ted演讲稿范文(最新10篇)
演讲稿可以按照用途、性质等来划分,是演讲上一个重要的准备工作。在社会一步步向前发展的今天,越来越多人会去使用演讲稿,相信写演讲稿是一个让许多人都头痛的问题,读书破万卷下笔如有神,下面虎知道为您精心整理了10篇《ted演讲稿范文》,亲的肯定与分享是对我们最大的鼓励。
英语演讲稿 篇一
In 20_ — not so long ago — a professor who was then at Columbia University took that case and made it [Howard] Roizen. And he gave the case out, both of them, to two groups of students. He changed exactly one word: "Heidi" to "Howard." But that one word made a really big difference. He then surveyed the students, and the good news was the students, both men and women, thought Heidi and Howard were equally competent, and that's good.The bad news was that everyone liked Howard. He's a great guy. You want to work for him. You want to spend the day fishing with him. But Heidi? Not so sure. She's a little out for herself. She's a little political.You're not sure you'd want to work for her. This is the complication. We have to tell our daughters and our colleagues, we have to tell ourselves to believe we got the A, to reach for the promotion, to sit at the table, and we have to do it in a world where, for them, there are sacrifices they will make for that, even though for their brothers, there are not. The saddest thing about all of this is that it's really hard to remember this. And I'm about to tell a story which is truly embarrassing for me, but I think important.
经典TED英语演讲稿 篇二
Do you think it's possible to control someone's attention? Even more than that, what about predicting human behavior? I think those are interesting ideas, if you could. I mean, for me, that would be the perfect superpower, actually kind of an evil way of approaching it. But for myself, in the past, I've spent the last 20 years studying human behavior from a rather unorthodox way: picking pockets. When we think of misdirection, we think of something as looking off to the side, when actually it's often the things that are right in front of us that are the hardest things to see, the things that you look at every day that you're blinded to.
For example, how many of you still have your cell phones on you right now? Great. Double-check. Make sure you still have them on you. I was doing some shopping beforehand. Now you've looked at them probably a few times today, but I'm going to ask you a question about them. Without looking at your cell phone directly yet, can you remember the icon in the bottom right corner? Bring them out, check, and see how accurate you were. How'd you do? Show of hands. Did we get it?
Now that you're done looking at those, close them down, because every phone has something in common. No matter how you organize the icons, you still have a clock on the front. So, without looking at your phone, what time was it? You just looked at your clock, right? It's an interesting idea. Now, I'll ask you to take that a step further with a game of trust. Close your eyes. I realize I'm asking you to do that while you just heard there's a pickpocket in the room, but close your eyes.
Now, you've been watching me for about 30 seconds. With your eyes closed, what am I wearing? Make your best guess. What color is my shirt? What color is my tie? Now open your eyes. By a show of hands, were you right?
It's interesting, isn't it? Some of us are a little bit more perceptive than others. It seems that way. But I have a different theory about that, that model of attention. They have fancy models of attention, Posner's trinity model of attention. For me, I like to think of it very simple, like a surveillance system. It's kind of like you have all these fancy sensors, and inside your brain is a little security guard. For me, I like to call him Frank. So Frank is sitting at a desk. He's got all sorts of cool information in front of him, high-tech equipment, he's got cameras, he's got a little phone that he can pick up, listen to the ears, all these senses, all these perceptions. But attention is what steers your perceptions, is what controls your reality. It's the gateway to the mind. If you don't attend to something, you can't be aware of it. But ironically, you can attend to something without being aware of it. That's why there's the cocktail effect: When you're in a party, you're having conversations with someone, and yet you can recognize your name and you didn't even realize you were listening to that.
Now, for my job, I have to play with techniques to exploit this, to play with your attention as a limited resource. So if I could control how you spend your attention, if I could maybe steal your attention through a distraction. Now, instead of doing it like misdirection and throwing it off to the side, instead, what I choose to focus on is Frank, to be able to play with the Frank inside your head, your little security guard, and get you, instead of focusing on your external senses, just to go internal for a second. So if I ask you to access a memory, like, what is that? What just happened? Do you have a wallet? Do you have an American Express in your wallet? And when I do that, your Frank turns around. He accesses the file. He has to rewind the tape. And what's interesting is, he can't rewind the tape at the same time that he's trying to process new data.
Now, I mean, this sounds like a good theory, but I could talk for a long time and tell you lots of things, and they may be true, a portion of them, but I think it's better if I tried to show that to you here live. So if I come down, I'm going to do a little bit of shopping. Just hold still where you are.
Hello, how are you? It's lovely to see you. You did a wonderful job onstage. You have a lovely watch that doesn't come off very well. Do you have your ring as well? Good. Just taking inventory. You're like a buffet. It's hard to tell where to start, there's so many great things.
Hi, how are you? Good to see you.
Hi, sir, could you stand up for me, please? Just right where you are. Oh, you're married. You follow directions well. That's nice to meet you, sir. You don't have a whole lot inside your pockets. Anything down by the pocket over here? Hopefully so. Have a seat. There you go. You're doing well.
ted中英文演讲稿 篇三
Everyone has his own dream. Some want to be doctors. Others hope to bescientists. My dream is to become a teacher.
Teachers can not teach us many things at school, but they do their best toteach us how to learn. Thanks to them, we learn knowledge. And at the same time,we learn how to live a happy life. They spend most time on their students. Theyare great in my eyes.
I hope to be a teacher because I admire teachers. I know it is not easy tomake my dream come true. But I decide to study harder from now on. I am sure mydream will come true.
