The Tim Ferriss Show - #421: Dr. Jane Goodall — The Legend, The Lessons, The Hope
Episode Date: April 16, 2020“The greatest danger to our future is apathy.” — Dr. Jane GoodallDr. Jane Goodall (@JaneGoodallInst) was born on April 3rd, 1934, in London England. At the young age of 26, she fol...lowed her passion for animals and Africa to Gombe, Tanzania, where she began her landmark study of chimpanzees in the wild, immersing herself in their habitat as a neighbor rather than a distant observer. Her discovery in 1960 that chimpanzees make and use tools rocked the scientific world and redefined the relationship between humans and animals.In 1977, she established the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI) to advance her work around the world and for generations to come. JGI continues the field research at Gombe and builds on Dr. Goodall’s innovative approach to conservation, which recognizes the central role that people play in the well-being of animals and the environment. In 1991, she founded Roots & Shoots, a global program that empowers young people in nearly 60 countries to act as the informed conservation leaders that the world so urgently needs.Today, Dr. Goodall travels the world, speaking about the threats facing chimpanzees, environmental crises, and her reasons for hope. In her books and speeches, she emphasizes the interconnectedness of all living things and the collective power of individual action. Dr. Goodall is a UN Messenger of Peace and Dame Commander of the British Empire.The next chapter of Dr. Jane Goodall’s life’s work unfolds in a brand-new documentary, Jane Goodall: The Hope, premiering on Earth Day, April 22nd, at 9E/8C on Nat Geo, Nat Geo WILD, and Nat Geo Mundo. The two-hour special takes viewers through the chapters of Dr. Goodall’s journey in the 60 years since her groundbreaking discoveries researching wild chimpanzees in Gombe, including her activism, creation of her non-profit organization the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI), and Roots & Shoots youth program, along with her current efforts to inspire the next generation.Dr. Goodall’s work through the Jane Goodall Institute is advanced through the generous support of people like you and me. To show your support, visit janegoodall.org/tim. Please enjoy! This episode is brought to you by ExpressVPN. I’ve been using ExpressVPN since last summer, and I find it to be a reliable way to make sure that my data is secure and encrypted, without slowing my Internet speed. If you ever use public Wi-Fi at, say, a hotel or a coffee shop, where I often work and as many of my listeners do, you’re often sending data over an open network, meaning no encryption at all.One way to ensure that all of your data is encrypted and can’t be easily read by hackers is by using ExpressVPN. All you need to do is download the ExpressVPN app on your computer or smartphone and then use the Internet just as you normally would. You click one button in the ExpressVPN app to secure 100% of your network data. Use my link ExpressVPN.com/Tim today and get an extra three months free on a one-year package!This episode is also brought to you by LinkedIn Marketing Solutions, the go-to tool for B2B marketers and advertisers who want to drive brand awareness, generate leads, or build long-term relationships that result in real business impact.With a community of more than 660 million professionals, LinkedIn is gigantic, but it can be hyper-specific. 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Please fill out the form at tim.blog/sponsor.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss, and welcome to a very special
episode of The Tim Ferriss Show. I have wanted to interview this incredible guest since day one
of this podcast, somewhere between six and eight years ago. And she is a living legend,
Dr. Jane Goodall. She was born on April 3rd, 1934 in London, England.
At the young age of 26, she followed her passion for animals in Africa to Gombe, Tanzania,
where she began her landmark study of chimpanzees in the wild, immersing herself,
like no one had before, in their habitat as a neighbor rather than a distant observer.
Her discovery in 1960 that chimpanzees not only use but make
tools rocked the scientific world and redefined the relationship between humans and animals.
In 1977, she established the Jane Goodall Institute, JGI, to advance her work around
the world and for generations to come. JGI continues the field research at Gumby and
builds on Dr. Goodall's innovative approach to conservation, which recognizes the central role that people play in the well-being of animals and the environment.
In 1991, she founded Roots and Shoots, a global program that empowers young people in nearly 60
countries. And since its inception in 1991, has greatly impacted youth in more than 100 countries
to act as the informed conservation leaders that the world so urgently needs. Today, Dr. Goodall travels around the world, normally 300 plus days a year, although
certainly quarantine changes that, speaking about the threats facing chimpanzees, environmental
crises, and her reasons for hope. And we do talk quite a lot about our current situation. And I
spoke to her from her childhood home in England.
In her books and speeches, she emphasizes the interconnectedness of all living things and the
collective power of individual action. Dr. Goodall is a UN messenger of peace and dame commander of
the British Empire. If that is not one of the coolest titles you've ever heard, I don't know
what is. The next chapter of Dr. Goodall's life's work unfolds in a brand new documentary,
and I highly, highly recommend watching it.
Jane Goodall, The Hope, premiering on Earth Day, April 22nd.
That's this April 22nd at 9 Eastern, 8 Central on Nat Geo, Nat Geo Wild, and Nat Geo Mundo.
The two-hour special takes viewers through the chapters of her
amazing journey in the 60 years since her groundbreaking discoveries in Gumby,
researching wild chimpanzees, including her activism, creation of her nonprofit organization,
the Jane Goodall Institute, as I mentioned earlier, JGI, and Roots & Shoots, the youth program,
which you can find out more about at rootsandshoots.org, along with her current efforts
to inspire the next
generation. Dr. Goodall's work through the Jane Goodall Institute is advanced through the generous
support of their donor family, people like you and me. In other words, to show your support,
visit janegoodall.org forward slash Tim. You can find her on social, on all social platforms,
at Jane Goodall Inst, as an institute, at Jane Goodall Inst, I-N-S-T.
And you can find out more about her youth program and visit them on social,
on all social platforms at Roots and Shoots. And without further ado, please enjoy this
wide-ranging conversation that I so thoroughly enjoyed myself with Dr. Jane Goodall. This episode is brought to you by AG1, the daily
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Dr. Goodall, welcome to the show.
Thank you very much.
I'm thrilled to finally connect. I don't use the word hero much, but you've certainly been a hero and an idol to me for many decades. In a previous lifetime, I wanted to be a marine biologist. And I am also very lucky in a
sense that I have you in one place because your team has told me that you travel and have traveled
300 plus days a year for the last several decades. But my understanding now is that you are in
Bournemouth. And I thought we would start perhaps close to the beginning. And this certainly
takes place in England. Just as context from your childhood, I understand that you grew up
during wartime. And I would love to hear you describe what that experience was like.
Well, you know, I'm really glad I grew up at that time, because although it was shocking,
I mean, we were in Bournemouth, but some bombs were dropped here. The German fighters used to
dump their bombs near the coast if they hadn't managed to hit the target,
and we're sort of in the middle. So we heard the bombs falling. We had sirens, air raid warnings.
We had to go into an air raid shelter, which was a little tiny cage, really, supposed to be
keeping people safe. So families with children were issued them. And people were killed and
damaged. And we never knew where the bombs would fall in London. My uncle was a surgeon,
so he'd come back every other weekend with shocking
tales of what had been happening. But the reason I say I was glad I grew up then is because I
learned to take nothing for granted. One square of chocolate was a huge treat. Food was rationed,
clothes were rationed. We had very little money. There was no television.
The only television were the newsreels. That was just about the war. And so books became very,
very important. And I've still got my childhood books. They're here with me in the room as I speak
to you. And so we luckily had this garden. It's my grandmother's house.
