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TED演讲集:八个成功秘笈(视频)《今日听力精华》-中英文双语

TED演讲集:八个成功秘笈(视频)《今日听力精华》-中英文双语
TED演讲集:八个成功秘笈(视频)《今日听力精华》-中英文双语

Richard St.John在Ted 英语演讲:成功的八个秘诀(中英双语)

2014-09-08

激情,刻苦,精通,专注,强迫,服务,点子,坚持,这就是成功的秘诀

This is really a two-hour presentation I give to high school students, cut down to three minutes. And it all started one day on a plane, on my way to TED, seven years ago. And in the seat next to me was a high school student, a teenager, and she came from a really poor family.

这真的是一个我给高中学生做的2个小时的演讲现在缩到了3分钟所有的一切都是从7年前的一天开始,我坐在飞往

TED会议的飞机上。在我邻座坐的是一个高中生,一个十几岁的年轻人。她生于一个贫穷的家庭而且她的愿望是成就一番事业所以她问了我一个简单的小问题。

And she wanted to make something of her life, and she asked me a simple little question. She said, "What leads to success?" And I felt really badly, because I couldn't give her a good answer. So I get off the plane, and I come to TED. And I think, jeez, I'm in the middle of a room of successful people! So why don't I ask them what helped them succeed, and pass it on to kids? So here we are, seven years, 500 interviews later, and I'm gonna tell you what really leads to success and makes TED-sters tick.

她说:“怎样做才能成功呢?”我当

时觉得糟透了因为我不能给她一个满意的答案后来我下了飞机,来到TED 忽然间我想到,天啊,我置身于一屋子成功人士之中!为什么我不问问他们是怎样走向成功的呢。这样我就可以把答案告诉孩子们了。所以就这样,7年中我坐了500次采访。现在我就要告诉你们是什么带来了成功是什么启发了TED演讲者们。

【And the first thing is passion.】

第一点是激情

Freeman Thomas says, "I'm driven by my passion." TED-sters do it for love; they don't do it for money. Carol Coletta says, "I would pay someone to do what I do." And the interesting thing is: if you do it for

love, the money comes anyway.

Freeman Thomas 说:“我总是被我的热情所牵引着” TED的讲演者因为有爱才做事情,不是为了钱。 Carol Colletta 说:“我会付给别人钱去做我的工作。”有趣的是如果你是为了爱而做的,钱自然而然就来了。

【Work!】

刻苦

Rupert Murdoch said to me, "It's all hard work. Nothing comes easily. But I have a lot of fun." Did he say fun? Rupert? Yes! TED-sters do have fun working. And they work hard. I figured, they're not workaholics. They're workafrolics.

Rupert Murdoch 曾经告诉过我“都是刻苦“为努力”“天下没有白吃的午餐。但是我得到了很多乐趣。”他提到了乐趣??Rupert?是的! TED讲演者都有一份充满乐趣的工作,而且他们都很刻苦。我觉得,他们都不是工作狂,他们是享受工作狂。

【Good! 】

精通

Alex Garden says, "To be successful put your nose down in something and get damn good at it." There's no magic; it's practice, practice, practice.

Alex Garden说:”要想成功,就要真的深入其中““然后做到精通。”想要做到精通没有秘诀,就是练习,练习,再练习。还

【And it's focus.】

有就是专注

Norman Jewison said to me, "I think it all has to do with focusing yourself on one thing."

Norman Jewison 告诉过我,“我想成功就要使自己专注于一件事情”

【And push! 】

强迫

David Gallo says, "Push yourself. Physically, mentally, you've gotta push, push, push." You gotta push through shyness and self-doubt. Goldie Hawn says, "I always had self-doubts. I wasn't good enough; I wasn't smart enough. I didn't think I'd make it." Now it's not always easy to push yourself, and that's why they invented mothers. (Laughter)Frank Gehry —Frank Gehry said to me, "My mother pushed me."

David Gallo说:“强迫你自己,”“心灵上,神情上。你一定要强迫,强迫,强迫。”“你要强迫自己去战胜羞涩和自我怀疑” Goldie Hawn说:“我总是怀疑自己。怀疑自己不够优秀,不用聪明。我从不相

信我会成功。”想要成功地强迫自己并不总容易,这就是为什么要发明妈妈。Frank Gehry-Frank Gehry对我说:“我妈妈过去总是督促我。”

【Serve!】

服务

Sherwin Nuland says, "It was a privilege to serve as a doctor." Now a lot of kids tell me they want to be millionaires. And the first thing I say to them is: "OK, well you can't serve yourself; you gotta serve others something of value. Because that's the way people really get rich."