每个人都有他自己的梦想。一些人想成为医生。一些人希望成为科学家。我的梦想是成为一名老师。
老师不仅能在学校教给我们许多事情,而且他们尽力教会我们如何去学习。感谢他们,我们学到了知识。并且在同时,我们知道怎么幸福地生活。他们花费他们大多数时间在他们的学生身上。他们在我的眼里是伟大的。
我希望成为一名教师因为我钦佩老师。我知道实现我的梦想并不容易。但是我决定从现在开始更加努力地学习。我确信我的梦想一定能实现。
I want to be a scientist in the future. This is my dream. I must work hardfor it. Scientists make great contribution to our society. We have TV, computer,train, plane, planet and many other things because of the hard work ofscientists. So I want to be a great person as they are. I want to become anaerospace scientist, because I am interested in the outer space very much. Theouter space is wonderful and amazing. It must be great if I can be a scientistof this field.
参考译文
将来我想成为一名科学家。这是我的梦想,我必须为之努力。科学家对社会做出了伟大贡献。因为科学家的努力工作,我们有了电视机,电脑,火车,飞机,卫星以及很多其他东西。因此,我想成为想他们一样伟大的人。我想成为航空科学家,因为我对外太空很感兴趣。外太空是美妙而又神奇的。如果我能成为这个领域的科学家一定很棒。
经典TED英语演讲稿 篇四
01、 Remember to say thank you
Hi. I'm here to talk to you about the importance of praise, admiration and thank you, and having it be specific and genuine.
And the way I got interested in this was, I noticed in myself, when I was growing up, and until about a few years ago, that I would want to say thank you to someone, I would want to praise them, I would want to take in their praise of me and I'd just stop it. And I asked myself, why? I felt shy, I felt embarrassed. And then my question became, am I the only one who does this? So, I decided to investigate.
I'm fortunate enough to work in the rehab facility, so I get to see people who are facing life and death with addiction. And sometimes it comes down to something as simple as, their core wound is their father died without ever saying he's proud of them. But then, they hear from all the family and friends that the father told everybody else that he was proud of him, but he never told the son. It's because he didn't know that his son needed to hear it.
So my question is, why don't we ask for the things that we need? I know a gentleman, married for 25 years, who's longing to hear his wife say, "Thank you for being the breadwinner, so I can stay home with the kids," but won't ask. I know a woman who's good at this. She, once a week, meets with her husband and says, "I'd really like you to thank me for all these things I did in the house and with the kids." And he goes, "Oh, this is great, this is great." And praise really does have to be genuine, but she takes responsibility for that. And a friend of mine, April, who I've had since kindergarten, she thanks her children for doing their chores. And she said, "
But before I show you what’s inside,
I will tell you that’s going to do incredible things for you 。
It will bring all of your family together.
You will feel loved and appreciated like never before.
And reconnect to friends and acquaintances you haven’t heard from in years.
Adoration and admiration will overwhelm you.
It will recalibrate what’s important in your life.
It will redefine your sense of spirituality and faith.
You’ll have a new understanding and trust in your body.
You’ll have unsurpassed vitality and energy.
You’ll expand your vocabulary, meet new people, and you’ll have a healthier lifestyle. And get this, you’ll have an eight-week vacation of doing absolutely nothing.
You’ll eat countless gourmet meals.
Flowers will arrive by the truck load.