And I spent lots and lots of time out there with my dog.
So the really shocking part was hearing about the Holocaust and seeing photographs of the skeletons of the Jews when the camps were opened up.
I mean, skeletons of living people.
And that really, you know,
it changed everything. And I started thinking age 10 about good and evil. So that was my growing up in the war. As you were growing up, I read a number of stories that seemed to, in a sense, foreshadow much of what would come later.
But I read stories of your mother finding you observing earthworms in your bed. I read of
stories of you hiding and waiting for more than four hours to see a hen laying an egg,
and the police almost being called because you were missing. Is that comfort with patience and, on some level, isolation,
something that you developed yourself? Is that something you've observed in other family members?
I would love to hear you comment on that, if you could.
It was just me. I mean, all the family all the family you know loved animals but they didn't
observe them or watch them or i didn't have any uh any example at all i was just born that way
and the luck was having such a supportive mother i mean earthworms in my bed imagine all the earth
and the muck and lots of mothers would have been horrified and
and thrown them out of the window but she just very quietly said you know they'll die here and
we took them back in the garden and then the hen house story it's one i tell a lot because we went
to stay on a farm in the country and i was given the job of collecting hens eggs and it was a proper farm there were no
animals cooped up in tiny prison-like quarters and constant animal concentration camps they were
free roaming in the field and the hens in the in the farmyard but they laid their eggs in these
little hen houses and apparently I began asking everybody but where does the egg come out nobody told me distinctly remember seeing this hen go into a hen house
and I crawled after her and with squawks of fear she flew out I can still feel her wings hitting
my face and I must have thought in that little four and a half year old brain, well, no hen will lay an egg here. It's
a dangerous place. So I waited. That was the time. I waited and waited in this empty hen house. But
I was rewarded. The hen came in. And I didn't know the family had been worried. I was rushing
towards the house. And there was mum. You can imagine how worried she was, having nearly called
the police.
But instead of, how dare you go off, don't you dare do that again,
which would have killed the magic, she sat down to hear this amazing story.
And the reason I love it is there's the making of a little scientist.
Curiosity, asking questions, not getting the right answer,
deciding to find out for yourself, making a mistake, not giving up, and learning patience.
A different kind of mother might have crushed that early scientific curiosity, and I might not have done what I've done. not just ability, but perseverance with observation. And in watching footage of you,
and we'll certainly get to Africa and other experiences in your biography, that you have,
or appear to have, many sensitivities. And I could be off base with that, but I want to
ask you a bit more about your mother, because in reading a New York Times
profile from, I suppose, about a year ago, there was one paragraph that caught my eye, and it was
related to your childhood during wartime, and related to your father's brother, Rex, who had
joined the Air Force and was killed. And the sentence that caught my eye was, one day we were
in Bournemouth
in the evening, and suddenly she, your mother, screamed Rex and started sobbing hysterically.
And it was the very moment he was shot down over Egypt. So just for clarity, is that to say that
she somehow intuited that he had been shot down before receiving news?
Oh, absolutely. I mean, no, we didn't know for quite some time. And there were other looked like cigars coming out on each side.
And mom threw me and my assistant to the ground.
I can still hear the terrible explosion.
And one of those bombs fell right on the path where we would surely have been if we'd gone the short way,
the normal way. Have you experienced any of that, for lack of a better word, intuition in your own
life, in the field or elsewhere? Or is that something that was unique to your mother?
It was pretty unique to her. But, you know, I experienced very vividly the presence of my second husband after he died, and it ties in with what other people have seen and felt.
So in other words, we're going into a sort of different realm here.
But I don't know what people believe, and I'm not quite sure what it all means myself.
But people have been asking me, what's your next big adventure?
And I always say dying, because, you know, when we die, there's either nothing, which is fine, or there's something.
And if there's something, what an adventure to find out.
You've had more adventures than most.
And I suppose this is a good time for those who certainly recognize your name.
I think almost everyone will recognize your name, and they'll know that you're considered to be one of the world's foremost experts on chimpanzees.
But beyond that, I think many people don't know about the early chapters.
And I'd like to segue to that,
because it opens up a number of doors that we can explore. Let's flashback, if we could, to March
1957. And I believe your passport is missing. Can you explain what has happened?
Well, we'd done a last minute shopping. And of course, in those days, there weren't planes going back and forth.
That's how long I've lived.
And it was by boat.
And we were actually on, I suppose, a train or bus or something.
I can't remember the details.
And suddenly I found I didn't have my passport.
And I remembered we'd been shopping in Peter Jones.
And so mum rang up. shop said they'd found it
we found somebody to go and collect it
who rushed to the dock
otherwise I couldn't have sailed
and all my money would have been wasted
so what a drama, what a way to start
and that money, just for those who aren't familiar, that was painstakingly gathered over
a rather long period of time with various jobs, was it not? It's not like you had this in a bank
account just waiting to be used for whatever purpose for a long period of time. When I left
school, there was no money for university and I had to have a job. You know, we had very little money. So I first of all did a secretarial course, which was boring, but I got my diploma. I got a
job. Then came the letter from a school friend inviting me to Kenya. So you couldn't save money
in London. So I went home and got a job as a waitress in a hotel around the corner. Very hard work in those days.
Families coming to spend a week by the seaside, and you had to look after them for a whole week
if you wanted any. And the tips were small, but I made sure they all knew I was saving up for Africa.
So that's how I got the money.
I would love just to spend a moment, and we don't have to spend a lot of time on this, but discussing Louis Leakey.
And I've read various accounts of how you connected with him, but I'd like to hear it directly from you.
And perhaps you could describe what it was that he saw in you.
But that initial contact and how that came to be
is of great interest to me. So if you could speak to that, I would appreciate it.
Okay. Well, I'd been staying with my friend for about, I suppose, a couple of months.
And somebody said to me at a party, if you're interested in animals, you really should meet
Louis Leakey. He was curator at that time of the Natural History Museum
but of course he's best known as a very eminent paleontologist.
He'd spent his life with his second wife Mary Leakey
searching for the fossils of Stone Age ancestors across Africa
and so I was very shy back then but i rang the museum
and said i'd love to make an appointment to meet dr leaky and a boy said i'm leaky what do you want
but anyway you know i was so passionate about animals i anyway went to see him and he took me all around. He asked me many questions
about the stuffed animals that were there. And I think he was impressed that because I'd read
everything I could about Africa, I could answer so many of his questions. Well, I mentioned earlier
that boring secretarial course that I did. Two days before I met Leakey, his secretary had suddenly quit.
He needed a secretary, and there I was.
You never know in this life.
So I'm suddenly surrounded by people who can answer all my questions about the mammals and the birds and the reptiles, the amphibians, the insects, the plants.
It was heaven.
Oh, you asked Leakey, what did he see in me?
He had a feeling that women made better observers.
He thought they were more patient.
He also wanted somebody to go and study chimpanzees because of his interest in human evolution.
So the fossils of early man that he was uncovering,
you can tell a lot from a fossil about whether the creature walked upright, the muscle attachments,
the wear of the tooth shows you roughly the kind of diet, but behavior doesn't fossilize.