Sherwin Nuland 说:“能够作为一名医生为他人服务是一种荣幸。”现在很多

孩子告诉我他们想成为百万富翁。但是一件事我对他们说的是,“好的,但是你不能为你自己服务,”“你需要为他人提供对他人有利的服务。””因为这就是人们致富的方式。“

【Ideas!】

点子

TED-ster Bill Gates says, "I had an idea: founding the first micro-computer software company." I'd say it was a pretty good idea. And there's no magic to creativity in coming up with ideas — it's just doing some very simple things. And I give lots of evidence.

TED演讲者 Bill Gates 说:”我曾经

有过一个点子,“成立第一个微机软件公司。”我必须承认这真的是很好的一个点子。对于能想出点子的创造力来讲没有什么魔力可言。都是些简单平常的事情。而且我可以举出很多证据。

【Persist!】

坚持

Joe Kraus says, "Persistence is the number one reason for our success." You gotta persist through failure. You gotta persist through crap! Which of course means "Criticism, Rejection, Assholes and Pressure." (Laughter)So, the big —the answer to this question is simple: Pay 4,000 bucks and come to TED. Or failing that, do the eight things — and trust me, these are

the big eight things that lead to success. Thank you TED-sters for all your interviews!

Joe Kraus 说“恒心是我们成功地第一条原因。”你必须坚持度过失败,你必须坚持度过crap,这里的crap是指”批评,拒绝,卑鄙小人和压力“(大笑)所以,这个问题的答案很简单:付4000块来TED 会场。如果不能来,就做到以上八点---相信我,这重要的八点就是通向成功的秘诀。谢谢TED讲演者参与我的采访!

TED演讲集:八个成功秘笈(视频)《今日听力精华》

作者:沪江英语

Richard在开头讲了一个小故事,说7年前在飞机上有个小女孩问他怎么才能成功,他答不上来,于是他用了7年时间,采访了500位成功人士,得出了如下结论:

1.PASSION热情

Do it for love,Not Money 爱上这事情,而不是为了钱。

2.Work努力工作

I t’s all hard work.Nothing come easily.But I have a lot of Fun.——Rupert Murdoch, big cheese CEO

3.Good把它做好

To be successful,put your nose down in something and get damn good at it.——Alex Garden, game developer

4.Focus专注

I think it all has to do with focusing yourself to one thing——Norman Jewison,filmmaker

5.Push推动/敦促

Push yourself,Physically mentally,you gotta PUSH PUSH PUSH——David Gallo,marine scientist

6.Serve服务

It was aprivelege to serve ad a doctor.—–Sherwin nuland ,profassor of surgery Yale

7.IDEAS创意

Listen/be curous/observe/ask questions/problem/solve/make connetions

8.Persist坚持

Persistence is the number one reason for our success—–Joe

Kraus ,co-founder,Excite

【视频原文】

This is really a two-hour presentation I give to high school students, cut down to three minutes. And it all started one day on a plane, on my way to TED, seven years ago. And in the seat next to me was a high school student, a teenager, and she came from a really poor family. And she wanted to make something of her life, and she asked me a simple little question. She said, "What leads to success?"

And I felt really badly, because I couldn't give her a good answer. So I get off the plane, and I come to TED. And I think, jeez, I'm in the middle of a room of successful people! So why don't I ask them what helped them succeed, and pass it on to kids? So here we are, seven years, 500 interviews later, and I'm gonna tell you what really leads to success and makes TED-sters tick.

And the first thing is passion. Freeman Thomas says, "I'm driven by my passion." TED-sters do it for love; they don't do it for money. Carol Coletta says, "I would pay someone to do what I do." And the interesting thing is: if you do it for love, the money comes anyway.

Work! Rupert Murdoch said to me, "It's all hard work. Nothing comes easily. But I have a lot of fun." Did he say fun? Rupert? Yes! TED-sters do have fun

working. And they work hard. I figured, they're not workaholics. They're workafrolics.

Good! Alex Garden says, "To be successful put your nose down in something and get damn good at it." There's no magic; it's practice, practice, practice.

And it's focus. Norman Jewison said to me, "I think it all has to do with focusing yourself on one thing."

And push! David Gallo says, "Push yourself. Physically, mentally, you've gotta push, push, push." You gotta push through shyness and self-doubt. Goldie Hawn says, "I always had self-doubts. I wasn't good enough; I wasn't smart enough. I didn't think I'd make it." Now it's not always easy to push yourself, and that's why they invented mothers. (Laughter) Frank Gehry

-- Frank Gehry said to me, "My mother pushed me."