People will say to you: “you look great! Have you had any work done?”
And you’ll have a life-time supply of good drugs.
You’ll be challenged, inspired, motivated and humbled.
Your life will have new meaning: peace, health, serenity, happiness, nirvana.
The price?
Fifty-five thousand dollars.
And that’s an incredible deal.
By now, I know you’re dying to know what it is and where you can get one.
Does Amazon carry it?
Dose it have the Apple logo on it?
Is there a waiting list?
Not likely.
This gift came to me about five months ago.
And looked more like this when it was all wrapped up.
Not quite so pretty.
And this.
And then this.
It was a rare jam.
A brain tumor.
Hemangioblastoma.
The gift that keeps on giving.
And while I’m ok now.
I wouldn’t wish this gift for you.
I’m not sure you’d want it.
But I would’t change my experience.
It profoundly altered my life in ways it didn’t expect.
In all the ways I just shared with you.
So the next time you are faced with something that’s unexpected, unwanted and uncertain. Consider that it just may be a gift.
简短的ted演讲稿 篇五
下面由好范文网的作者为你提供简短的ted演讲稿的写法。
同学们好:
我始终相信任何一个人想要改变自己的人生,想要改变自己的命运,最佳的法宝或者说最好的力量,就是去进行奋斗,我相信在座的各位同学坐在这儿也是来吸取这种力量。
我们每一个人出生都不一样,曾经年轻的时候,抱怨自己生长在一个贫困家庭。曾经年轻的时候抱怨过自己的父母,什么也不能给我。混遍北大整整七年,没有一个女人爱上我的时候,我发现我的很多同学都已经谈了好几次恋爱。有的同学已经娶上了美丽的女人,成立了美好的家庭。当我发现至少每个同学都拥有一个健康身体的时候,我在大学三年级的时候得了肺结核。发现好像所有的生活黑暗和不如意都集中在你一个人身上,幸亏在这样的过程中间我始终没有放弃自己身上唯一的力量,这个力量就是我觉得只要努力,只要奋斗,只要给我足够的时间,我应该能够改变自己的命运,我应该能够让自己的生活变得更好。而这种感觉来自于什么地方呢,就是来自于我从小在农村的那种生活,来自于我自己高考的启示,因为对于我来说,农村孩子长大唯一可能的归宿就是在农村。
我十四岁初中毕业,紧接着命运就对我做出了宣判,当时中国有一个政策,叫做贫下中农子女,一家只能有一个上高中,我姐上了高中,因此就轮不到我。所以其实我在十四岁的时候就认认真真地当过一回农民,在那个时候我就料定了自己这辈子大概只能在农村待着了。但是,老天给了我一个非常好的机会,这个机会就是“四人帮”粉碎以后,教育政策立刻就改变了。我们的初中老师想起了我,说俞敏洪是一直喜欢读书的人,我们是不是可以把他破例地重新放到高中里面来。我妈听说我这个事情以后就非常地兴奋,就找公社大队的领导和学校的校长去不断地说,说我儿子就是可以来的,所以我这辈子我最感激的就是我妈。这就是我的第一次机会,这个不是我奋斗来的,是党和国家给我的。高中毕业的时候,其实整个班全是农民,因为我们就是农村中学,几乎没有一个人会有信心说能考上大学,但是这个时候我碰上了一个好老师。这个老师现在还在南京,已经八十岁了,他在我们复习高考的时候,高二的时候就对我们说了一句话,他说我知道你们在座的小子没有一个能考上大学的`,你们以后一定都是农民,但是我依然要求你们每一个人都去考大学,因为当你们以后回到农村,在田头劳动的时候,当你拄着锄头仰望蓝天,叹息自己命运悲哀的时候,你会想起来,你曾经为了改变自己的命运而奋斗过一次。这句话,我到今天还能记得,大家想想这个印象多深,所以我就认定了自己一定要考大学,第二是我认定了一定要让这个老师失望一次。但这只是一次美好的愿望,我高考第一年出来以后,英语分数只考了33分,尽管当年这个录取的英语分数线也不高,最低大专录取分数线就是我们江苏有一个地区师范学院,只有40分,但是我只考了33分,差了7分,那么我就想,如果我再努力一年,我也许就超过40分了,也许我就进这个大专去了,所以我就边干农活边复习。当时农村连电灯都还没有,在煤油灯底下复习,我就是在高考复习的第二年眼睛近视了,所以第二年去高考的时候考出来,考了55分,我拿到这个分数就特别高兴,为什么呢,我想录取分数线是40分,我是55分,那么我无论如何能够进那个师范学院了。结果分数线下来以后,师范学院的分数线提到了60分,结果又差了5分。高考两次失败以后反而让我增加了信心,我就觉得我非要考第三年不可,所以我就跟我母亲说,第三年我无论如何不干农活,就是说一定要每天,所有的时间都交给我,但是我母亲就说我再给你一年时间,但是我们家确实很穷,所以第三年如果你再考不上的话,你就只能是老老实实回来当农民。所以我第三年就拼命了,每天早上六点起来,晚上十二点睡觉,到第三年参加高考的时候,成绩一出来我就发现我的成绩超过了北京大学的录取分数线,所以后来就有幸跟撒贝宁这样的名人成了校友。其实北京大学这四个字在我脑袋中连闪都没闪过,所以这个例子给同学们又一个启示。什么启示呢?人是要有梦想的,但是你梦想再大,你不去努力是不管用的,就像你爬山的时候,就算你不看那个山头,你只要知道自己在向上爬,只要你爬的路是对的,你到达山头只是一个时间问题。所以,回想我自己的生命,我觉得往往是我生活中带来的一些失败,最后促使我反弹起来,又够着了一个新的目标。
