your performance. Those who embrace their roles and work to improve their performance grow, change and expand the self. Play it well and your days will be mostly joyful. And what my dad was saying is that we've all been assigned ranges and roles in this world. But he was also saying the essence of this talk. Those roles and ranges are constantly expanding and evolving. So when a scene calls for it, be a ferocious mama bear and a humble advice seeker. Have excellent evidence and strong allies. Be a passionate perspective taker. And if you use those tools and each and every one of you can use these tools, you are expand your range of acceptable behavior and your days will be mostly joyful. Thank you.

部分单词释义

  • advocate

    及物动词提倡; 鼓吹; 拥护; 为…辩护

    名词提倡者; (辩护)律师; 支持者

    The verb is pronounced /'?dv?ke?t/. The noun is pronounced /'?dv?k?t/. 动词读作 /'?dv?ke?t/,名词读作 /'?dv?k?t/。
  • perspective

    名词透镜,望远镜; 观点,看法; 远景,景色; 洞察力

    形容词(按照)透视画法的; 透视的

    1. (尤指受到某种思想、经验影响的)思考方法,态度,观点,角度
    A particular perspective is a particular way of thinking about something, especially one that is influenced by your beliefs or experiences.

    e.g. He says the death of his father 18 months ago has given him a new perspective on life...
    他说18个月前父亲的去世让他对人生有了新的认识。
    e.g. ...two different perspectives on the nature of adolescent development...
    对青少年成长发育特点的两种不同观点

    2. 正确/不正确地看待(或判断)
    If you get something in perspective or into perspective, you judge its real importance by considering it in relation to everything else. If you get something out of perspective, you fail to judge its real importance in relation to everything else.

    e.g. Remember to keep things in perspective...
    记住要客观看待事物。
    e.g. It helps to put their personal problems into perspective...
    这有助于正确看待他们的个人问题。

    3. 透视画法
    Perspective is the art of making some objects or people in a picture look further away than others.

  • double

    形容词双的; 两倍的; 两面派的; 双人用的

    及物动词使加倍; 把…对折; 重复

    不及物动词加倍,加倍努力; 快步走

    副词两倍地; 双重地

    名词两倍; 双精度型

    1. 双的;成双的;成对的
    You use double to indicate that something includes or is made of two things of the same kind.

    e.g. ...a pair of double doors into the room from the new entrance hall.
    从新的门厅通向该房间的一对双开门
    e.g. ...a lone skier gliding along smooth double tracks.
    独自沿平滑的双轨雪道滑行的滑雪者

    2. (用于单数名词前)两个的,双重的
    You use double before a singular noun to refer to two things of the same type that occur together, or that are connected in some way.

    e.g. ...an extremely nasty double murder...
    极端残忍的双重谋杀
    e.g. The government committed a double blunder...
    政府重蹈覆辙。

    3. (数量、大小)两倍的,加倍的
    If something is double the amount or size of another thing, it is twice as large.

    e.g. The offer was to start a new research laboratory at double the salary he was then getting...
    所提供的工作机会是创建一个新的研究实验室,待遇是他当时所得工资的两倍。
    e.g. Leeds Prison is reported to have almost double the number of prisoners it's designed to accommodate.
    据报道利兹监狱里犯人的数量几乎已达该监狱设计可容纳人数的两倍了。

    4. 加倍的;双料的;可容纳两个的
    You use double to describe something which is twice the normal size or can hold twice the normal quantity of something.

    e.g. ...a double helping of ice cream.
    双份的冰激凌
    e.g. ...a large double garage...
    能停放两辆车的大车库

    5. (房间)双人的,供两人用的
    A double room is a room intended for two people, usually a couple, to stay or live in.

    e.g. ...bed and breakfast for £180 for two people in a double room.
    费用为180英镑的双人间,含房费和早餐

    6. (床)双人的
    A double bed is a bed that is wide enough for two people to sleep in.

