TED Talks Daily - What gets lost when we treat conversations like transactions | Khaya Dlanga

Episode Date: January 12, 2026

The most powerful stories are the ones told simply to connect with each other, says author Khaya Dlanga. Through humorous anecdotes and moving memories, he explores why it's the conversations we have ...without strategy or agenda that actually allow us to see one another. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:06 You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas and conversations to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hu. In South Africa, a common greeting is Sani Bona, which roughly translates to, We See You. In this talk, author and social commentator, Kaya Shanga, shares why he believes the most powerful stories are the ones told simply to connect with another human. Through personal memories, conversations, and moments of deep listening, he shows how conversation, without strategy or agenda, helps us feel truly seen and be present with one another. So it is quite traditional in my country to walk into a room and to greet. But it's not just to greet.
Starting point is 00:00:54 You're supposed to respond back to the greeting that I'm about to teach you. I promise you it's very easy. So there are two things that I'm going to ask of you today, because I imagine part of some of you are maybe I'm pretty shy. Okay? So what I will say is Sanibona, and you will respond back by saying, Sakoboana. All right? Are we ready?
Starting point is 00:01:17 Sanibona. Sanibona. Thank you. That was very easy, right? Very easy. So in my culture, it has considered considerably rude to walk into a room without any greeting, as I mentioned to you before. What Sanibona really means is we see you. It's kind of crazy to think that I'm saying,
Starting point is 00:01:38 that we see you, right? But it's just one person. It's just me standing here. What it really means is that everything that I am, everything that I come with, sees all the stories that come with you. It also means that the ancestors come with me and they too see you.
Starting point is 00:01:57 That's what Saniborna truly, truly means. This is the second thing I'm going to ask you to do today. I promise you is the last thing I'm going to ask you. And it's even easier than Sarkobona. All right? So I'm going to ask you to repeat after me. It is a tradition. You have to say this after you say,
Starting point is 00:02:14 Saqobona. Are you ready? All right. All right. You can't be a mccalin. You're going to tell them. Your turn. All right.
Starting point is 00:02:32 That is a notoriously difficult tongue twister in my language of Issa. It's a course I'm pretty sure even that is pretty difficult to say, the language itself. So this is the language that I speak. And I'm pretty sure you're saying that, okay, great, Kaya, what are you here to tell us? What is the great new insight that you're going to reveal to us today besides doing some breakdancing with your tongue? To tell you the truth is that I'm literally just here to have conversation for the sake of conversation. I'm here to tell stories for the sake of telling stories. There's a great South African philosopher by the name of Steve Biko.
Starting point is 00:03:12 He wrote an amazing book called I Write What I Like. And in it, he says, Westerners are often quite surprised by our capacity as Africans for talking to one another. And not to talk because there is any particular conclusion we want to arrive at, but simply to have a conversation for his sake. And this is what I want to do today. So I'm going to tell you three stories for the sake of telling stories.
Starting point is 00:03:44 And I really do hope that you have nothing to learn from these stories. The first story that I want to tell you is when I began my career in advertising many, many years ago, my cousin, who was also in advertising, had to shoot an avat with the great and legendary William Shatner back in South Africa. So William Shet and I went and flew to South Africa, and I was an incredible fan of Boston Degel, his TV show. And I shared my love with my cousin, whose name is Colisa. I shared this love with him, and he fell in love with the show.
Starting point is 00:04:29 And so somebody told William Shepard that, like, there are these young guys who just love the show. And so he was so moved that he conspired to have a lunch with us the day before he left South Africa to go back to the United States. And we went to this incredible, expensive, exclusive hotel that I'd never been to in my entire life. And when he got to this hotel, he was waiting for us. And you were so kind and so generous. And he called a waiter and he said to the waiter, can I have three glasses of whiskey, the most expensive whiskey that you have? But before you get me those whiskeys. If money was an object for you, I want to ask you a question, what kind of
Starting point is 00:05:16 cigar would you choose for yourself? And the young man thought about it, and they said, did you say that money is our object? And the young man said, the barman said, okay, yeah, I know what to give you. And it gave us three cigars. And I'd never, I mean, I don't smoke cigars. I know nothing about cigars. But if you know anything about Boston Ligal, you will know that. At the end of every single episode, William Shetner's character sits with his potter and they have a glass of whiskey and smoke a cigar. And so we sat with William Shetna and we did this. And when we are having amazing conversations with him,
Starting point is 00:06:03 and the most incredible thing about William Shetner is that, and to this day, I've never met someone who listens like he does. It felt like his entire body was listening to us. His whole being, I'd never been seen like that in my entire life. He was so generous with his time. And I remember looking at my cousin that I was thinking, he is spending his time with us, but also spending his money with those expensive whiskey and these expensive cigars.
Starting point is 00:06:32 He talked about his family, he talked about religion. And I didn't feel like I was talking to a superstar, but I felt like I was speaking to my long-lost grandfather. And then after two and a half hours of having amazing conversation with Mr. Shetner, somebody came up to us and said, Mr. Shetner, we have to take you to the airport now. And so he got up and he said, thank you so very much. I really do appreciate what you guys did for me. And then he pointed to the waiter and said to him, they are paying.
Starting point is 00:07:13 But I felt so seen. It was priceless. That particular experience. And this is my second story that I'm going to tell you. So my second story that I'm about to tell you is that I grew up towards the tail end of apartheid South Africa. And what that meant was that I was in the first cohort of kids, of black kids, who were allowed to go to previously white-only government schools. In fact, I was the only black child in my class when I went to this particular school.