我后来在八十年代末的时候想要出国去读书,但是我联系几十个大学,十几个大学给我发录取通知书,没有一个大学给我发奖学金,都说你只能自己出钱了,而当时我在北大的工资,连奖金带基本工资加起来大概一个月二百块钱,换成美元,三十美元左右。美国的最低学费一个大学大概三万美金,还不算你的生活费,我算了一下,一百年不吃不喝都不够。所以我就想到了我应该要赚更多的钱,怎么赚更多的钱呢?人有了需求就会有想法,有了想法就会有创新。当时刚好中国的外语培训业已经开始轰轰烈烈地起来了,所以我就想我为什么不自己办一个培训班呢?所以就有了新东方。新东方完全不是我理想的产物,有人说俞老师你做新东方,是不是想到了你要为中国教育要做贡献,我想到的就是我要钱。但是今天的我,倒真的实实在在想要为中国的培训事业,和中国的教育做点事情了。为什么?因为你有了这样的实力,你有了这样力量,你有了这样的基础,那自然你就会做,所以我们不用去想太多。很多你没有想到的事情可能会做到,那么为什么会做到呢?就是因为你在不断地改变自己。我们永远不可能说我们站在这个舞台的中央,你就坐着,天上就掉下馅饼来,永远不可能!这个世界上有偶然的运气,有必然的运气,如果你把偶然的运气当做必然的运气,你的生命就会越来越差。但是一个人可以追求必然的运气,什么叫必然的运气,必然运气就是通过自己的努力,踏踏实实地使自己达到了某一个状态,达到了某一个境界,用你这个状态,用你这个境界,用你这个身价去换取你所需要的东西,二十五年前的我在北大拿一百多块钱的工资,这就是我的身价。十五年前的我在新东方我能挣的钱也就是勉强能够养活自己,但是今天的我已经算是中国的在美国比较好的上市公司的老总之一,这个东西是我自己通过努力得来的,所以就不太容易被人剥夺,这个东西是我自己努力得来的,所以我得到了心安理得。这个东西是我努力得来的,所以我更加相信努力的力量,为我自己的后半辈子,我还会去持续不断地继续努力,这就是一个正向的,积极心态的循环。比如说现在的小年轻,我常常觉得很痛苦,为什么呢?第一个,虚荣心特别地强,虚荣心强他关注的什么呢?他关注的不是自己生活的状态,他关注的是周边人跟自己的比较以后,我能不能胜过周边人。比如说中国人结婚以后,中国的女人比自己的丈夫,比的最多的就是你看你看,你的同学怎么怎么样了。你看你看,隔壁的老张怎么样了,完了以后你看你这个窝囊废,到现在还这个样子。她从来不去想这个丈夫本身的好处在什么地方,他的优缺点在什么地方,她是通过个人比较,而比较的标准又特别地庸俗,不是比较对方更有钱,就是比较对方地位更高了。隔壁老张都升了局长了,你这窝囊废,你跟他是同班同学,你现在还是个处长,你看你怎么活的,还不如我嫁给老张算了,好面子就变成了一个人奋斗的动力,而不是说真正的追求幸福的这个心态去变成自己奋斗的动力,所以现在比如说很多年轻人都是贷款,买房买车,完了变成了房奴和车奴,完了生活就被毁掉了。为什么呢?因为你在年纪轻轻的时候就背上了负担以后,你有了一份工作你就不敢扔了,(被)锁在一份工作上当然很好,表面上你很专注,但是另外一个方向就是,你失去了一切让自己的生命可以在其它方向腾飞的机会。我当初之所以敢从北大出来,当初我自信地从北大出来,很简单,我没房没车,北大给我安排的当时的宿舍就是十平米的宿舍,我想这十平米的宿舍不住也罢。所以出来,天地都在我身边,就这种感觉,所以你不怕丢。一个人要不怕丢,因为你怕丢什么东西都不可能得到,你想谈恋爱你就可能失恋了。你想找工作你就可能会失业了。你要想高兴就可能会失落。你想创业你就可能会失败,所以失可能比你得还要更加地重要。
至于说我们的家庭背景,我在大学演讲的时候会遇到很多学生来跟我讨论问题,有同学说俞老师你看,你看我的同学,他们拥有无数的社会资源,现在社会资源越来越集中,完了像我们这样穷人家来的孩子,我们已经争取不到这个机会,这个世界是如此地不公平,我们这些人该怎么办?这个世界从来就没有公平过,即使你到美国,也不可能有这样的公平,但是中国其实还有另外一个好处,中国从来没有社会,真正的社会阶层等级概念。你从一个最普通的老百姓,只要你愿意奋斗出来,你就会被人一视同仁。所以尽管我们会发现周围有资源的人会比你更早地拥有资源,但是人生不是百米赛跑,让他们先得到好了,你给自己一辈子,这个自信人生二百年,会当击水三千里,我们也许活不到二百年,但是一百年总可以吧。所以在我大学毕业的时候,全班同学毕业典礼上,大家每个人都要上去表态,我上去说的我到今天还依依稀稀记得。我说同学们大家都很厉害,你们的学习成绩都那么好,但是请大家相信我不会放弃自己,你们做了五年的事情,我做十年,你们做十年的我做二十年,你们做二十年的我做四十年,实在不行,这辈子我要保持健康心态,保持心情愉快,身体健康,到了八十岁以后,把你们一个一个送走了,我再走。
其实人生奋斗没法比,每个人都有自己的事业,每个人都有自己的人生,最重要的什么呢?你跟自己比,就你跟自己比,你的今天是不是比昨天好,你的明天是不是比今天好,你的明年会不会比今年好,十年以后的你会不会比十年前站在这的今天的你要更好。还有的同学很有意思来问我说俞老师你看,我这个长相不怎么样,也影响了我的事业发展。比如说我去求职面试的时候,人家老板一看我长得这副挫样,他就不要我了。我说你敢这么说,说明你内心还是有点自信的,所以人是什么呢,人在三十岁以前长相可能是有一定的关系的。女孩子就算你再漂亮,过了三十岁你还能说老娘长得很妖娆吗?这感觉不对吧?就是说人是要有一点外表上的干净利落的感觉,但是到此为止了。一个男人天天在镜子面前花半个小时打扮自己,我真看到过这样的男人,半个小时都不止,我觉得男人连镜子都不应该照的。你要知道,你这么好的时间你不用在让自己的生命变得更加有魅力上面,有什么用呢?你再打扮,你能不老吗?你再打扮到年纪大了,你能皱纹不上脸吗?当你皱纹上脸的(时候),皱纹中透露出的是庸俗还是透露的是智慧,这全是你现在要做的事情,所以同学们长相跟你没关系。有一次一个小男孩,我在演讲的时候跑上来,很矮。他说俞老师,我这样一个人,在男人堆里找不到自己,在女人堆里我也找不到自己,实在太矮了,他说你看我这辈子怎么办?我说,你知道鲁迅多高吗?1米58。你知道邓小平多高吗?1米57。你知道拿破仑多高吗?1米56。我说你多高,他说我1米55,我说你知道你应该变成什么样的人了吧。
人生是自己的选择,你要把自己变成的是一个能够不是对得起自己长相,而是对得起自己的内心,对得起自己的能力的人,应该是这样去做的。所以同学们,大家一起共同努力,只要你自己相信,奋斗能让你改变自己,你的生命一定会越来越灿烂,我的演讲到此为止,谢谢大家!
ted中英文演讲稿 篇六
She told me a lot of things, for example, she and her teacher. Between students, these things let me know she is a girl of heart is very wide, can always go to others. It was also because of her generous, her tolerance, let us go closer, she always can tolerate everything of mine, if I said hard words again, she still endure to endure. Finally one day, I can't help but ask her: "you never angry?" She is still a face of smile ground to say: "what things should come to your senses, how to tolerate others, actually is also a good way to treasure the friendship, which is beneficial to oneself, you're right!" Listen to her words, I also learned to tolerance, learned to take a step back.
She also have a gift for painting, usually can get something, drawing, it makes me admire her. She told me: "as long as the heart, you also can do a good job." I learned to do a good job in every thing by heart.
She taught me a lot, but most of them are of some minor in life, but it let me change a lot.