    7. (酒等饮料)双份的
    You use double to describe a drink that is twice the normal measure.

    e.g. He was drinking his double whiskey too fast and scowling.
    他猛灌着双份威士忌,脸色阴沉。

    8. (用于单词拼写或数字中)两个的
    Double is used when you are spelling a word or telling someone a number to show that a letter or digit is repeated.

    e.g. Ring four two double two double two if you'd like to speak to our financial adviser.
    如果想和我们的财务顾问通话,拨打 422222。

    9. (使)加倍;(使)增加一倍
    When something doubles or when you double it, it becomes twice as great in number, amount, or size.

    e.g. The number of managers must double to 100 within 3 years...
    经理的人数在3年内必须翻倍达到 100人。
    e.g. The program will double the amount of money available to help pay for child care.
    该方案将使可用于帮助支付儿童保育的钱款增加一倍。

    10. 酷似的人;极相似的人
    If you refer to someone as a person's double, you mean that they look exactly like them.

    e.g. Your mother sees you as her double.
    你母亲将你看作是她的翻版。

    11. 兼职;兼任;兼做
    If a person or thing doubles as someone or something else, they have a second job or purpose as well as their main one.

    e.g. ...a farmer who doubles as a night nurse...
    兼做夜班护士的农夫
    e.g. Lots of homes in town double as businesses.
    镇里的很多民宅还兼做商用。

    12. (网球或羽毛球等的)双打
    In tennis or badminton, when people play doubles, two teams consisting of two players on each team play against each other on the same court.

    13. 迅速;立即;马上
    If you do something at the double or on the double, you do it very quickly or immediately.

    e.g. Two soldiers entered at the double and saluted...
    两名士兵立即进来敬礼。
    e.g. Come to my office, please, at the double.
    请来我的办公室,马上。

    14. 弯腰;弓着身子
    When you bend double, you bend the top half of your body downwards a long way.

    e.g. There wasn't room to stand up and he had to bend double.
    空间太小无法站直,他不得不弓着身子。

    15. 弯腰的;弓着身子的
    If you are bent double, the top half of your body is bent downwards so that your head is close to your knees.

    e.g. Pickers are bent double, plucking each flower with lightning speed.
    采花人弓着身子飞快地摘着花。

    16. (眼花等时)看成重影
    If you are seeing double, there is something wrong with your eyes, and you can see two images instead of one.

    e.g. I was dizzy, seeing double.
    我一阵眩晕,看到的都是重影。

    17. in double figures - see figure

    相关词组:double backdouble up

  • passion

    名词激情,热情; 热心,爱好; 热恋; 酷爱

    及物动词不及物动词[诗歌用语]表露强烈感情,显示巨大热情

    1. 强烈的情欲;热恋
    Passion is strong sexual feelings towards someone.

    e.g. ...my passion for a dark-haired, slender boy named James.
    我对一个名叫詹姆斯的黑头发高挑个儿男孩的热恋
    e.g. ...the expression of love and passion.
    爱和情欲的表达

    2. 热情;激情;强烈的感情
    Passion is a very strong feeling about something or a strong belief in something.

    e.g. He spoke with great passion.
    他发表了热情洋溢的讲话。
    e.g. ...the passion and commitment of the Republican candidate.
    共和党候选人的激情和奉献精神

    3. 强烈爱好;酷爱
    If you have a passion for something, you have a very strong interest in it and like it very much.

    e.g. She had a passion for gardening...
    她酷爱园艺。
    e.g. His other great passion was Italy.
    他酷爱的另一个国家是意大利。

  • flexibility

    名词柔度; 柔韧性,机动性,灵活性; 伸缩性; 可塑度

  • volatile

    形容词易变的,不稳定的; (液体或油)易挥发的; 爆炸性的; 快活的,轻快的

    1. 易变的;动荡不定的;反复无常的
    A situation that is volatile is likely to change suddenly and unexpectedly.

    e.g. There have been riots before and the situation is volatile...
    以前曾发生过暴乱,现在局势不太稳定。
    e.g. The international oil markets have been highly volatile since the early 1970s...
    从20世纪70年代初开始,国际石油市场就一直很不稳定。

    volatility
    He is keen to see a general reduction in arms sales given the volatility of the region.
    鉴于该地区局势动荡,他非常希望武器销售能全面缩减。
    ...current stock market volatility.
    目前股票市场的起伏动荡
  • ferocious

