TED Talks Daily - Sunday Pick: How to be an adult — and how to raise one | How to Be a Better Human
Episode Date: October 27, 2024Each Sunday, TED shares an episode of another podcast we think you'll love, handpicked for you… by us. Whether it’s grades and test scores, cushy jobs or big salaries, our ideas of “suc...cess” tend to be incredibly narrow and often start incredibly early. Julie Lythcott-Haims is a New York Times bestselling author and former Dean of Freshmen at Stanford, and she is dedicated to helping people reconsider what really makes a happy, “successful” adult. In this episode of How to Be a Better Human, another podcast from the TED Audio Collective, Julie shares wisdom for parents and anyone who has been parented on why it’s crucial to question societal expectations, how to find your own path and why empathy towards yourself and others are the true key to loving who you’ll grow up to be. Get more How to Be a Better Human wherever you get your podcasts.For the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts
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TED Audio Collective.
Hey, TED Talks Daily listeners, I'm Elise Hu.
Today we have an episode of another podcast
from the TED Audio Collective, handpicked by us for you.
What does it mean to be a successful person in this world?
Is it a high salary and a list of achievements?
Or is it the impact we have on others? Thank you. a best-selling author, the former dean of freshmen at Stanford, and a beloved TED speaker.
If you want to hear more great insights from experts like Julie, you can find them each week on How to Be a Better Human, available wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about the TED
Audio Collective at audiocollective.ted.com. Now on to the episode, right after a quick break. Support for this show comes from Airbnb. If you
know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when I travel. They make my family feel most at home
when we're away from home. As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs,
I pictured my own home sitting empty. Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family
like mine by hosting it on Airbnb? It feels like the practical thing to do, and with the extra
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You're listening to How to Be a Better Human.
I'm your host, Chris Duffy.
Sometimes with friends, I play this game where we try and pinpoint what our internal age is. I don't mean our actual biological age, but rather how old we feel on the inside.
I have some friends who are definitely extremely
elderly. They're ones who love an early bedtime and they love an early bird special. They like
to eat dinner while the sun is still high in the sky. And personally, for me, I feel like I am 10
years old on the inside. I'm just like so excited to be here and to get to run around and to read chapter books and to learn facts.
Now, your internal age, it may or may not change.
But on the outside, we all do age.
We all age in the same direction and at the same pace.
And that comes with real challenges, usually challenges that we do not have a roadmap for how to address.
And without formal instruction, we all have to figure out on our own what it means to be an adult. For you, that might mean anything from learning how to budget your money to navigating relationships
to developing agency and self-regulation.
Or maybe, maybe for you, being an adult means something completely different, like having
fresh berries in your refrigerator.
I know that for me, whenever I see fresh berries in someone's fridge, I think, oh, wow, that
is an adult. Regardless of what being an adult means to you, figuring out how to be an adult is what
today's guest, Julie Lithgott-Hames, is an expert in.
If you're a parent looking for wisdom on how to impart skills to your kids, Julie has you
covered with her book, How to Raise an Adult.
Or if you're a young person trying to figure this out on your own, Julie wrote a follow
up called Your Turn, How to Be an Adult, so she's got your back too.
Here is a clip from Julie's TED Talk.
I've got two kids, Sawyer and Avery. They're teenagers.
And once upon a time, I think I was treating my Sawyer and Avery like little bonsai trees.
But I was going to carefully clip and prune and shape into some perfect form of a human
that might just be perfect enough to warrant them admission
to one of the most highly selective colleges.
But I've come to realize,
after working with thousands of other people's kids
and raising two kids of my own.
My kids aren't bonsai trees.
They're wildflowers
of an unknown genus and species.
And it's my job to provide a nourishing environment
to strengthen them through chores
and to love them so they can
love others and receive love.
And the college, the major, the career, that's up to them.
My job is not to make them become what I would have them become, but to support them in becoming
their glorious selves.