Moment of parting is always painful, tearfully bid farewell to you, my dear friends, at this moment, I just want to say to you: "thank you, this is my confession, inner, which really! Though we are far away from the, but our hearts are linked together, forever, because you are my best friend."
ted演讲稿 篇七
瞧,她笑的多开心呀,两只眼睛成了弯弯的月亮,微微的翘起的小鼻子向上耸起,红红的小嘴随着咯咯的笑声一张一合的,就连那两只小羊角辫也在抖动着。你知道她是谁吗?告诉你,那就是我。
我个儿不高,大约1米1左右。我有很多特点,最大的特点就是喜欢动物。
初冬,我在街上花钱买了两只小鸡,一只乳白色,一只橘黄色。买了它们满以为妈妈也会像我一样高兴,可一进门,妈妈就不高兴的说:“你怎么把这小东西买回来啦?他会冻死的。”我不以为然,我决心要把它们养活。我先把它们放在地上,又拿来小米喂它们,可它们只是叽叽叽地叫,不肯吃。妈妈走过来说:“天气冷,它们冻得顾不上吃了。”我仔细一看,果然,它们冻得直发抖。于是,我把它们放在手心上,它们才叽叽叽地吃起来。晚上,我在桌前写作业,小鸡在旁边并不吃我给它们的小米,总是叽叽叽地叫。每办法,只好把它们放在我的棉衣里,它们才不叫了。我安心地写完作业,把它们拿出来,它们又开始叫了,我只好跟它们“同床共枕”。
总算熬到开暖气的那一天了,房间变暖了,小鸡的羽毛也长了。晚上,我把它们放在盒子里,怕它们跑了,就在上面又蒙上了一层布。结果第二天,小鸡闷死了。我伤心的哭了,并且一连好几天都很伤心。
我曾经被赵忠祥伯伯主持的《动物世界》所感动,希望自己长大以后,为保护动物做宣传。我也曾被那些铺杀动物的不法分子所激怒,为那些无辜被害的动物流泪。有一次,我在电视上看到公安局抓获一批走私动物皮的犯罪分子,既高兴,又伤心,伤心的是有那么多的动物被他们残忍的杀害了,高兴的是公安局的叔叔终于把那一伙惨无人道的走私分之抓获了,侥幸生存的一批动物可以得到保护了。
这就是我,一个喜欢动物,爱护动物的小女孩。
ted中文演讲稿 篇八
(一)
三月的洛阳,点乱红山碎杏发,铺平绿水新苹生,十里湖光千世梦,花语雨初嬉笑回。而那年的三月,白雁翅低仍重飞,黄鹂舌涩未成语,纵使是旷世迁客骚人也难揄扬曾经这如仙境般的美景。他们的眼中只是,泥上飘零许多愁,落水边花未随流;只是,感时残花溅血泪,恨别憔鸟惊恨心。那年,国家天下,内外忧患,人心惶惶。那年,朝廷政权摇摇欲坠,动荡不安,眼看着这曾经盛世民族如今将逢灭顶之灾。
那年,朝中,权臣当道,把持朝政。新帝幼小,是非不分。边境,四面临敌,千里报急。朝廷却迟迟不肯发兵救援。守边大将叶护一人难敌万众,被困敌军,生死未卜。权臣说服幼帝让将军之子叶寒下洛阳,寻找传说中的绝世宝剑,传说,“宝剑一出,无与争锋,以一敌万,救民水火。”
那年,叶寒来到洛阳。
阴沉沉的风刮过洛阳边界,天空中有无数只鸟雀盘旋哀鸣,浓烈的悲哀从叶寒狼眼般狭长深邃的眼睛中渐渐渗出。突逢家变,年少的他,挑起家主的负担。背负国仇,无援的他,担起救国的重任。谁来怜惜,这个昔日冷漠倔犟的少年。多日的跋涉,身心双疲的他,两眼一黑,重重的倒在地上,晕了过去。
不知多久,褥席上,叶寒躺着,嘴角微微上扬,不知他在梦中遇到了谁。微瞬间,叶寒醒了。睁开眼,发现自己躺在一张干净的床上,身边是一个清秀的少年。
“我是言幽,是我救了你。你的身体很弱,需要休息。”少年对着叶寒说。
“嗯?恩!”话虽短,却是温暖。叶寒笑了,这种感觉好像父亲。
“来,喝药。”黑黢黢的药水,泛着波痕。叶寒斜觑着言幽,那双眼睛似乎与梦中的人影重叠,一样的光彩熠熠,似夜空中的星,折射出柔和的颜色,却带着点点忧愁。
“父亲……”叶寒低头不知在自语什么。
(二)
数月过去,天地景物,宛若迷雾。山涧四季,水面涟漪,草际烟光,月下花容,杲杲云彩,风中飘逸。那天晚上,赤橙色的星辰点缀着墨蓝色的天空,夜弥漫着温馨的颜色。那天山上,磷光莹莹,萤火虫闪着模糊地绿光,连缀起一片绿色,好似夜空的倒影,迷茫而又清晰。言幽突然开口道:“你,想要什么?”
叶寒眉头不见任何波澜,默默注视夜空许久,方回声:“我要找到宝剑,复兴我朝。”意气勃发,“我要救父亲,我的父亲……”黯然泣下,声音渐小,一抽一噎。
“男儿有泪不轻弹,不要哭。”言幽的声音庄重有威严,“我们会救出来的。”
“嗯。”叶寒望着像似父亲的眼神,颔首一点,渐渐凝神,双眉紧蹙,脆弱的脸上浮现如山般坚毅,如月般冷漠倔强。
又是长时间的沉默。
言幽突然又道“生在乱时,是我们的不幸。但,国破山在,城春草木,只待烟雨,雨润如舒。逢在痛时,是我们的不甘,但,宝剑锋从磨砺出。是英雄,终显本色,仗剑纵路,才是漫游名山的铮铮傲骨。即使,一把锈迹斑驳的剑。”
“是!”叶寒铿锵有力的回答。
搁浅的记忆一点点尘封重启,叶寒的脑海闪烁嘶嘶火光:
“哟,这不是言幽吗?怎么,又出来行骗了。害人还没害够吗?”每每这声音如刺般在叶寒的脑中回旋。
“我不是。”言幽的声音急促响起,却惜在人们的嬉笑中,反驳声消失在人海。他的眉角是落寞,是忧愁,是痛恨,是不甘。
叶寒懂了,他知道言幽如同自己有不堪回首的过去,有自己的痛,有自己的殇,一直,深深埋在内心最深处。叶寒明了,他知道言幽在等待属于自己的命轮,等待有一天自己俯看天下。
“那你呢?”叶寒道。
“我。呵呵,我枉费一生医术。哼,终有一天,我会站在颠峰,让天下的人都知道我言幽是何等的医术高超。”双拳紧握,眉角是坚毅,是凝重。
“可为何他们不信,他们宁愿死也不信,我说他们喝的符汤有毒,不能喝。他们不听,喝了,死了人,还怪罪于我,说我得罪神明,神明降罪,害他们惨死,为什么?”言幽大喊,“为什么,为什么?”