So he reckoned there was a ape-like, human-like common ancestor about six million years ago
which is now generally accepted and that he thought well if jane finds behavior in chimps
and humans today that is similar or the same maybe it came directly from the common ancestor
and has been with us through our long separate evolutionary journeys
in which case he could have a better way of imagining how his early humans used to behave
so he wanted a mind uncluttered by the reductionist thinking of the animal behavior of people at the
time it was a very new science They were anxious to make it a hard
science, which it shouldn't be. And so the fact I hadn't been to college was a plus, and the fact
that I was a woman was a plus. So I was just fish it lucky.
Well, he seems to have picked the winning lottery ticket, or at least a very formidable combination of traits. And if we take that mention of patience
or his belief that in part women make better observers because of more patience, if we flash
forward then to you landing in Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania, if I'm getting the
pronunciation correct, I was watching the first
nat geo or maybe not the first but the the one of the more recent nat geo documentaries about you
titled jane and in that and also in your writing i believe it took something like five months
of constant effort and having chimpanzees flee from your presence to finally be what we
might call accepted. And I have two questions related to that. The first is, what do you think
made the difference? Why did they go from fleeing to accepting? And second is when you first really had the opportunity to look deeply into a
chimpanzee's eyes, what did you see? And just as importantly, what did you feel?
All right. Well, the acceptance in the movie, it sort of looked as though they suddenly accepted
me. And it wasn't like that. It was very gradual. And it was partly thanks to this one male
who began to lose his fear much ahead of the others.
I called him David Greybeard because he had a lovely white beard.
And because he began to let me get closer and closer,
I think if I came to a group in the forest
and he was with that group,
because they separate into separate small groups and sometimes alone.
But if he was there, then the others were ready to run.
But he was sitting calmly.
And I suppose that made them feel, well, she can't be so dangerous after all.
So gradually I could get closer.
And the first time I came close to a group that didn't run away,
I think was one of the proudest moments of my life. You know, I'd made it just in time
before the six months money ran out. And so the fact that I'd seen David Gravey use and make
tools to fish for termites, thought to be something only humans
were capable of. That's what brought the geographic in right at the beginning, six months after the
study began. They agreed to go on funding it. Was David Graveyard the first chimpanzee that you
were able to get close enough to sort of connect eye to eye with?
Yes, definitely.
What did you see and feel when you had that opportunity?
Well, I saw that I was looking into the eyes of a thinking, feeling being.
And it was not so surprising as you might think,
because I had always felt that animals were thinking, feeling beings.
But with a chimpanzee, they're so like us, behaviorally and biologically, that it's almost, it's not like looking at another human.
It's different, and I can't explain how it's different. But it was a very magical moment,
because he looked back. That was the thing. He didn't run. He just sat there and looked back at
me. I would love to ask questions about what we might learn and what perhaps you've learned
about human nature, or even questions that
have been raised in your interactions and observations of chimpanzees. And you mentioned
it briefly, but it's hard to overstate just how incredible and shocking and world-shattering for
many people it was that you observed chimpanzees not just using tools,
but constructing tools for, in this case, consuming termites. I mean, it made news around the world.
You had many other observations. I believe also that the belief that chimpanzees were
purely vegetarians. Also, you observed not to be the case with their consumption of other primates.
Exactly.
And you noted, and I know this was a real, in some eyes, a faux pas at the time,
real personalities.
And you might have been accused of anthropomorphism and all of these things.
But you observed different personalities in different chimpanzees. And I thought perhaps we could just start with a story. And that is the story of Old Man and Mark Cusano, if I'm getting the pronunciation right. And then I have questions about a few other chimpanzees you personally had quite a bit of interaction with. in a medical research lab. He'd been captured from the wild. His mother was shot.
And he was called Old Man because an infant chimp
who's distressed and frightened,
they have wrinkled faces and they huddle
and they do look very old.
And he was lucky.
He was about 12.
And for some reason, he was no more used to the lab.
And he was put on an island with three females, two of them from medical research, one from a circus.
And Mark Husano was employed to look after them.
And he was told, don't go anywhere near them.
They're vicious.
They hate people.
They're much stronger than you.
They'll kill you.
So he threw food from his little paddle boat onto the island and began
watching them. And a baby was born. So old man was the father. And he felt, you know, these are
such amazing beings. I must have some kind of relationship with them if I'm to look after them.
So he began going closer and closer. And one, he held out a banana in his hand.
And when old man took it, he said, I know how you felt when David took a banana from you.
One day, he went onto the island.
One day, he groomed old man.
One day, they played.
And old man laughed.
And they became basically, it was a friendship.
And then one day, Mark slipped.
It had been raining, fell flat on his face.
Unfortunately, frightened this infant, who was the love of old man's life.
Old man used to protect him and carry him and share food. Well, the mother, hearing her child scream, raced and attacked Mark, biting into his neck.
The other two females to support her ran in, one bit his wrist, one bit his leg.
And Mark thought, well, how on earth am I going to get away from them because they're much stronger than us?
He looked up.
He saw an old man thundering across the island with a furious scowl on his face.
And he thought his time had come to die or he'd come to protect his precious infant.
But what Old Man did was to pull those three screaming, roused females off Mark and keep them away while Mark dragged himself to safety.
And I met Mark when he came out of hospital.
He said, no question, old man saved my life.
And so, you know, I always think if a chimpanzee who's been abused by people
can reach out to help a human friend in time of need,
then surely we, with our greater capacity for compassion,
can do the same to the chimpanzees in their time of need.
Thank you for telling that story.
And it's, I think, a useful and beautiful segue into a discussion of some of the other things that you observed.
And in this case, we see compassion on the part of old man. And then, perhaps on the other hand, you've also observed
quite a lot of aggression and violence within chimpanzee communities. I think it was 1974 to
78, Gombe chimpanzee war. I saw footage of, I think it was the Southern troop being annihilated, or at least the dead bodies of those chimps. I believe, and please correct me if I'm wrong, that in some cases, dominant females will deliberately the compassion as you have, what has that led you to
believe or infer about human nature?
Well, it's interesting. When I began talking about that aggression, many scientists told me I should
play that down, because it might indicate that aggression in humans was inherited from our past ancestors,
which for me was very clearly the case. And I thought, well, I'm not going to be bullied. I
never have been by scientific opinion. So I continued to talk about it. And it was a time
you wouldn't remember. It was 1977, I think. And it was a time you wouldn't remember it was 1977 i think and it was a time
when whether aggression is innate uh inborn or acquired learned was it was a huge controversy
and that's when i first really talked about it to a scientific community
um and i i don't know i mean it seems obvious to me that we've inherited from our common ancestor traits of aggression and also traits of compassion and empathy. from your personal experience, and I know very little about Frodo, but Frodo seems to have been
amongst the chimpanzees you had exposure to, one of the more aggressive. But I'd love to hear you
speak to this. And how would you explain the variance among chimpanzees? Was it also appear to be innate? Did it seem to stem
from some type of trauma? How did you think about that, and perhaps Frodo specifically?
Well, they're all different. Some are much more aggressive than others, just like we are.
And Frodo was spoiled. He was a spoiled brat.
His mother was the highest-ranking female at the time, Fifi.
He had one older brother who always came to his defense, as did Fifi.
And so he always got his own way.
And he was a real bully.