We will be back with more from Julie
on how to become your glorious self
and how to help your kids to do that too,
right after this.
And we are back.
Today, we're talking with Julie Lithcott-Hames
about how to become an adult,
whether you are a young person
figuring that out on your own or a parent trying to help guide your child. I'm Julie Lithcott Haynes about how to become an adult, whether you are a young person figuring that out on your own or a parent trying to help guide your child.
I'm Julie Lithcott Haynes, and I'm so delighted to be here.
I'm an author.
I'm a mom.
I'm a former dean of freshman at Stanford, and I'm pretty much just rooting for all of
us to make it.
You did this TED Talk that was for parents, and now you've got this book, Your Turn,
which is about how to be an adult. So what's the relationship between those two? Yeah, absolutely.
My TED Talk was based on my years as a Stanford dean, where I was watching the encroachment of
parents into the lives of university students. Helicopter parenting had finally arrived at the
university level, and I was deeply concerned with
what those well-intended behaviors were doing in effect to undermine student agency. And so my TED
talk emanated out of fierce empathy and compassion for young people who were being raised with this
heavy hand, this micromanaging parenting style. And so my third book, Your Turn, How to Be
an Adult, is the companion offering. If the TED Talk is trying to help parents retool so they
don't undermine their kids, Your Turn, How to Be an Adult, is this compassionate offering to anybody
who's feeling, I can't adult, I don't want to adult, I'm scared to adult, I don't know how.
This is me not critiquing them like many do. What's wrong with
that generation? No, no, no. This is me saying, yeah, I get it. I get it. And I'm here for you.
Yeah. You know, something that I've heard you say is that if everyone in a generation is saying
that they're really struggling with how to enter this next phase of what it means to be an adult,
how to leave childhood, that that's not an individual problem, that that is a societal failing and that that's how you're viewing it, which I think is so
different from a lot of the kind of condescending talk of like, oh, this generation, they don't
know what they're doing.
What can we do about it on an individual level as we experience it ourselves?
Well, let's name a couple of the systemic issues.
One is macroeconomics.
We have crafted an American society where wages and salaries have not kept
up with the cost of living. And so you emerge out of high school or you emerge out of college or
trade school and you emerge into a workplace environment where these two mathematic variables
don't line up. That's not the fault of a generation, right? Another societal macro thing is how a lot of young
people were raised, which was with this overly helpful, lovingly intended parenting style where
they managed your every move. They watched your every move. They cleaned up your mistakes. They
made choices for you. They did the tough things for you. And so you literally have not had the
chance to practice in a lower stakes way through childhood, the things that are now the higher stakes version of that stuff in adulthood.
So we can't change those things anytime soon.
But I think if an individual young person can be aware of those macro things that are
impediments or obstacles in their path and take a deep breath and say, you know what?
Boy, that sucks.
But neither of those things is my fault.
They are truths of my environment.
But I'm still in charge of me.
And in the face of the awareness of those things, I can say, well, yeah, that sucks.
But what am I going to do about it?
What am I going to do to learn the things I feel less capable of doing?
How am I going to reach out to my network and ask for support
as I make my way forward? Maybe I'm going to uproot myself from the San Francisco Bay Area
where I grew up because I can't afford to live here, even though I did all the right things.
You know, I'm going to go move to a part of the country that is actually hospitable to young
adults who are trying to make it. The individual has profound, profound choice and agency.
And that's a little bit of an ableist and a class-based statement I just made.
Obviously, if you're financially struggling, if you have significant special needs, maybe what I've just said isn't really available to you.
But in the main, I want people to hear, like, this life is up to you.
And yes, there are obstacles.
But guess what?
You are powerful. And you, there are obstacles, but guess what? You are powerful and you can figure this
out. And from the parent side, what's one thing you think parents should be doing differently to
empower their children to feel like that and to learn those skills?
Look, I'm a parent. Let me get that out of the way. I have a 23-year-old and a 21-year-old.