“呵。”叶寒苦笑。在村里住了几月,渐渐的打听到言幽的事,他不能说什么,也不能做什么,他知道是村民的无知,可这有什么办法,村民信神明,不信言幽。每当他问村民言幽的事,他们总是咬牙切齿,恨不得噬其肉,饮其血。
是啊?为什么?我们只是少年,为何,为何?
黑夜总是会过去的,风如海啸席卷而过,划开黎明的光彩。
(三)
轻轻的用叹息掩埋疲惫,轻轻的用叹息远离血腥,轻轻的用叹息牵手,道一声“能行”,轻轻的用叹息别离殇时,流转命轮。已经一个月了,那天晚上的对话后,他们投身军营,开始了流离颠沛的生活。
叶寒没有再去找宝剑,没有再把希望全部寄托在宝剑上,他相信了言幽,要靠自己的双手赶走敌人,靠自己的努力救出父亲。他当小兵起,一步一步的向上。
黑夜漫长,轻轻阖眼,叶寒睡了。的人金袍战衣,意气奋发。金戈铁马,驰骋沙场。脸上,没有随着岁月的流失日渐沧桑。“寒儿……寒儿……”一遍遍的唤着。梦中的叶寒突然紧皱眉头,不安的梦魇缠着他,“不要……血……父亲……”。
白帐撩起,言幽站在了床前,“醒醒,醒醒。”言幽摇动着叶寒的身躯,轻轻拍打叶寒的脸。叶寒睁开眼,短短一瞬,“言幽,谢谢你。”言幽只是浅浅的一笑。他也从军了,当了军医。叶寒看着瞬即而逝的笑容,想起梦中的一幕,父亲被困,齐唰唰的剑砍到他身上,他心悸了。“没事,只是噩梦。”言幽淡淡地说。叶寒看着类似父亲眼睛,轻轻点了点头。
鼓角声暮霭中响起,无数将士战场中撕杀,满地血流,殷红一片。一个,两个,不停的倒下。几天几夜的撕杀,将士们累到了极点。这几天几夜,将士们打退敌人的一轮又一轮的突袭,今天,成功了。躺在沙地上,将士们欣慰地露出了笑容,他们没有死,活着,见到了黎明的期盼。军旗飘扬,旗下,一黑一白。黑色铠甲,白色军袍,如今,他们成就了未来。
不败少年将军叶寒,绝世军营神医言幽,他们,生死阔契。烹羊宰牛战场为乐,风萧萧兮畅行天涯。
霎时,他们名声响彻大江南北,震撼一时多少豪杰。
霎时,敌人闻风丧胆望风而逃,卷起多少千堆风雪。
千古江山踏歌恒飞,寻常巷陌风雨共济。秋牡丹满盛中,他们带着凌人的傲慢,紫陌红尘中,日久弥香。花海中,轻转罗盘,旋开了通往盛世的大道。
(四)
风尘扬,金夕消。
蹄声,塞满了天与地。
蹄声骤聚,一黑一白,在苍黄的日影下浮动。他们,骑着马,奔腾。
胜利的那天,叶寒救出了父亲。站在敌军营前,叶寒的心,久久不能平息。一颤一颤的。“爹。”喊出了多少天的期盼,多少天的痛楚。“太好了,真是太好了!”叶寒欢呼,露出少年的天真。言幽一旁站着,露出了浅浅的微笑,他由衷的高兴:“是太好了,是太好了!”堇色的余辉下拉长了三人的身影。
金黄的沙翻滚,马背上的两个少年望着火红的远方,望着曾经敌寇猖狂的地方,一串泪,一串泪辛酸的泪,一串泪至死也不会凝竭的泪,粉碎在金黄的尘沙上,粉碎着重重叠叠的昨日,屈辱的昨日,殇痛的昨日。他们流出了一个笑容,流出了一个皇家的未来,流出了命轮的流转。
他们,放长了僵绳,让马蹄缓缓敲响前行的路。“驾”鞭马声响起,沙场上淡淡的身影渐渐拉长,一点一点浅去……
“阿寒,你说那些村民会相信我吗?”
“会,一定会的。”
……
晨初
经典TED英语演讲稿 篇九
When you are a kid, you get asked this one particular question a lot, it really gets kind of annoying. What do you want to be when you grow up? Now, adults are hoping for answers like, I want to be an astronaut or I want to be a neurosurgeon, you’re adults in your imaginations.
Kids, they’re most likely to answer with pro-skateboarder, surfer or minecraft player. I asked my little brother, and he said, seriously dude, I’m 10, I have no idea, probably a pro-skier, let’s go get some ice cream.
See, us kids are going to answer something we’re stoked on, what we think is cool, what we have experience with, and that’s typically the opposite of what adults want to hear.
But if you ask a little kid, sometimes you’ll get the best answer, something so simple, so obvious and really profound. When I grow up, I want to be happy.
For me, when I grow up, I want to continue to be happy like I am now. I’m stoked to be here at TedEx, I mean, I’ve been watching Ted videos for as long as I can remember, but I never thought I’d make it on the stage here so soon. I mean, I just became a teenager, and like most teenage boys, I spend most of my time wondering, how did my room get so messy all on its own.