So there were two young ones playing, same age as him perhaps,
and he came to join them, they would stop playing immediately because they knew if he entered the game, he'd suddenly become rough and cause one of them to be hurt. So it wasn't
just humans, field assistants, and especially me that he targeted with his displays, hitting over,
dragging. I got it worst of all. I was stamped upon. But he was not trying really to hurt me.
He was trying to assert his dominance. And I guess they don't realize quite how strong they are.
I mean, if he wanted to kill me, I wouldn't be speaking to you now,
that's for sure.
Is the assertion of dominance, and I don't know how much of this is conscious, and I don't know
how one would even know, but is that a conscious or potentially conscious political maneuver to get better access to resources and so on?
Or is it really just a conditioned behavior based on, as you said, being spoiled,
and that just being some type of primitive drive that they have and perhaps even we have?
No, because Frodo's brother before him became the top-ranking
male, and Freud had a very different character. He was reflective. He became dominant not through
aggression, but through being smart. Some of the males get to the top by sheer aggression,
by bullying, by swaggering about, waving their arms. They remind me so much of some human politicians.
It's not true.
But there are other males who get to the top by skillfully forming alliances,
and they only tackle a higher-ranking male when their ally is there to support them.
And then there are some who just persist.
They persist in charging towards groups of superior
males who are grooming each other startling them so they run away and in the end this was goblin
in the end i think the other males thought well he's just going to go on doing this all right
let's just let him get to the top we don't care anymore anymore. That's how it seemed. And he ran for 10 years, and he was
small, and he wasn't very aggressive at all. You are, I think for many people, a messenger of hope.
And I personally swing quite often, more often than I would like, between having faith in humankind, human nature,
and feeling as though we are perhaps hard-coded or through DNA destined to at times revert to our
lesser selves, lowest selves, most aggressive, selfish selves. How have you formed your own
thinking, or I should say, what is your thinking about human nature and where it has led us,
and how that relates to perhaps poor decisions and good decisions that we've made that have
landed us where we are? Certainly, you're in your childhood home, spending more time in England now
than you have in decades. I'm also in lockdown. But how, after your many decades of observation
of not just chimpanzees, but humans, where do you currently stand on thinking about human nature? Well, I find sadly that there are some people who really cast a very bad light
on human beings if we look down from another planet. And that's, I mean, you know, as I told
you earlier, I was so shocked about the Holocaust, and that's what made me think about human evil.
And the way we differ from the chimps is that chimps can be aggressive and chimps can kill,
but it's something that's roused in them.
It's a strong emotion, and they just display an attack.
But human beings can sit and think and plan deliberate torture, mental and physical, in cold blood.
And that, I think, is where we differ.
And it changes from aggression to evil.
And it's a dichotomy.
I mean, some people are saintly and patient and do good.
And other people are the opposite.
And unfortunately today, we have many presidents and prime ministers
who seem to be more concerned for their own advancement,
their own careers, their own power, their own acquisition of wealth,
than for the good of the people who elected them.
So we're both. And it's going to be a race, isn't it, as to which side will win. And if the greedy materialism of the capitalist,
materialistic world wins, then we're doomed. And this is why I spend so much of my time trying to grow our program for young people.
Because I would say almost none of the young people who've been through this program, which began in 91 and is now in six countries and is kindergarten through university. And I don't know of more than two who've strayed from the path of having good values,
respect for nature, respect for each other.
So I want to grow more and more of these young people because they're the future,
and we've been stealing their future for decades.
And this is the Roots and Shoots youth program that you're referring to?
Yes.
Rootsandshoots.org. I'll also put that in the show notes for everyone, of course.
Let's talk a little bit more about that. And as it relates to youth program, the cultivation
of minds that are inclined to bend towards the light instead of the darkness, or towards good instead
of evil. I know those are very strong words, but let's use them for now. If we're looking at the
current situation as it relates to SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 and so on, could you speak to what got us into this fix? And I mean, I'm thinking,
of course, the wildlife trade, its effects on human health, and so on doesn't need to be
specific to that. But how we got here, how we contributed to it. And then also,
if you're teaching youth, how you would educate them so that they don't make the same mistakes?
Okay, well, you sort of asked three questions there.
I did. It's a bit of a sloppy question. Sorry about that.
Let's start with the COVID-19, because that's on everybody's minds right now. And the shocking thing is it's been predicted by science for decades,
just like climate change has been predicted.
And I only wish that somehow there'd been lockdown about climate change
the way that there's been lockdown over this spread of this virus
because, you know, we have known for all this time
that because we are destroying the environment of some of these animals,
they're having to spend more time in contact with each other because they've got less habitat
and also more time in contact with humans.
And sometimes that involves crop raiding but there's also people penetrating deeper and hunting and then of course selling the meat in
the african markets bush meat and then selling meat across asia in these terrible what they're
known as wet markets and also selling animals for medication, for pets,
all of this bringing us in close contact.
So the theory seems to be that there's a virus in a wild animal,
and because of this closer contact between animals, it jumps into another animal. And that's when in these very bad conditions,
including factory farms, by the way,
the virus can then jump into a human.
If there is a similar kind of virus with which this new one can bind,
and that leads to a new form,
which as is the case with COVID-19, can be rather devastating. But just think if we
treated climate change like this all those years ago when we were warned about it,
we might not be in the state we're in now. So basically what I'm saying is our leaders have not listened to science.
The big corporations have not listened to science. And hundreds of people, now we're in this
materialistic, money-grabbing age, you know, just want to carry on with business as usual. They
don't want to think about not eating all the meat they want or not favoring the destruction of a
piece of habitat to build yet another shopping mall.
So, you know, that's what this virus is teaching us.
And will we learn from it?
We didn't seem to learn from SARS.
The markets for live animals were banned for a while, but then it started up again.
China is now talking about making it permanent, but they're still allowing animals, wild animals,
to be sold for medicine. So that's a tremendous loophole. Luckily, people in China want to close
that loophole too. And if you have a classroom, and as you do now with social media, I mean, you are arguably
reaching more people now virtually than you might in travel speaking to live audiences.
But let's just say you had a classroom of 10,000 children or adolescents, youth, who
were hanging on your every word, what are the
sort of principles or truths that you would infuse in your lessons to them that could possibly help
avoid some of these problems that we've created, or types of thinking? What would the curriculum
look like? Well, first of all, let me just say that Roots & Shoots, which began in 1991 with 12 high school
students in Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, we decided at a meeting, because they were worried about,
you know, poaching in the parks and illegal dynamite fishing and street children and cruel treatment of animals
in the market. I mean, they were concerned about all kinds of different things. So we decided that
the main message of this new program that we wanted to start together would be that every
single individual matters has a role to play and makes a difference every single day with a choice as to
what kind of difference to make. Right from the beginning, because I learned about the interconnection
of things in the rainforest, how every species matters and has a role to play, we decided that
every group formed would choose between them three projects, one help people one to help animals one to help
the environment and they would share their projects with each other and so we began listening to them
what did they feel mattered how could we help them and when when young people understand the
problems and we empower them to take action and listen to their voices, it's quite extraordinary.
I mean, my main reason for hope is traveling around the world, as I have been.
I've met so many young people.
They've been part of Roots and Shoots or similar groups, shining eyes, wanting to tell Dr. Jane what they've been doing to make this a better world.
And because they can choose, they're passionate and they sit down together and they discuss it.
It's very democratic.
They discuss what they can do between them.
