Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • Imagine being unable to say, "I am hungry," "I am in pain,"

  • "thank you," or "I love you."

  • Being trapped inside your body,

  • a body that doesn't respond to commands.

  • Surrounded by people,

  • yet utterly alone.

  • Wishing you could reach out,

  • to connect, to comfort, to participate.

  • For 13 long years, that was my reality.

  • Most of us never think twice about talking, about communicating.

  • I've thought a lot about it.

  • I've had a lot of time to think.

  • For the first 12 years of my life,

  • I was a normal, happy, healthy little boy.

  • Then everything changed.

  • I contracted a brain infection.

  • The doctors weren't sure what it was,

  • but they treated me the best they could.

  • However, I progressively got worse.

  • Eventually, I lost my ability to control my movements,

  • make eye contact,

  • and finally, my ability to speak.

  • While in hospital,

  • I desperately wanted to go home.

  • I said to my mother, "When home?"

  • Those were the last words I ever spoke with my own voice.

  • I would eventually fail every test for mental awareness.

  • My parents were told I was as good as not there.

  • A vegetable, having the intelligence of a three-month-old baby.

  • They were told to take me home and try to keep me comfortable

  • until I died.

  • My parents, in fact my entire family's lives,

  • became consumed by taking care of me the best they knew how.

  • Their friends drifted away.

  • One year turned to two,

  • two turned to three.

  • It seemed like the person I once was began to disappear.

  • The Lego blocks and electronic circuits I'd loved as a boy were put away.

  • I had been moved out of my bedroom into another more practical one.

  • I had become a ghost,

  • a faded memory of a boy people once knew and loved.

  • Meanwhile, my mind began knitting itself back together.

  • Gradually, my awareness started to return.

  • But no one realized that I had come back to life.

  • I was aware of everything,

  • just like any normal person.

  • I could see and understand everything,

  • but I couldn't find a way to let anybody know.

  • My personality was entombed within a seemingly silent body,

  • a vibrant mind hidden in plain sight within a chrysalis.

  • The stark reality hit me that I was going to spend

  • the rest of my life locked inside myself,

  • totally alone.

  • I was trapped with only my thoughts for company.

  • I would never be rescued.

  • No one would ever show me tenderness.

  • I would never talk to a friend.

  • No one would ever love me.

  • I had no dreams, no hope, nothing to look forward to.

  • Well, nothing pleasant.

  • I lived in fear,

  • and, to put it bluntly,

  • was waiting for death to finally release me,

  • expecting to die all alone in a care home.

  • I don't know if it's truly possible to express in words

  • what it's like not to be able to communicate.

  • Your personality appears to vanish into a heavy fog

  • and all of your emotions and desires are constricted, stifled and muted within you.

  • For me, the worst was the feeling of utter powerlessness.

  • I simply existed.

  • It's a very dark place to find yourself

  • because in a sense, you have vanished.

  • Other people controlled every aspect of my life.

  • They decided what I ate and when.

  • Whether I was laid on my side or strapped into my wheelchair.

  • I often spent my days positioned in front of the TV

  • watching Barney reruns.

  • I think because Barney is so happy and jolly,

  • and I absolutely wasn't,

  • it made it so much worse.

  • I was completely powerless to change anything in my life

  • or people's perceptions of me.

  • I was a silent, invisible observer of how people behaved

  • when they thought no one was watching.

  • Unfortunately, I wasn't only an observer.

  • With no way to communicate, I became the perfect victim:

  • a defenseless object, seemingly devoid of feelings

  • that people used to play out their darkest desires.

  • For more than 10 years, people who were charged with my care

  • abused me physically, verbally and sexually.

  • Despite what they thought, I did feel.

  • The first time it happened,

  • I was shocked and filled with disbelief.

  • How could they do this to me?

  • I was confused.

  • What had I done to deserve this?

  • Part of me wanted to cry and another part wanted to fight.

  • Hurt, sadness and anger flooded through me.

  • I felt worthless.

  • There was no one to comfort me.

  • But neither of my parents knew this was happening.

  • I lived in terror, knowing it would happen again and again.

  • I just never knew when.

  • All I knew was that I would never be the same.

  • I remember once listening to Whitney Houston singing,

  • "No matter what they take from me, they can't take away my dignity."

  • And I thought to myself, "You want to bet?"

  • Perhaps my parents could have found out and could have helped.

  • But the years of constant caretaking,

  • having to wake up every two hours to turn me,

  • combined with them essentially grieving the loss of their son,

  • had taken a toll on my mother and father.

  • Following yet another heated argument between my parents,

  • in a moment of despair and desperation,

  • my mother turned to me and told me that I should die.

  • I was shocked, but as I thought about what she had said,

  • I was filled with enormous compassion and love for my mother,

  • yet I could do nothing about it.

  • There were many moments when I gave up,

  • sinking into a dark abyss.

  • I remember one particularly low moment.

  • My dad left me alone in the car

  • while he quickly went to buy something from the store.

  • A random stranger walked past,

  • looked at me and he smiled.

  • I may never know why, but that simple act,

  • the fleeting moment of human connection,

  • transformed how I was feeling,

  • making me want to keep going.

  • My existence was tortured by monotony,

  • a reality that was often too much to bear.

  • Alone with my thoughts, I constructed intricate fantasies

  • about ants running across the floor.

  • I taught myself to tell the time by noticing where the shadows were.