Serve! Sherwin Nuland says, "It was a privilege to serve as a doctor." Now a lot of kids tell me they want to be millionaires. And the first thing I say to them is: "OK, well you can't serve yourself; you gotta serve others something of value. Because that's the way people really get rich."

Ideas! TED-ster Bill Gates says, "I had an idea: founding the first

micro-computer software company." I'd say it was a pretty good idea. And there's no magic to creativity in coming up with ideas -- it's just doing some very simple things. And I give lots of evidence.

Persist! Joe Kraus says, "Persistence is the number one reason for our success." You gotta persist through failure. You gotta persist through crap! Which of course

means "Criticism, Rejection, Assholes and Pressure." (Laughter) So, the big -- the answer to this question is simple: Pay 4,000 bucks and come to TED. Or failing that, do the eight things -- and trust me, these are the big eight things that lead to success.

Thank you TED-sters for all your interviews!

Ted中英对照演讲稿.

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工作励志演讲稿3分钟范文3篇

工作励志演讲稿3分钟范文3篇 工作励志演讲稿3分钟范文3篇 的朋友。当我来到大学的时候,我发现老师根本教不了我什么,然后我就在学校对面租了个小房子,开始我的二次创业。我从小到大都是一个不太招人喜欢的人,所以没有人会喜欢我,这让我很孤独。但有时候孤独让我成长得特别快,因为我知道只有靠我自己,我才能很努力、很努力地跑下去。今天我看到了在场很多年轻人,但我觉得今天很多年轻人一点都不年轻。什么叫年轻呢?我依稀记得我幼稚园的时候然后老师问一个问题,说哪个小朋友懂啊?我们都会举手,说,老师,我懂我懂。但是今天在座很多人其实不敢的,为什么?你怕答错,怕答错被人冷落、被别人否认。我觉得就是一些枷锁让你变得一点都不年轻,真正年轻就是把你的枷锁去掉。勇者无畏,没有枷锁,你就更有冲劲、更有勇气,去干更多更多更多的事情。别拿90后说事,90后也没什么了不起的。今天我看到整个社会,都在吹捧90后的时候,我觉得我们是不是应该向我们60后、70后、80后的前辈们致敬呢?是他们开创了这个时代给我们创造了一个很好很好的环境。所以我从来不称呼自己为90后,我说我是个年轻人,年轻的头脑、年轻的思想一直会流行,但90后一定会过去。谢谢大家!这段关于20岁青年人如何看待人生的演讲引起了许多TED粉丝的讨论,来自TEDx组织团队的David Webber就说: Meg指出最重要的一点便是青年人需要及早意识到积累经验和眼界,无论是20岁还是30岁,都是有利自己发展的重要事。”30岁不是一个新的20岁,生活决定权在于你自己。记得见我第一位心理咨询

顾客时,我才20多岁。当时我是Berkeley临床心理学在读博士生。我的第一位顾客是名叫Alex的女性,26岁。第一次见面Alex穿着牛仔裤和宽松上衣走进来,她一下子栽进我办公室的沙发上,踢掉脚上的平底鞋,跟我说她想谈谈男生的问题。当时我听到这个之后松了一口气。因为我同学的第一个顾客是纵火犯,而我的顾客却是一个20出头想谈谈男生的女孩。我觉得我可以搞定。但是我没有搞定。Alex不断地讲有趣的事情,而我只能简单地点头认同她所说的,很自然地就陷入了附和的状态。Alex说: “30岁是一个新的20岁。”没错,我告诉她“你是对的”。工作还早,结婚还早,生孩子还早,甚至死亡也早着呢。像Alex和我这样20多岁的人,什么都没有但时间多的是。但不久之后,我的导师就要我向Alex的感情生活施压。我反驳说: “当然她现在正在和别人交往,她现在和一个傻瓜男生睡觉,但看样子她不会和他结婚的。”而我的导师说: “不着急,她也许会和下一个结婚。但修复Alex婚姻的最好时期,是她还没拥有婚姻的时期。”这就是心理学家说的“顿悟时刻”。正是那个时候我意识到,30岁不是一个新的20岁。的确,和以前的人相比,现在人们更晚才安定下来,但是这不代表Alex就能长期处于20多岁的状态。更晚安定下来,应该使Alex的20多岁成为发展的黄金时段,而我们却坐在那里忽视这个发展的时机。从那时起我意识到,这种善意的忽视,确实是个问题,它不仅给Alex本身和她的感情生活带来不良后果,而且影响到处20多岁的人的事业、家庭和未来。人生如蜡烛一样,从顶燃到底,一直都是光明的。

TED演讲:成功的关键不是智商,而是毅力

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