I'm not some expert who's critiquing parents without fundamentally critiquing what I've
done in my own house to micromanage my own kids.
So I've learned these lessons firsthand.
Each one of us as parents needs to really get this fact.
One day we'll be dead and gone.
And to survive as mammals, we are supposed to have taught the younger generation, our
offspring, how to do everything for themselves.
And we don't teach them to do for themselves by doing it for them. We teach them by explaining it and getting
out of the way and watching and wincing a little as they kind of sort of do it and sometimes screw
it up. That's our job. And so as parents, we have to be asking, what are the next three things I
want my kid to learn this weekend, this semester, this year?
And at every age and stage, it's a different set of skills from, you know, walking into a store and asking a question, being able to take public transportation, being able to make a meal.
You know, these are basic things that we've deprived our kids from learning how to do.
And we've got to delight in their learning instead of fearing that they're going to be imperfect at it today. We have to delight in the learning process, which makes
them able to do it themselves tomorrow. You've talked about how sometimes parents approach
their children as though they're a project that they're trying to perfect so that they can then
brag to their other parent friends about it, rather than as a human that
you're trying to set up for success in life, true success in terms of like resilience and
the capacity to learn and to grow. Yeah. So what you're hitting on is ego,
this sense that my child is my project, my pet, the evidence of my worth as a human, as a parent.
So therefore, I need to make sure that when they're on the soccer team or they're taking
this math test or whatever, that I need to curate that situation so that I make sure
they achieve the highest level of measurement on this thing because it all reflects on me.
And what that really gets to, Chris, is we as parents are so insecure.
It's like we have filled our life with, I'm raising this child and that will be the evidence of my worth.
As Carl Jung said, the greatest harm to a child is the unlived life of the parent.
When we're centering our child as the project in our life. It puts so much pressure on them.
And it says to them, all that matters in my life is you.
So don't screw up.
Can you imagine how that makes a kid feel?
We've got to go get really good therapy,
get really right within ourselves about what am I so afraid of?
Why am I so worried about what my peers think of where my child places in school next year?
You know, what what is unwell in me that if I do the work to heal, it means I will be a parent and child, they translate into some of the biggest issues that are facing this country, facing the world, right?
When you think about things like segregation, when you think about things like the wealth
gap, right?
These are forces where when you think about like, I have to make my child's life perfect,
and that is the only thing, the score of that. Often it plays into these huge
social ills. And when we think about it in the other way, even just on the micro level, it plays
into these unrealistic standards for the self. It plays into, you know, stress, mental illness,
a lack of well-being. All of these like big issues can come from this like one thing,
which is viewing the world as though it is a zero sum game. And we're trying to get a score through our children.
Yeah, that's beautifully put. And if I may, I want to bring Lori Gottlieb into this conversation.
She's a psychotherapist in L.A. and she's done a TED talk and has an amazing book. And I was in
conversation with her when I was writing Your Turn. I said, help me understand what you're
seeing in your psychotherapy practice when it comes to adulting or the inability to adult.
She said, you know what, Julie, when a person has been so attended to in childhood, your parents brought you anything you forgot.
You were so busy studying.
They brought you dinner to your laptop.
They just served, served, served, rescued.
You know, we're just always there. It's of course,
lovingly intended. And yet it sets up a pattern where this young person comes to believe that
love looks like the other person drops everything to show up for you. So in her psychotherapy
practice, she's got these young adults who are out there in the world. They're trying to, you know,
succeed at a job, succeed in relationship. And they come to her and they say, well, I dropped him or I dropped them.
I dropped her. You know, like I'm not with them anymore. Why? Lori says. And the client says,
well, we got into a fight and they just wouldn't see it my way. So shrug shoulders, hands in the
air. I dropped him. I've moved on. She says they don't know how to be in relationship with another
human who also expects to be heard and seen and supported and validated.
Right. If they've been taught that the person who loves you drops everything to serve you, they will not be able to succeed in relationship with other humans.