    形容词凶猛; 残忍的; 极度的; 恶

    1. 凶猛的;凶暴的
    A ferocious animal, person, or action is very fierce and violent.

    e.g. ...a ferocious guard-dog...
    凶恶的看门狗
    e.g. The police had had to deal with some of the most ferocious violence ever seen on the streets of London.
    警方不得不去处理伦敦街头发生的一些极其严重的暴力事件。

    ferociously
    She kicked out ferociously.
    她狠命地踢着。
  • humility

    名词谦逊,谦恭; 谦让的行为; 谦虚谨慎

    1. 谦逊;谦虚;谦恭
    Someone who has humility is not proud and does not believe they are better than other people.

    e.g. ...a deep sense of humility...
    极为谦虚
    e.g. For a long time he still thought like a millionaire but he has humility now.
    在很长一段时间里,他仍以一个百万富翁的方式思维,但他现在变得谦恭了。

  • leeway

    名词余地; (航行由于强风所致的)偏航; 时间损失,落后; 风压差,风压角

    1. 自由;自由空间;回旋余地
    Leeway is the freedom that someone has to take the action they want to or to change their plans.

    e.g. Rarely do schoolteachers have leeway to teach classes the way they want...
    鲜有学校老师可随心所欲地教书的情况。
    e.g. The President said that he wanted to give states more leeway to pursue their own health-care reforms.
    总统说他希望给各州更多的医疗改革空间。

    2. (需要弥补的)失去时间,落后差距
    If you have leeway to make up, you have to work hard because you do not have much time to reach a particular goal.

    e.g. He just could not make up the leeway from the earlier stages in which Ryan scored well.
    瑞安在前几轮得分很高,他现在再想赶也赶不上了。

  • tapestry

    名词挂毯; 织锦; 绣帷

    及物动词用挂毯装饰; 在一块挂毯中制织出或描绘; 罩上绣花罩毯

    1. 挂毯;壁毯;织锦;花毯
    A tapestry is a large piece of heavy cloth with a picture sewn on it using coloured threads.

    e.g. The seats of the chairs had been recovered in tapestry...
    椅座上又铺回了花毯。
    e.g. He sat on a tapestry cushion next to the hearth...
    他坐在壁炉边上的一块绣花软垫上。

    2. 各式各样的人(或物)
    You can refer to something as a tapestry when it is made up of many varied types of people or things.

    e.g. Hedgerows and meadows are thick with a tapestry of wild flowers.
    灌木树篱和草地中开满了五彩缤纷的野花。
    e.g. ...Chicago's political tapestry.
    芝加哥政坛的丰富多彩

  • allies

    盟军;联盟国,同盟者;同盟国,同盟者( ally的名词复数 );支持者;

  • insulting

    形容词无礼的; 出言不逊的,侮辱的

    动词侮辱,冒犯( insult的现在分词)

    1. 侮辱的;侮慢的;无礼的
    Something that is insulting is rude or offensive.

    e.g. The article was insulting to the families of British citizens...
    那篇文章侮辱了英国公民家庭。
    e.g. One of the apprentices made an insulting remark to a passing officer.
    其中一名学徒对着一名路过的警官说了一句侮辱他的话。

    insultingly
    Anthony laughed loudly and insultingly...
    安东尼无礼地放声大笑。
    I have rarely read anything so insultingly sexist as this article.
    我很少读到像这篇文章般带有侮辱性的性别歧视的东西。
  • condemnation

    名词谴责; 定罪; 谴责(或定罪)的理由; 征用

    1. 谴责;指责
    Condemnation is the act of saying that something or someone is very bad and unacceptable.

    e.g. There was widespread condemnation of Saturday's killings...
    周六的杀人事件受到普遍谴责。
    e.g. The raids have drawn a strong condemnation from the United Nations Security Council.
    突袭行动受到联合国安理会的强烈谴责。

  • elating

    使高兴,使得意( elate的现在分词 );