  • As I learned how the shadows moved as the hours of the day passed,

  • I understood how long it would be before I was picked up and taken home.

  • Seeing my father walk through the door to collect me

  • was the best moment of the day.

  • My mind became a tool that I could use

  • to either close down to retreat from my reality

  • or enlarge into a gigantic space that I could fill with fantasies.

  • I hoped that my reality would change

  • and someone would see that I had come back to life.

  • But I had been washed away like a sand castle

  • built too close to the waves,

  • and in my place was the person people expected me to be.

  • To some I was Martin, a vacant shell, the vegetable,

  • deserving of harsh words, dismissal and even abuse.

  • To others, I was the tragically brain-damaged boy

  • who had grown to become a man.

  • Someone they were kind to and cared for.

  • Good or bad, I was a blank canvas

  • onto which different versions of myself were projected.

  • It took someone new to see me in a different way.

  • An aromatherapist began coming to the care home about once a week.

  • Whether through intuition or her attention to details

  • that others failed to notice,

  • she became convinced that I could understand what was being said.

  • She urged my parents to have me tested by experts

  • in augmentative and alternative communication.

  • And within a year,

  • I was beginning to use a computer program to communicate.

  • It was exhilarating, but frustrating at times.

  • I had so many words in my mind,

  • that I couldn't wait to be able to share them.

  • Sometimes, I would say things to myself simply because I could.

  • In myself, I had a ready audience,

  • and I believed that by expressing my thoughts and wishes,

  • others would listen, too.

  • But as I began to communicate more,

  • I realized that it was in fact only just the beginning

  • of creating a new voice for myself.

  • I was thrust into a world I didn't quite know how to function in.

  • I stopped going to the care home

  • and managed to get my first job making photocopies.

  • As simple as this may sound, it was amazing.

  • My new world was really exciting

  • but often quite overwhelming and frightening.

  • I was like a man-child,

  • and as liberating as it often was,

  • I struggled.

  • I also learned that many of those who had known me for a long time

  • found it impossible to abandon the idea of Martin they had in their heads.

  • While those I had only just met

  • struggled to look past the image of a silent man in a wheelchair.

  • I realized that some people would only listen to me

  • if what I said was in line with what they expected.

  • Otherwise, it was disregarded

  • and they did what they felt was best.

  • I discovered that true communication

  • is about more than merely physically conveying a message.

  • It is about getting the message heard and respected.

  • Still, things were going well.

  • My body was slowly getting stronger.

  • I had a job in computing that I loved,

  • and had even got Kojak, the dog I had been dreaming about for years.

  • However, I longed to share my life with someone.

  • I remember staring out the window as my dad drove me home from work,

  • thinking I have so much love inside of me and nobody to give it to.

  • Just as I had resigned myself to being single for the rest of my life,

  • I met Joan.

  • Not only is she the best thing that has ever happened to me,

  • but Joan helped me to challenge my own misconceptions about myself.

  • Joan said it was through my words that she fell in love with me.

  • However, after all I had been through,

  • I still couldn't shake the belief

  • that nobody could truly see beyond my disability

  • and accept me for who I am.

  • I also really struggled to comprehend that I was a man.

  • The first time someone referred to me as a man,

  • it stopped me in my tracks.

  • I felt like looking around and asking, "Who, me?"

  • That all changed with Joan.

  • We have an amazing connection

  • and I learned how important it is to communicate openly and honestly.

  • I felt safe, and it gave me the confidence to truly say what I thought.

  • I started to feel whole again, a man worthy of love.

  • I began to reshape my destiny.

  • I spoke up a little more at work.

  • I asserted my need for independence to the people around me.

  • Being given a means of communication changed everything.

  • I used the power of words and will to challenge the preconceptions

  • of those around me and those I had of myself.

  • Communication is what makes us human,

  • enabling us to connect on the deepest level

  • with those around us --

  • telling our own stories,

  • expressing wants, needs and desires,

  • or hearing those of others by really listening.

  • All this is how the world knows who we are.

  • So who are we without it?

  • True communication increases understanding

  • and creates a more caring and compassionate world.

  • Once, I was perceived to be an inanimate object,

  • a mindless phantom of a boy in a wheelchair.

  • Today, I am so much more.

  • A husband, a son, a friend,

  • a brother, a business owner, a first-class honors graduate,

  • a keen amateur photographer.

  • It is my ability to communicate that has given me all this.

  • We are told that actions speak louder than words.

  • But I wonder,

  • do they?

  • Our words, however we communicate them,

  • are just as powerful.

  • Whether we speak the words with our own voices,

  • type them with our eyes,

  • or communicate them non-verbally to someone who speaks them for us,

  • words are among our most powerful tools.

  • I have come to you through a terrible darkness,

  • pulled from it by caring souls

  • and by language itself.

  • The act of you listening to me today brings me farther into the light.

  • We are shining here together.

  • If there is one most difficult obstacle to my way of communicating,

  • it is that sometimes I want to shout

  • and other times simply to whisper a word of love or gratitude.

  • It all sounds the same.

  • But if you will,

  • please imagine these next two words as warmly as you can:

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

Imagine being unable to say, "I am hungry," "I am in pain,"

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

A2 初級

TED】我的思想是如何復活的--而且沒有人知道|馬丁-皮斯托瑞斯|TED演講-----。 (【TED】How My Mind Came Back to Life — and No One Knew | Martin Pistorius | TED Talks)

  • 386 17
    Max Lin 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字