Some of the way that we're approaching it in the conversation so far, I can imagine if you're a parent and you're feeling like, oh, gosh, it's yet another thing that I'm doing wrong.
But but I think the bigger picture is that like something that I've heard you say is
that a parent's worth today is defined by the sentence, right?
Like I stayed up all night to help Sarah finish her biology project.
And and why would we define a parent's worth like that?
Why does that happen, do you think?
Oh, my gosh.
Peer pressure.
You know, once upon a time, a small number of
parents stayed up all night with a glue gun, bragged about it the next day as they clearly
demonstrated their child's project, which was better than the other kids work because a parent
helped. You know, that used to be the absurd parent who did that. Now, when I go to communities
around America talking about this stuff and I say,
you know, nobody here, but people near here are doing their kids homework. Everybody laughs
because they know it's happening in their community, in their house, maybe. And so it's
become the way to demonstrate you care instead of, no, I expect my kid to do their own homework
because that's the only way they're going to learn. And I'm okay if they get a B or a C or whatever today
because I want them to work harder
and work with their teacher and become the student
who can actually earn the grade for excellence themselves
without my hands having to be anywhere in it.
A very relevant thing that I know you've thought about a lot
is you look at this from the perspective
of the young adults who maybe are recognizing that they
need to have a hard conversation with their parents, but they're not quite sure how to do it.
So what advice would you give them as they're trying to broach this with the people who are
raising them? Yeah, what I tell kids is basically I've got a six step method. I advise kids with
these six steps. And what it begins with is ask for the time you need. Say, I have something
serious on my mind. Can we set aside time to talk,
which will freak them out, but make them listen. And then when you are in that prearranged time,
open with gratitude because your parents love you and are trying to do the best. They're not
trying to ruin your life. Like I love you and I know you love me, or I know you've worked so hard
and sacrificed so much for me.
And frankly, this will further set your parents back. They'll now be completely worried. And
that's terrific because you've got their attention, which is how then the actual
substance of the conversation is going to more successfully unfold.
Sometimes I have this feeling that there are families that have issues and they need to work them out.
And then there's other families that don't have issues because they're doing it right.
And I think one of the real clear reminders here is that no matter what, whether you have, you know, a healthy, loving family, whether you have a family that has some like real issues, we always need to set these boundaries and to have conversations about these things, because it's it's kind of impossible to get through becoming an adult without needing to have these sorts of conversations.
So let's put it this way. Humans are complicated. Human interaction is complex.
We get better and better at it as we grow and know ourselves, as we get better at articulating
our wants, at drawing boundaries,
but also getting better at listening to what other people need and what's really animating
their anger underneath that is fear, animating their wild emotion underneath that is insecurity.
The more mature we get, the more we're able to appreciate, kind of approach human conversation with that sort of finer tuned dial. And what I'm
describing is the work, the delicious, confounding, frustrating, necessary work of being a human.
And so whether your family is deeply problematic and your life is filled with trauma or it feels
like a fairly functional family,
but there are still some issues and situations that crop up wherever your reality may be
on that spectrum.
It's worth it.
It's worth doing the work to unpack, to know somebody better, to know something.
Your life is filled with a relationship with them accordingly, or to be able to draw that
line and say, you know what?
Peace out.
I love y'all.
But y'all got some stuff to work on.
I mean, that's my final piece of advice for young people.
If after having this mature, thoughtful conversation, your folks are still insisting that they have
the right effectively to treat you like a dog on a leash and they will always yank you
back, you have the right to snip that leash and say, you know what?
I'm going to go do my thing.
And when you've done doing your work, if you want to come back to me, I will be here.
But this is my life and I am no longer going to let you dictate the path.
What is the value of independence to a young person?
Yeah.
You know what?
Instead of independence, Chris, I'm going to use the word agency.