Did I take a shower today? And the most perplexing of all, how do I get girls to like me? Neurosciences say that the teenage brain is pretty weird, our prefrontal cortex is underdeveloped, but we actually have more neurons than adults, which is why we can be so creative, and impulsive and moody and get bummed out.
But what bums me out is to know that, a lot of kids today are just wishing to be happy, to be healthy, to be safe, not bullied, and be loved for who they are. So it seems to me when adults say, what do you want to be when you grow up? They just assume that you’ll automatically be happy and healthy.
Well, maybe that’s not the case, go to school, go to college, get a job, get married, boom, then you’ll be happy, right? You don’t seem to make learning how to be happy and healthy a priority in our schools, it’s separate from schools. And for some kids, it doesn’t exists at all? But what if we didn’t make it separate? What if we based education on the study and practice of being happy and healthy, because that’s what it is, a practice, and a simple practice at that?
Education is important, but why is being happy and healthy not considered education, I just don’t get it. So I’ve been studying the science of being happy and healthy. It really comes down to practicing these eight things. Exercise, diet and nutrition, time in nature, contribution, service to others, relationships, recreation, relaxation and stress management, and religious or spiritual involvement, yes, got that one.
So these eight things come from Dr. Roger Walsh, he calls them Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes or TLCs for short. He is a scientist that studies how to be happy and healthy. In researching this talk, I got a chance to ask him a few questions like; do you think that our schools today are making these eight TLCs a priority? His response was no surprise, it was essentially no. But he did say that many people do try to get this kind of education outside of the traditional arena, through reading and practices such as meditation or yoga.
But what I thought was his best response was that, much of education is oriented for better or worse towards making a living rather than making a life.
In 2006, Sir Ken Robinson gave the most popular Ted talk of all time. Schools kill creativity. His message is that creativity is as important as literacy, and we should treat it with the same status.
A lot of parents watched those videos, some of those parents like mine counted it as one of the reasons they felt confident to pull their kids from traditional school to try something different. I realized I’m part of this small, but growing revolution of kids who are going about their education differently, and you know what? It freaks a lot of people out.
Even though I was only nine, when my parents pulled me out of the school system, I can still remember my mom being in tears when some of her friends told her she was crazy and it was a stupid idea.
Looking back, I’m thankful she didn’t cave to peer pressure, and I think she is too. So, out of the 200 million people that have watched Sir Ken Robinson’s talk, why aren’t there more kids like me out there?
Shane McConkey is my hero. I loved him because he was the world’s best skier. But then, one day I realized what I really loved about Shane, he was a hacker. Not a computer hacker, he hacked skiing. His creativity and inventions made skiing what it is today, and why I love to ski. A lot of people think of hackers as geeky computer nerds who live in their parent’s basement and spread computer viruses, but I don’t see it that way.
Hackers are innovators, hackers are people who challenge and change the systems to make them work differently, to make them work better, it’s just how they think, it’s a mindset.
I’m growing up in a world that needs more people with the hacker mindset, and not just for technology, everything is up for being hacked, even skiing, even education. So whether it’s Steve Jobs, Mark Zuckerberg or Shane McConkey having the hacker mindset can change the world.
Healthy, happy, creativity in the hacker mindset are all a large part of my education. I call it Hackschooling, I don’t use any one particular curriculum, and I’m not dedicated to any one particular approach, I hack my education.
I take advantage of opportunities in my community, and through a network of my friends and family. I take advantage of opportunities to experience what I’m learning, and I’m not afraid to look for shortcuts or hacks to get a better faster result. It’s like a remix or a mash-up of learning. It’s flexible, opportunistic, and it never loses sight of making happy, healthy and creativity a priority.
And here is the cool part, because it’s a mindset, not a system. Hackschooling can be used anyone, even traditional schools. Soo what does my school look like? Well, it looks like Starbucks a lot of the time, but like most kids I study lot of math, science, history and writing. I didn’t used to like to write because my teachers made me write about butterflies and rainbows, and I wanted to write about skiing.
It was a relief for my good friend’s mom, started the Squaw Valley Kids Institute, where I got to write through my experiences and my interests, while, connecting with great speakers from around the nation, and that sparked my love of writing.
I realized that once you’re motivated to learn something, you can get a lot done in a short amount of time, and on your own, Starbucks is pretty great for that. Hacking physics was fun, we learned all about Newton and Galileo, and we experienced some basic physics concepts like kinetic energy through experimenting and making mistakes.
My favorite was the giant Newton’s cradle that we made out of bowling balls, no bocce balls. We experimented with lot of other things like bowling balls and event giant jawbreakers.
Project Discovery’s ropes course is awesome, and slightly stressful. When you’re 60 feet off the ground, you have to learn how to handle your fears, communicate clearly, and most importantly, trust each other.
Community organizations play a big part in my education, High Fives Foundation’s Basics Program being aware and safe in critical situations. We spent a day with the Squaw Valley Ski Patrol to learn more about mountain safety, then the next day we switched to science of snow, weather and avalanches.
But most importantly, we learned that making bad decisions puts you and your friends at risk. Young should talk, well brings history to life. You study a famous character in history, and so that you can stand on stage and perform as that character, and answer any question about their lifetime.
In this photo, you see Al Capone and Bob Marley getting grilled with questions at the historical Piper’s Opera House in Virginia City, the same stage where Harry Houdini got his start.
Time and nature is really important to me, it’s calm, quiet and I get to just log out of reality. I spend one day a week, outside all day. At my Fox Walkers classes, our goal is to be able to survive in the wilderness with just a knife. We learn to listen to nature, we learn to sense our surroundings, and I’ve gained a spiritual connection to nature that, I never knew existed.
But the best part is that we get to make spears, bows and arrows, fires with just a bow drill and survival shelters for the snowy nights when we camp out. Hanging out at the Moment Factory where they hand make skis and design clothes, has really inspired me to one day have my own business. The guys at the factory showed me why I need to be good at math, be creative and get good at selling.