They sometimes ask for help, maybe a parent, maybe a teacher.
And then they roll up their sleeves and take action,
whether it's restoring a wetland,
whether it's installing rubbish bins or organic gardens in the schools,
whether it's saving up money to help earthquake victims.
And because we put them in touch with each other,
face-to-face when possible, but virtually, which is wonderful,
they are inspiring each other.
Yes, we do have some curricula because some countries want it.
UK wanted a curricula, so we're in 1,700 schools now. And some of the African countries want
curricula. Sometimes it's just, you know, so yes, I do have messages for them. And I do talk to them
about the role that they can play, about the importance of thinking about the consequences of the little choices you make each day,
how people may look different, sound different, have a different language, a different color of skin,
but if they fall and bleed, the blood is the same.
If they weep, the tears are the same.
And kids get it.
So it's not so much teaching.
It's sort of the values have developed.
They've grown up with the program.
And we now have a number of adults in quite high places.
And they have kept their values as they leave the program and move on into adult life.
So we've got teachers and people in government and people in law,
and they're just remembering the importance of respect.
It's a key word, respect the environment, respect for animals.
And, of course, I tell them about animals and how each one has a personality,
a mind and emotion, how pigs and rats and octopus are amazingly intelligent and how they can feel pain and fear and despair.
So it depends on the children and their age, kindergarten, university, everything in between.
It depends what I tell them, but I do as many gatherings of young people as I possibly can. And as you say,
now I can do it virtually. And I can talk to them about things that I've learned.
I recall a few years ago speaking with a friend of mine who I consider to be a good father,
a good parent. And I asked him what advice he would have for someone like me, considering
having children. I have none of my own yet. And his advice, he had a number of pieces of advice,
but his first was, teach your children to be optimists. And it seemed like a precursor or a
prerequisite for so many other things. And I'm looking at a Time article, Time magazine
article that is, that you wrote in 2002. And I just want to read one paragraph and then ask you
to elaborate or speak to it. So here's the paragraph. The greatest danger to our future
is apathy. We cannot expect those living in poverty and ignorance to worry about saving the world. For those of us able to read this magazine, and my side note,
or listen to this podcast, it is different. We can do something to preserve our planet. You may be
overcome, however, by feelings of helplessness. You are just one person in a world of six billion.
How can your actions make a difference? Best you say to leave it to decision makers, and so you do nothing.
Can we overcome apathy?
Yes, but only if we have hope.
And I'd love to hear you speak to that and also just to how you cultivate hope, whether that's in yourself or the people you speak to.
Well, you know, I have my reasons for hope, which I'm always sharing with people.
But this thing of people feeling helpless because
they don't know what to do, this message of our youth program, that every individual makes a
difference. And, you know, if it's just you picking up trash, if it's just you saving water,
then it wouldn't make the slightest bit of difference.
But because people are becoming more aware all around the world,
then there's not just you but thousands, millions of people picking up trash and saving water.
And so the message again being think about the consequences of the small choices you make every day what do you eat
where did it come from did it harm the environment was it cruel to animals like the intensive
farming um is it cheap because of child slave labor somewhere make ethical choices and because
millions of people are making ethical choices we're're moving in the right direction. And all of our young
people, you know, they're influencing their parents and their grandparents. I know that
because the parents tell me. So, you know, my reasons for hope, number one is the youth,
as I've said, because they're just so inspiring. And secondly, to start by saying it's very bizarre but what makes us more different from
chimps and other animals is this explosive development of our intellect i mean look at
what's happening now with just social media it's one example you and i talking we're far apart
we're reaching millions of people i mean it's it's quite amazing, isn't it, when you think about it?
We've sent rockets to Mars and all that sort of thing.
So how odd that this most intellectual creature is destroying its only home.
So there seems to be this disconnect between the clever brain and the human heart,
which is love and compassion.
And, you know know we're thinking about
how does this help me now instead of how does it affect future generations so now we're beginning
to use our brains or scientists are to come up with more and more sophisticated technology
that will help us lead better live in more harmony with the natural world.
If governments would sponsor clean, green energy rather than succumbing to their ties
with the oil and gas industry, we could be more or less off the grid in many countries
today.
China and India are moving in that direction rapidly, and UAE as well.
But each one of us can use our brains to think about the environmental footprint we make each
day. And then there's the resilience of nature. I tell people stories about areas that were totally destroyed rivers lakes lake airy was so polluted that it set it caught
fire was so polluted and now there's fish swimming in it because people cared animals on the brink of
extinction have been given another chance we just have to save the habitats we have to change the
mindset of those companies that want to destroy a forest to make money out of the wood or destroy forest to get minerals out of the ground to make more money.
But then we've got to solve poverty because, as you quoted earlier, if you're really poor, what can you do except cut the last tree down because you're desperate to grow food to feed your family, eat the cheapest junk food because you've got to do it to live.
So we have to solve poverty and the unsustainable lifestyle of the rest of us. But you know, my last reason for hope is this indomitable human spirit, the people who
tackle what seems impossible and won't give up. And they may die as a result of their conviction,
but in the end, they succeed.
I would love to speak about the power of storytelling. We've been discussing for at least a few minutes,
or at least made mention of intellect and technology, two powerful and very interrelated
facets of our human experience. In watching the trailer for perhaps the next chapter of your life's work that will be
shown and the story told in Jane Goodall, The Hope, which is going to premiere on Earth Day,
April 22nd, on NatGeo. And I'll include NatGeo Wild and NatGeo Mundo. I'll include all of those
details in the show notes and also will have already mentioned them in the introduction. on NatGeo, and I'll include NatGeo Wild and NatGeo Mundo. I'll include all of those details
in the show notes, and also we'll have already mentioned them in the introduction. But there
was a quote in that trailer about changing minds. And the quote is this, if you want somebody to
change their mind, it's no good arguing, you've got to reach the heart. And I wanted to, this might seem like a strange segue,
I'd love to ask the question of Mr. McGregor and how he came to his end. Could you speak
to who Mr. McGregor was and ultimately how he died?
Mr. McGregor was an old male, even when I first got to Gombe, slightly bald on the top of his head, a bit cantankerous.
And he was just really very, very special.
And he had a special relationship with a young female.
I don't know if she was related to him, but he was old and she was young.
He used to protect her and then probably the darkest days even worse than the war was when the chimps were
affected with a polio epidemic and it was a terrible time first one would come back
dragging a paralyzed limb one male learned to walk upright because one arm got totally paralyzed but Mr. McGregor was paralyzed in both legs and he dragged himself
up to the feeding station and I think the most awful part was that the other chimpanzees shunned
him a fear of strangeness which of course is very adaptive if it's an infectious disease. But I can never forget there was a group of the other males grooming in a tree.
And with enormous effort, Gregor dragged himself from branch to branch
with just the strength of his arms.
And they took one look and climbed down.
And the look on his face, like, oh, all this effort.
What have I done wrong?
Why are they going away?
And very slowly he went down to the ground again.
And in the end we had to shoot him because, well,
we didn't have any other way of euthanizing him.
We could have kept him alive feeding him bananas,
but if you'd seen the sadness on his face,
there was no way that was a life for a chimpanzee.
It would have been cruel.
So it made a deep, deep impression on me, Mr. McGregor.
And when I saw it in the movie, I brought it all back. It was a terrible time.