This is a term out of the field of psychology. It was discovered slash labeled by Professor Albert Bandura at Stanford quite some time ago. And this is the fundamental knowing within the human psyche of our own existence. I know I exist. Why? Because when I act, something happens or when I fail to act, there's a consequence.
Our psyche needs to see the cause and effect in order to know of our existence. So you might be able to intuit that when we over help as parents, which I have done with my kids, I'll admit it.
Or when we're always watching to make sure every step goes well or when we force them to an outcome because they have to be a doctor or they can't come home from college, you know, we are interrupting what would otherwise be the natural development of
self-efficacy. So you called it independence. I'll call it agency. We need to demonstrate to
ourselves that we can do stuff not only to get the thing done, not only to build the skill and
be stronger for next time, but because this is the very foundation of our mental health and wellness. Outside of parenting methods, there
are a lot of other social pressures and societal pressures that young adults are facing right now.
Can you talk about what some of those challenges right now are? So this 21st century, man, it's a
trip. Societal factors like widening income inequality, systemic racialized violence,
climate catastrophe looming, a lack of faith in our democracy here and democratic systems here
in the United States. COVID. I mean, let's not let's not overlook we are emerging out of a pandemic. For young people, there are incredibly valid and real threats.
And it is not unreasonable to want to go hide in the corner in the face of it all.
However, what I would offer, if I may, to anyone feeling that way, in addition to it
being valid, don't you forget how much agency you do have and can build further in yourself.
Okay. We all, most of us, I would wager are descendants of people who went through an even
worse set of circumstances at some point over the history of our ancestry. So you come from people
who survived. You come from people who survived long enough to give life to the people who gave
you life. And you can draw upon that strength and remind yourself, I am capable. And there's
nothing like people who have the bit between their teeth. I'm frustrated by this. I want to
pour my heart into this. I want to pour all my energy into this. I mean, this is a ripe time for problem solving of these most seemingly intractable problems. I am so certain that Gen Z
and whatever we're calling the people who come after them and millennials, let me not overlook
them. They're just getting to be middle-aged now. So I don't think of them as super young anymore,
right? There is every indication that this generation, these generations are going to take us forward in ways that are beautiful and that blow our minds.
I am going to blow your mind right now with the fact that we're going to take a quick break for some ads, but we'll be right back with more from Julie right after this. Support for this show comes from Airbnb.
If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when I travel.
They make my family feel most at home when we're away from home.
As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs,
I pictured my own home sitting empty. Wouldn't it
be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it on Airbnb? It feels like
the practical thing to do, and with the extra income, I could save up for renovations to make
the space even more inviting for ourselves and for future guests. Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at airbnb.ca slash
host. And we are back. We're talking with Julie Lifcott-Hames about what it means to be a grown-up
and how to navigate life. Here is a clip from Julie's course on how to become your best adult
self. I am not wiser than you. I've been broken, sad, scared, bewildered, worried, and ashamed.
I try to help humans make their way in life. Your life is completely up to you, and I'm not going to
try to tell you what to do with it. In teaching this course, this is just me farther down the
path of life, and I'm turning around and shining a warm light back at you so that you can see things more clearly.
You, for many years, worked with first-year students in college.
And I know that that, one of those, especially for students where it's the first time that they're living away from home. One of the real beauties of that can be getting to share and compare amongst other people of your age about what your parents are like.
So I'm curious how you've seen those conversations play out in helping students or young people in general to start developing some of that agency or independence that we've talked about? Well, the first thing I got to say is, yeah, I was a dean of freshmen and I chose
that work because I have a heart for freshmen. And by that, I mean, I have a heart for people
who are new, lost, bewildered, scared, worried they won't make friends, worried they won't
measure up. And Chris, I think that's because I moved a ton as a child. I was always the new kid.
Not only that, I was the black kid often in an all white environment. So I just have this
compassion or empathy for those who might, you know, be on the margins.
You brought up some of your own background in your own childhood. You wrote a memoir all about
this called Real American, a really beautiful and award winning book.