Starting point is 00:07:47 And I have this very vivid memory of me in junior school, going to the library with my new white friends, and we get into the library, and we had this profound obsession with these other boys of astronomy, as young boys tend to do. And we went to the library and spoke in harsh tones, and we were paging through and showing all of what we know about the planetary systems. And this one boy says to me, when I saw a picture of this moon,
Starting point is 00:08:13 he said, oh, when you look at the moon, you can see the face of a man on the moon. And I remember being quite flabbergasted and thinking there is no man on the moon. What do you mean? And then it began to trace out these images of what you could say. And I saw a man on the moon for the first time. You see, the very difference between him and I
Starting point is 00:08:34 is that I'd spent the first 10 years of my life in village South Africa. And now, when I say village, don't imagine the idealistic village in England. So, do you know what I saw when I was looking at images, when I look at the moon, I could see a woman carrying a bucket on a head with a baby on her back. I'm so you're confused. You're saying, what is this. This is what we grew up saying.
Starting point is 00:09:04 We saw a woman and not a man, a woman carrying a bucket on her head with a baby on her back. That's how that all is known. And when we sat there together, we were quite, when I was looking at these images and I remember thinking, this is so different from what I thought, and both stories were so true. And no one thought that the one version was better than another, or more meaningful than the other. We obviously went home and we shared these versions and showed off the new thing that we learned today. So to bridge the gap between two different cultures, it is important for us to embrace all stories. in a world that we find ourselves in, especially today,
Starting point is 00:09:49 when we think that our version is a correct one, that the only version we need to follow is the one that we know. We do not build a world that is great for the bridges that we need to create for ourselves. And I think we understand what kind of world we find ourselves in today. And then I'm sure another question that you're wondering is like, Kaya, but you, okay, we'll hear you. Did you really mean it when you said that? You're telling stories for the sake of telling stories?
Starting point is 00:10:17 Yes, I meant it. And I said that I don't want it to learn anything from these lessons. But I do have a question. And one of the questions that I have to ask is, when did we decide that every conversation must be transactional? When did we decide that every conversation must have some hidden KPI and not have a conversation for its sake to enjoy the company of another human.
Starting point is 00:10:45 Because in reality, what we do know is that behind every casual conversation will have somebody with anybody is the desire for connection. We want to connect with another human being. And the hardest thing about connection is making that first step to connect with another person. There is this battle against loneliness that we're fighting. and yet we think that technology is what's going to help us fight against its loneliness. But what has happened to us is that the more time we connect with our technology,
Starting point is 00:11:21 the less to get to know our neighbors. We know more about technology in our hands than we do know about our neighbors. It is as if we have created a new commandment, which is know thy technology, but don't know thy neighbor. And so I want to tell a very personal story now, and I decided this as I was walking here, that I should share this particular story. For a few short years ago,
Starting point is 00:11:49 my brother, who was the youngest in my family, took his own life. And the reason he took his life was because he had a profound connection with a device, and this device exploited his addictive personality. and his evictive personality was gambling, online sports betting. He was so ashamed that he did not connect us and talk to us about his problem that eventually took his own life. And I'll never forget the day we went to his funeral.
Starting point is 00:12:27 And my mother, that evening, talking to myself and my sisters, almost talking to herself, my mother said in my language of Isetosa which means I am going to die next year and what I am happy to say that the following year she did not die. She was a very healthy woman and very active and a year
Starting point is 00:13:01 after that my mother did not die but exactly almost exactly a year ago my mother passed away from a heartbreak because she could not longer connect with her son. And her words connected to a prophecy that made her own passing a reality.
Starting point is 00:13:25 And so, and what I do in return is that in order for me to be able to connect with my parents, with my mother, and with my brother, is that I decided to write a book, but it felt like I was exploiting them, exploiting their death in order for me to connect with them. But it did make me feel better, despite what I felt.
Starting point is 00:13:47 And so I suppose how I want to end to this is, AI is going to take over all sorts of tasks, and correctly so. It's going to take over tasks. It's going to take over all sorts of algorithms. But the one thing it cannot do is take our humanity. It cannot do that. While AI
Starting point is 00:14:12 can tell old stories and can tell beautiful stories, it cannot tell a story that one heart can tell to another. And finally, I do want to close off with this. While human beings are made for connecting with one another, while sharing stories for the sake of trying stories,
Starting point is 00:14:34 while having conversation for the safe of conversation, is not what makes us human. What really makes us human is the fact that we simply connect for the sake of connecting. Thank you. That was Kaya Shanga speaking at TED 2025.
Starting point is 00:15:00 If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines. And that's it for today. Ted Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team. and produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green,
Starting point is 00:15:19 Lucy Little, and Tonica Sung Marnivong. This episode was mixed by Lucy Little. Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Ballerazo. I'm Elise Hu. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feet. Thanks for listening.

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