What did you take from that experience, whether Mr. McGregor and that entire
experience or the polio itself affecting the chimpanzees around you what did you
what did you take from that experience or learn from that experience
well and they definitely caught it from human beings um fortunately none of us
none of us at all but there was an epidemic in the nearby town.
And for some odd reason, the doctor said it wasn't polio.
I don't know what he thought it was.
So there was no medication, there was no vaccination.
And the first lame chimps were seen way down south near that place.
And I presume that it spread from them up to our community
because there was nobody in our staff or anybody who got polio.
What did I take away from it?
The fact that, you know, I think human beings have tended to treat people
who behave strangely with fear and shun them.
And that's led to a lot of suffering.
Like people with cerebral palsy, people used to shut them away, not realizing that inside all those strange movements and sometimes strange sounds, inside is a perfectly normal brain, but that brain can't express itself.
So Mr. McGregor had what we think was his younger brother, and Humphrey was the only one who never left. He wouldn't go near Gregor, but he stayed nearby in the trees,
even when all the rest of the group went far away feeding on some fruit.
Humphrey stayed.
And after we euthanized Gregor, we did it when no chimps were around, including Humphrey.
For at least the next month, Humphrey came and sat in trees near where Mr. McGregor had been.
So it just taught me a lot about how chimpanzees and humans react to something strange. over the last several decades, but particularly with the youth program, and also in my mind,
trying to affect change with decision makers, the people in positions of power, who are responding
to their own incentives, whether that be could be getting reelected, could be power of some other
type, it could be acquisition of capital. It could be
any number of things. Are there any stories that you have found particularly effective for reaching
the heart to grab the attention of people as you've traveled and spoken with so many over
so many decades.
Is there anything that sticks out to you?
Well, first of all, you're absolutely right.
It's telling stories.
I always try and spend a little bit of time
finding out the person I'm going to meet,
if it's somebody in government or something.
Do they have children? Do they have dogs?
I mean, just so you can
start something often not just i'm here for this blah blah blah lobbying on the hill for example
and then try to tell stories because i've found that if you point fingers if you're argumentative
if you're blaming then you don't you don't see change because they're not going to let especially
a woman some high high-powered man it's not going to let a woman make him look stupid by saying oh
you're right and i'm wrong change i believe has to come from within and so if you can reach the heart and there was a medical research lab and I managed to get better conditions
in that lab by reaching the heart of the director of the lab telling stories about the chimps
and there was another director of a lab and this this is slightly different, but he had a 16-year-old daughter who came to one of my lectures.
And I was showing secretly filmed footage of the awful conditions in the lab of which he was director, conditions for the chimps.
He said his daughter came back one day from this lecture sobbing and saying, Daddy, you're so cruel.
How can you do this?
And he said, Jane, for two years,
I absolutely hated you. But he said, please, could you come and see the lab now? Because you are
right. And I never accused him directly. It was through his daughter, and he changed the lab
completely. And then the last story I love, I was in a taxi. It was very early in the morning.
I was very tired.
I was going to have a snooze on the way to the airport.
And, oh, he'd heard that I was one of those animal lovers.
And, oh, he couldn't stand that.
And his sister was one of those animal lovers, too.
And all these poor people, why weren't we helping them?
What was it about animals?
So I thought, oh, well, that's the end of my snooze.
And I pulled open the window, leaned forward in the jump seat,
and I told him stories about the chimps and stories about dogs all the way to the airport.
Well, we got there, and he just grunted.
And, you know, I thought, well, it didn't make any difference.
But I had to try.
He owed me £10 at the end because he didn't have any change.
So I said, well, give it to your sister for the work she does in the shelter, animal shelter.
I never thought he would, but I got back two weeks later.
There was a letter from the sister, and she said, first of all, I really want to thank you for your donation.
But secondly, what did you do to my brother? She said, he's listening to me. He's been three times to help me in the shelter. So it's always worth doing your best, because you never know what effect that is going to have. Sometimes you will never know. It was pure luck that that ended
the way it did. That's incredible. And if we dig into that just a little bit more, whether it's
that first director of the lab or the cab driver, you mentioned telling stories about the chimps,
but there are many different ways to tell stories. and there are many stories that could be told. What types of stories did you tell either of them
that you think could have had that impact?
Oh, well, I talked about the very strong bonds between family members, the maternal behavior.
Um, I told stories like when one infant lost his mother, he was three years old, little Mel.
He didn't have an older brother or sister who would have adopted him because that's what they do.
But he was adopted by a 12-year-old unrelated adolescent male who carried him around,
who shared his food with him, drew him into the
night nest so that they slept curled up together. And most amazingly, an adolescent male will
usually keep well out of the way of adult males when they're socially roused and charging
about and screaming. But little Mel, who normally would have been taken away by his mother before he got into
danger and Spindle risked everything by running in to rescue him if he got too close to those males
even though he was beaten up quite badly himself because he was a the adolescent males are scapegoats
for the big males and he saved Mel's life without any question.
So that's the kind of story that I tell them.
You also seem to be, aside from an expert storyteller,
very good at using imagery or symbols.
And sometimes stories themselves are symbols.
But could you describe Mr. H?
Who is Mr. H?
Mr. H was given to me 28 years ago by a man called Gary Horn, which is why he's Mr. H.
Gary went blind when he was 21, to become a magician everybody said but Gary
you can't be a magician if you're blind
he does shows for children
I've watched him three or four times now
and of course he sets his props up ahead of time
children don't know he's blind
and at the end he'll tell them
and he'll say, you know,
something might go wrong in your life. You can't tell. If it does, don't give up. There's always
a way forward. And he does scuba diving, cross-country skiing, skydiving. But I think
most amazing, he's taught himself to paint. And when he gave me Mr. H, he thought he was giving me a stuffed chimp. But Mr. H has a
tail. And I made him hold the tail. He said, never mind, take him with you. And you know,
I'm with you in spirit. So he's one of those examples of the indomitable human spirit,
doing skydiving when you're blind, teaching yourself to paint. And there's a picture in
this. He's done a little book called Blind Artist, which you can only get on Amazon.
And there's a portrait of Mr. H. He's never seen him. He's only felt him. And it's unbelievable.
And Mr. H, if I'm not mistaken, has been many places with you. I don't know if wanted to touch Mr. H because I tell them the inspiration rubs off.
But, you know, I have other symbols.
I have one of the long, long, long, I think I'm trying to measure with my hands,
over two foot feather from the wing of a California condor.
I've got all the proper permits for it.
And they were down to 12 birds. And now
there's very many of them flying the skies. And so I have that as a symbol of the fact we can
save animals from extinction. I've got a piece of the Berlin Wall. There was a time after the war
when we thought that Berlin Wall was up forever between East and West Germany.
But it came down.
Walls do come down, despite what one of our country's presidents thinks about walls.
And so I carry these little symbols with me.
I've got a piece of limestone from the quarry where Nelson Mandela labored for 21 years, I think it was 21 years in the limestone quarry before he
attained his freedom and moved his country out of the evil regime of apartheid.