How has your own background and your own experience of growing up influenced the way that you think about trying to help young people today as they become adults of their own?
Yeah, a couple of things come to mind. I'm 55. I'm the child of an African was not contemplated favorably by the rules of society
as a mixed race child. And nobody put it in those terms to me when I was a child, but I could sense
that some people thought something was wrong with me. And it's given me tremendous compassion for
the many, many humans who are discarded or treated as the other by society. I'm a parent. I'm a mom.
I am deeply interested in my own children thriving and want to know what I do to aid and help and
have also learned the hard way that sometimes I'm pushing them from behind or, you know,
pulling them from the front. I'm trying to live that life for them. I'm sure I've got it all
figured out and I just want them to follow like tiny ducks behind me. I've learned that
with the best of intentions, we can undermine someone else being on that life path. I think
those are a couple of the things that animate my fierce interest in all of us being able to make
our way unfettered by the opinions or overhelp of others.
Something that I wouldn't have thought about before listening to you talk about all these
is how growing up, you felt coming from a mixed race background that there was this
impossibility of fitting into the perfect box of expectations.
And so much of your work right now is trying to communicate to young people that if
they feel that they do not fit into this small, perfect box of what you're supposed to look like,
that that is also OK. And it seems like there is a connection there, perhaps.
You are 100 percent right. I never fit into a box. So therefore, I'm deeply interested in anyone else who's either
forced into a box or trying to get into a space and is told they don't belong. It is definitely
animating my compassion for others. And look, I went off to law school to help humans.
I knew I wanted to help humans. I knew I wanted to be one of those who would speak up for those whose voice was trampled upon or discarded. And yet, even though I went to law school to be that type of lawyer, humans, like be a public defender, I came out of law school knowing in my own head, I need to get
a corporate law offer to prove to all the people I fear are judging me and think I don't measure up.
I need to prove to them that corporate America wants me and I'm going to go be a lawyer in
Silicon Valley. And Chris, I did that work and I was good at it. They told me and they mentored me
and they were kind to me and sure, Lord knows they paid me well. But I had a knot in my stomach every Sunday
because the work was not work I loved. And I learned it's not enough to just be good at it
or just to be pleasing others. I was pleasing others. OK, I was applauded. But my spirit was
telling me this is not why we're here, Julie, on the planet.
And I pivoted from that work to being a dean at a college to try to help young people figure themselves out sooner than I had, give themselves permission to be that self. What are
you good at? What do you love? Both are necessary in order for you to really be on a path in life
that's going to feel rewarding, meaningful,
joyful.
And I'm speaking here a little bit to the Japanese concept of ikigai, which I didn't
know of as I was formulating this way of being with students.
But I'm just acknowledging I'm not the only one who preaches this stuff.
Mary Oliver's poem, Tell Me What Is It You Plan To Do With Your One Wild and Precious
Life, in the realm of poetry poetry is offering the same opportunity.
If you're willing to ask yourself, what is it I'm good at?
What do I love?
Who am I?
And then give yourself permission to be that person.
That is when life is a magical enterprise.
So this is a question that's a selfish question. It's a question that
I really struggle with. And I'm really curious to hear how you think about emotionally, intellectually.
I'm convinced. I'm totally convinced by what you say about how we have put all this pressure to be
in these one or two very narrow definitions of success that only if you get to this handful of
the most successful exclusive
schools are you actually have done well in high school and will you do well in life.
And I get I buy that that's not true.
And yet, when I think about myself as a person and when I think about what I would want for
a future child of my own, it's hard to it's hard to reconcile that with some of the advantages
that I know come from going to one of these extremely exclusive places and then getting
one of these extremely exclusive jobs, right?
The same things that create all the distress and this impossible bar, it's easy to see the rewards of them.
So how can I push back on that in myself and how, as you, you know, someone who went to
these prestigious institutions, you taught at Stanford, how do you push back on the idea
that your path or that path is the only successful one in yourself?