So I got an internship at Big Shark Print to get better at design and selling. Between fetching lunch, scrubbing toilets and breaking their vacuum cleaner, I’m getting to contribute to clothing design, customizing hats and selling them. The people who work there are happy, healthy, creative, and stoked to be doing what they are doing, this is by far my favorite class.
So, this is why I’m really happy, powder days, and it’s a good metaphor for my life, my education, my hackschooling. If everyone ski this mountain, like most people think of education, everyone will be skiing the same line, probably the safest and most of the powder would go untouched.
I look at this, and see a thousand possibilities, dropping the corners, shredding the spine, looking for a churning from cliff-to-cliff. Skiing to me is freedom, and so is my education, it’s about being creative; doing things differently, it’s about community and helping each other. It’s about being happy and healthy among my very best friends.
So I’m starting to think, I know what I might want to do when I grow up, but if you ask me what do I want to be when I grow up? I’ll always know that I want to be happy. Thank you.
ted中文演讲稿 篇十
何处会成愁,离人心上秋。
——题记
每一天的每一秒,离别无处不在。或许在阳光下,为了理想我们握手互道珍重。或许,一轮冷月下,转身离开将分手掩埋。更或许,面对现实的无奈,苍白得找不到借口,于是我们离别,只为不想看见彼此严重隐隐的泪痕。
关于阳光下
我从没想过,有一天小鱼丸会离开,就像一尾深海里的鱼从不会想海水会枯竭这个问题一样。所以,当离别明晃晃地摆在眼前,阳光刺痛了我的眼,眼泪真的是因为疼痛而滑落,我一再地提醒自己,不是因为伤心。小鱼丸,这个清瘦却极安静男孩,像江南的雨一样心思缠绵。因为离别,我们一群人做出了老师眼里大逆不道的行为,逃课,喝酒,夜不归宿。我们坐在海边,酒精令我们双眼蒙胧,我们在自我嘲笑:我们都是乖孩子,我们从来不逃课。眼泪砸在海里,却溅不起一小朵的浪花,面对离散我们都不再坚强。因为所谓的单枪匹马的战争,因为所谓的理想所谓的未来,我们亲爱的小鱼丸不能留在我们身边,苍白无力的嘴唇以最愚蠢的姿势安慰自己:还会相见,还会相见,我们只是暂时的分别,等到下个六月的战争结束后,等到过了明年那个讨厌的夏天后,我们就会重逢。是谁在哼那熟悉的旋律,又是谁在低吟,你知道我很担心我很难过,那是谁在说,兄弟,一路珍重?阳光下,理想成了离别的原因,夏天还在继续炎热,为什么我们却感到了秋的萧索?
关于冷月清辉里
有人问:究竟要多少次回眸,才能换到一次擦肩而过?究竟要用多少承诺才能凝结成永恒?缘字决被谁刻在了月老的姻缘簿,又是谁牵好了红线带走了心?站在爱情边上看爱情的人告诉我,爱情只是一场灿烂的火。我仍旧像最初一样面对他的存在,面对他时而温暖时而冰冷的眸,那是一种矛盾的煎熬,太年轻的感情注定夭折,懵懂的感情在不知不觉中发了芽开了花,却没能经得住风吹雨打。从开始到最后,没有人告诉我这中蒙胧是不是所谓的爱情,但却有人不断地在耳边絮叨,这是错,这是错,取不得,取不得。我坐在栏杆上往外眺望,远处的烟火在最灿烂的那刻灰飞烟灭,残忍的美丽没有血液的参与却让人心里隐隐作痛。梦里依旧是同一个画面,似乎亘古未曾改变:安静的夜色,月色正蒙胧,面庞模糊的男孩牵起我冰冷的手,在我耳边喃喃而语,他说:丫头,让我一辈子走在你的前面,替你挡风。午夜梦回,依旧只有清风明月,路灯树影。你我应该都还记得,那次月色之下的离别,我们早已沦为陌路。
关于我的青春年华
还是青春的容颜,心却已经苍老,害怕被别人窥视到最深处的疼痛的我们像春蚕般用虚伪的丝将自己伪装得坚强。这个夏天似乎比以前更加炎热,突如其来的十八岁让我们措不及防,就像是一个偶然得到了梦寐以求的糖果的小孩的那份兴奋与不知所措。回头看踏过的雪,不知什么时候已经融化漏出温暖的绿色,将青春以及所有关于青春
的一切装在精心准备的盒子里,我们已经长大。年龄像芝麻开花般节节增长,而快乐却像火车驶过是窗外掠过的风景,渐行渐远然后变得模糊不堪直至消失不见。曾经走过的那条小路突然让自己感到莫名的惧怕,害怕在行走的过程中听见曾经的欢笑,害怕在行走的过程中,看到自己休闲得踩着落叶数着脚步的身影。不知道是清醒还是坠入魔道,一个劲儿地否认过去的生活,却也不知道该怎样定位未来该走的方向。这就是我的青春,一个茫然概括了所有的过程,应该与不应该,能够和不能够。告别了无知与懵懂,我人生的列车驶向另一个未知的路口。我坐在车里往回看,看见的风景渐行渐远直至消失不见,心中的惆怅却忽而膨胀,哪条路才驶向我想到达的尽头。
似乎,能拼凑的言语已经不多。从开始到这里,我一直以为自己所踩出来的步伐一定像朵梅花,看了看,隐约可以看见的轮廓不是花朵,却隐约透着葡萄味糖果的形状,有些酸有些甜,正是种种离别的影子,离别人,离别物,甚至离别岁月,亲爱的,我们应该变得勇敢,我们应该相信离别是为了更好的相见,请在下个阳光明媚的日子,让我看见你微笑着的脸,对我说“嗨,好久不见!”
以上就是虎知道为大家带来的10篇《ted演讲稿范文》,希望可以对您的写作有一定的参考作用。
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