Do you still have Jubilee? And could you explain who Jubilee is? Jubilee, you know, so many people think that because my father gave me a very large stuffed
chimpanzee when I was one and a half, that that is why I chose to study chimpanzees. It couldn't
be further from the truth. But I did love Jubilee. And um Jubilee I had when I was one and a half
and I'm 60 I mean 86 now so you can imagine he's nearly bald now and he's actually sitting
in the National Geographic exhibition in DC uh in a specially built bulletproof glass case because I didn't want him you know I
thought it's dangerous for him to go away he's much too precious but he was hand carried and
he's sitting there and that exhibition is going to go online they've made it some way of showing it to people. So people will be able to see the real Jubilee in that.
It's called Becoming Jane.
So Jubilee went with me everywhere when I was a child.
I mean, literally everywhere.
And when you then had your own child, after your experiences with your mother,
my understanding is that you didn't have much of a relationship with your father,
but more so with your mother.
And then your experiences with the chimpanzee mothers, Flo, for instance.
How did you think about mothering or parenting?
I imagine a lot of it was sort of very primal drive that was created in you, but what did you decide?
Were there any decisions based on what your mother did with you or what you observed in Flo and others that affected your parenting style or mothering style? Yeah, well, you know, I was never a sort of gooey over baby type, really.
And of course, when I was pregnant, I thought about mothering, and I was in Africa.
I thought about the way mum raised me.
I got, Dr. Spock was all the rage then and actually he
has some really sound advice but i also thought about flow i had all those three examples along
with as you say a sort of instinct because after the baby was born of course i adored him
and in that film jane i'd forgotten what a gorgeous baby he was, actually.
He was enchanting.
Anyway, so what I learned from the chimp mothers is just like us, there are good and bad mothers.
And the good chimp mothers are like mine.
They support their child.
Even if they know they're going to get attacked, they will run to rescue their child from danger. And the offspring of
those, now we can look back and find that they tend to do better. They're more assertive,
more confident. The males reach a higher position in the hierarchy, probably sigh more offspring.
And the females are better mothers. But the one thing that I really took away from Flo and the other chimp mothers, they love to play with their babies.
They would spend hours playing with them.
And I thought, yes, I'm going to have fun with my baby too. He did a lot of things that chimp mothers did, you know, lying on my back and sort of dangling grub from my feet and tickling him and things like that.
So I had a lot of fun with him.
And that came from the chimps.
How did he get the name Grub?
It was very silly.
He was born about the same time as a little chimp called Goblin.
And Goblin was a very messy eater. I mean,
all the other chimps would tumble around playing and come out sleek and black. And he'd have every
burr around stuck to his hair. And one case, he got hold of a very big banana. It was about as
big as him. And he's eating eating it but you know he eats far
too much so he takes a mouthful large mouthful he spits it into his hand he looks at it and then he
smashes the hand with the banana all over his face my son um he was a messy eater too he didn't want
to be weaned and he didn't like baby food.
And he would do much like Goblin.
He was a complete mess with it.
And so it became Goblin the Chimp, Goblin Grub.
And then my son became Grublin Gob.
So his real name is Grublin.
His nickname is Grublin.
And in the film, Jane, I'm referring to for people listening, and we don't have to spend a ton of time on this if you prefer to discuss other things, but I found myself wondering, after Grubb was really raised in the bush and had this natural existence, at some point, the decision was made to help him socialize and be educated. And I remember the footage in this film of walking down the street hand in hand in London. What was it like for him going from these all natural environments to that urban environment and being dropped off at school? And just, I suppose, the time after that, that he was dropped off at school and just I suppose the time after that that he was dropped off well you know
he was quite a bit of the time uh not in the bush he was in Nairobi and he did go to school there so
it wasn't that new and also my mother had been out visiting twice so he knew her very very well
and when he went back to England he wasn't just dumped in a school. He went to live where I am now in this house, actually in this very room.
And so he was with an extended family and he actually loved school.
So, you know, it wasn't it sort of sounds brutal, but it was more brutal for me than him, because he enjoyed school. And I felt that I
shouldn't have let him go. But I wouldn't have if mom and the family hadn't been there.
So he was in a very loving home. And it wasn't really that strange.
How do you relate to being alone? It seems that you're very comfortable, incredibly comfortable spending time
solitary by yourself. Certainly in Africa, that seemed to be the case. How do you relate to that?
I think that being alone is something many people fear. How do you think about it and relate to it?
Well, you know, when I was a child, I was spending hours alone out with the birds
and watching insects with my dog,
going up and down the cliffs of Bournemouth,
which was actually really good training for Gombe.
It's not that different.
And I used to spend hours up in the top of my favorite tree,
which I'm looking at right now.
Beach, it's a beach tree.
And I felt, you know, up near the birds and
closer. I don't know, it was a wonderful feeling being alone, being alone out in the forest,
in Gombe, absolute bliss. And the biggest problem with my life on the road is that I have
so little time alone. So hotel rooms come to be a sort of haven in a way
because I can shut and lock the door and I'm alone.
And do you find that you recharge by yourself?
Or what is your experience like by yourself?
I know that might sound like a strange question,
but many people busy themselves to avoid being alone or feeling alone.
What does it feel like for you to be alone?
It just feels really peaceful.
It means that I can think my own thoughts.
I can do things like reading.
And I think being a child, growing up with no TV, you know, reading.
Reading is much less busy than watching a tv show and i i think it's very sad
that so many children don't get to read more and have all this television all the time you know i
was in love with tarzan and when mum saved up to take me to probably the first johnny weiss
smaller film that came over. Great treat for Jane.
She took me, and after a little while I started to cry,
and she had to take me out.
She said, whatever's the matter?
I said, but that wasn't Tarzan.
Because as there was no TV and no movies,
I had my own Tarzan that I fell in love with,
and it wasn't Johnny Weissmuller.
You know, you don't have that opportunity anymore, because right from the beginning, they're deluged with some information of how they should see the world. a unique capability in sharing them through not just storytelling and sheer endurance,
but also a high degree of compassion.
And this is all a way of leading up to a question related to something you mentioned earlier,
and that is, you just a handful of days ago, really, turned 86.
And you seem as sharp as ever, as busy as ever, someone on your team was saying that
their impression is that you seem to work from 6am to 10pm, with the exception of a dog walk
in the middle. To what do you attribute the maintenance or maybe even increase of your
mental clarity and sharpness and endurance for such a long period of time?
Well, first of all, I've obviously inherited very good genes from my father, actually.
That was a major contribution he made to who I am. A lot of the rest of it came from
mom, but he was tough and strong. He could endure, so he was in the war. Anyway, what do I attribute
it all to? Well, I don't actually think people say, do you exercise? Do you meditate? What food, what diet, and on and on like that.
What supplements?
And I say, well, you know, I just eat what's around.
I don't want to eat very much.
I don't care about food.
I don't take any supplements.
I don't have a special diet except I'm vegetarian or when I'm at home now, vegan.
And I don't have time to do exercise.
Usually it's been just the airports.
Walking with the dog now, yes, but he's old.
And he's the only dog I've ever met who doesn't like walking.
And even when he was younger, he didn't.
He's a whippet.
He's more like a cat i mean
this morning honestly it was like taking a reluctant snail out for a walk
it's it's because uh well i mean if you think about things and i've always loved writing
i i think that's very important i didn't want to be a scientist.
I wanted to be a naturalist, live with animals and write books about them.
And so I've always loved writing.
My mother loved writing too.
In fact, I have a story somewhere.
I can't find it now, but I dictated it to her when I was five.