I want to just offer you compassion around that.
And for that future child you might have, I love that you're already thinking about doing that work. I want to push back on the sort of it's easy to see the rewards and advantages. Yeah, it does look like there's some rewards and advantages that come with attending a big brand name school. But do we know that the people who aren't at that big brand name school are not experiencing a set of rewards and advantages that are deeply satisfying and meaningful.
There are so many great colleges, most of which don't have big brand names. So what I preach is fit and belonging. Go to a place, you walk the pathways, you feel like I can be myself here,
I can be valued for who I am, because that means you're going to lean into the opportunities that
are going to lead to the grades and lead to the letters of rec and so on that you crave, which are going to lead to the opportunities outside of college.
There's research that shows that it's about whether you were mentored where you went to
college, not the brand name of the school that determines whether you were successful,
but were you at a place where one person, faculty or staff, mentored you, gave a darn about you. And great mentoring happens at places well
below the top tier. So we should be seeking those opportunities to be mentored and make our college
choices accordingly. There's a lot of people who had a brand name life who are deeply miserable.
The brand name doesn't make you better at being in relationship.
The brand name may lead to the greater likelihood
that you can land that really lucrative job.
But if you don't feel joy in that job,
doesn't matter how much money they're gonna give you,
you feel miserable.
There are a lot of people who feel the imperative
to be in a brand name life,
who in fact have it,
but discover this is not who I am.
And these sort of shiny trappings of success are really thin and hollow. It's like, do you want an
Instagram life or do you want an actual life? An actual life is well-lived when, you know, we find
work that we love, we find people who love us as we are. And we pursue those things really without regard to the brand names
attached to the places we've gone to school or the or the work that we do.
It's such a good point. It's really an important reframing for me to hear, too. And I think it also
it brings up for me the idea that like no matter how many of the brand name life pieces that you can stack up, eventually something is
going to not line up, right? Like no one can live the Instagram life 24 seven for their whole life.
And when that falls down, this is the, these are the things that actually matter.
So let me tell you what would break my heart at Stanford. and it applies to any school where this could happen, I would hear from students who'd say, well, I want to be a third grade teacher, but everyone's telling me to go for the PhD and be a college professor.
Or, you know what, I want to be on the front line saving lives.
I really see myself as an EMT in the back of an ambulance, but I'm being told, go all the way, go to med school. Or, you know what?
My dad wants me to work on Wall Street, but I just love being in the wilderness and really
would rather go to forestry school.
And these kids were feeling that being a forestry person, being a wilderness naturalist, being
an EMT, being a grade school teacher were unacceptable pursuits because someone in their
life that they felt was judging
them or conditioning love upon these choices was telling them that's not good enough.
And I saw it as my job to validate that choice.
The world needs wilderness naturalists and third grade teachers, and Lord knows it needs
EMTs.
Why not you?
And yeah, maybe you can't afford to live in the most expensive region of the country
and do those things
because maybe they don't pay a lot.
But when you love the work,
the work becomes part of the compensation.
So go find where you could do that work
and still pay your bills
and you will lead a life of joy.
And even if your family
never really gets it to hell with them,
it's not their life.
It's yours.
Well, it has been an absolute pleasure
talking to you. Thank you so much for making the time to be on the show. I have loved it. It's yours. Well, it has been an absolute pleasure talking to you.
Thank you so much for making the time to be on the show.
I have loved it.
It has been an honor.
And thanks to everyone who listened.
That is it for today's episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Thank you to today's guest, Julie Lithgott-Hames.
Her books are called How to Raise an Adult in Your Turn.
I am your host, Chris Duffy, and you can find more from me, including my weekly comedy newsletter and information about my live shows at chrisduffycomedy.com.
How to Be a Better Human is brought to you on the TED side by Daniela Balarezo, Whitney Pennington-Rogers, and Jimmy Gutierrez, who seem, at least from the outside, to fully understand how to be adults.
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