And it's a charming little story about a giraffe with a neck that was so long he could reach up to the moon.
Yeah, so it was always animals, you see.
So telling stories, thinking about stories.
I used to write a sort of icon.
When it first happened, I was really, really disturbed.
Because, you know, why were people thinking about me like that?
I was just me.
I was a lucky person.
But then I realized, well, if people are going to recognize me because of geographic and come up and want a signature of selfie now, then I must make use of it and be nice to them and smile at them and give them a brochure and tell them about Roots & Shoots. So there was a time when as I
went around the US, you could see the Roots & Shoots groups springing up like a comet with a
tail. But obviously, I look back on my life, honestly, Tim, and I see that there were stages
and at the end of a stage, there a crossroads and it never seemed that I consciously
made a decision it just was something that happened to change me and I think I've made
the right decisions and I'm meant to be here and I'm meant to be doing this and that gives me
extra I suppose endurance to cope with it And I care passionately about the future for the environment, animals and children.
And I suppose because I think a lot, I gained wisdom, I hope.
And I want to share it.
Well, I think you're doing a fantastic, beyond fantastic job. And one thing I've also noticed and gathered from people who work with you on your team, and seen certainly in videos, is that people, many fans of yours, many people you encounter become very emotional in your presence. They might break down in tears, for instance.
That is not always the case with figures who are well-known.
How would you explain that?
Or why do you think that's the case,
that so many people get so emotional when they meet you?
I don't know. I've thought about it a lot.
And I've asked them, and they don't seem to know and then they apologize and I say no
no no don't apologize it's it's something that for some odd reason I inspire these tears I ask
them why they why they're crying and they say well I never thought I'd see you I can't believe I'm
seeing you I'm so happy to be to be here And you've made my dream come true. And I suppose,
I don't know, my grandmother used to cry every time she was happy.
It seems like you make a lot of people happy. And perhaps it is, I mean, as a messenger of hope,
in many respects, that you give people hope. I think that there's, in some respects, a real shortage
of hope in many people's minds.
And the media spends so much time giving the gloom and doom, and there is a hell of a lot
of gloom and doom, I know. But there's also such wonderful things happening. And sharing
the good stories, the successes,
the nobility of so many people, the self-sacrifice,
which we're seeing with the coronavirus too,
then people realize all is not lost.
There's still a lot that we can do to make this a better world.
And after lectures, there's always at least one and often more people who come up
and say, I had lost hope, but I promise you, I'm going to do my bit. Thank you for giving me
some hope again. So I think this job of mine of giving people hope is a really important one
right now, right now more than perhaps ever before. And it's so compelling, I think, not just because
you are good at giving people hope, but also because you are, in a way, living proof and
the poster child for what hope can enable you to do, if that makes any sense. You're not just a
passive commentator giving lip service to hope. I mean, you are a case study in how much fuel and endurance, in part, hope can provide. I
think that's, at least for me, why it's so compelling and convincing and inspiring. So,
thank you for that.
You said that your friend told you to teach your children to be optimistic.
Yes. to be optimistic yes it's it's really you can't teach them that but you can tell stories and
tell stories about people and encourage them and support them i mean so many parents have set
views on what they want their child to be and the lesson i get from my mother is it was nobody was
thinking about going to af Africa and living with animals
when I wanted to except a few explorers you know who wanted to shoot them and put them in museums
but when everybody laughed at me and said I never get there I was just a girl it was a war we didn't
have money mom said if you really want something this, you're going to have to work really, really hard.
But take advantage of every opportunity.
And if you don't give up, you'll find a way to do that or something else that you really, really want to do.
And that story, that wisdom I take and share with young people everywhere, especially in disadvantaged communities.
And I wish mom knew how many people have said, Jane, thank you. You taught me that because you did it, I can do it too. You have so many projects and opportunities ahead of you.
Before I perhaps tie this to a close with a description of a few things that you have coming,
and then tell people where they can find out more about you and certainly follow along with your
continued adventures, I'd be curious to ask if you had a billboard, metaphorically speaking,
that could get a message out to billions of people.
It could be a word, a phrase, a question, an image, really anything.
What might you put on that billboard?
Remember that you make a difference every single day.
Perfect. That could not be more perfect. Dr. Jane Goodall, you have a new documentary. This is certainly continuing to showcase the incredible work you do. This is Jane Goodall, subtitled The Hope, which is premiering on Earth Day. That's this April 22nd, 9 Eastern, 8 Central,
and Nat Geo, Nat Geo Wild, and Nat Geo Mundo.
It is a two-hour documentary special that will take viewers through chapters of your journey
in the 60 years since your groundbreaking discoveries
in Gombe, researching wild chimpanzees,
including your activism,
creation of your nonprofit organization,
and also where people can find more about you,
janegoodall.org. That is the Jane Goodall Institute, JGI. And Roots & Shoots,
rootsandshoots.org. That is your youth program, along with your current efforts to inspire
the next generation. And I would go a step further and say, not just efforts, but successes. It's tremendously inspiring, not just
because of the ethos, but the actual effect that you are having. It's just remarkable. People can
find you on social media. You're also doing some very fun things like story time with Dr. Jane,
but Instagram, that is at Jane Goodall Inst, like Institute, I-N-S-T. Twitter, Jane Goodall Inst.
And same on Facebook, Jane Goodall Inst. And then the Roots & Shoots is the same on Facebook,
Instagram, and Twitter. The handle is at Roots & Shoots. This has been such a tremendous honor
and pleasure for me to spend so much time with you. I appreciate your generosity in granting
the interview, providing time, and also really keeping up the good fight and being a purveyor
and spreader of hope in a world where it is so easy to succumb to despair and hopelessness.
It's just tremendous. It's really a gift that you are providing. So I hope
that you're able to feel that and let that sink in at times. But I appreciate you so much for
taking the time to chat with me today. Well, I want to thank you, too, for giving me the chance
to chat to you. And I get interviewed by lots and lots of people. And sometimes it's a bit boring,
but I haven't been at all bored talking to you. So thank you, Tim.
That really means so much. And please keep it up. I will do my best to get your message,
your work, this interview to many millions of people who hopefully will in turn share it and spread it
because I think that hope really is the foundation here upon which so much else depends. And for
everyone listening, I will have everything in the show notes, links to everything we discussed at tim.blog forward slash podcast. And Dr. Jane Goodall, thank you so much.
And I hope we get to meet in person someday. Oh, I'm sure we shall. Thank you, Tim Ferris.
Hey, guys, this is Tim again, just a few more things before you take off. Number one,
this is five bullet Friday. Do you want to get a short email from me? Would you enjoy getting a short email from me every Friday
that provides a little morsel of fun for the weekend?
And Five Bullet Friday is a very short email
where I share the coolest things I've found
or that I've been pondering over the week.
That could include favorite new albums that I've discovered.
It could include gizmos and gadgets
and all sorts of weird shit that I've somehow dug up in the world of the esoteric as I do. It could include favorite
articles that I've read and that I've shared with my close friends, for instance. And it's very
short. It's just a little tiny bite of goodness before you head off for the weekend. So if you
want to receive that, check it out.
Just go to 4hourworkweek.com. That's 4hourworkweek.com all spelled out and just drop in
your email and you will get the very next one. And if you sign up, I hope you enjoy it.
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