full transcript

From the Ted Talk by Olivia Remes: How to cope with loneliness


Unscramble the Blue Letters


Eunice Tan, Translator

Tanya Cushman, reeviwer

Loneliness can make you depressed. It can lead to early death, and it can make it more likely that you get Alzheimer's diasese. I'm sure you would agree that this is so interesting - the fact that loneliness can physically harm you. The problem is that more and more people are lonely taody. In fact, it's almost one in three. You'd think that with all of this social media, smartphones, and FaceTiming that allow us to get in touch with one another instantly, that we'd feel more connected. But actually, the opposite is true. We're lonelier than ever, more depressed and anxious than ever, and people are turning to therapy and antidepressants to cope. The reason that loneliness has such serious consequences is that the human being is a social animal, and if it's on its own for too long, it gets sick. Today, I'll be talking to you about how to get rid of loneliness and become hpapy. Now, you don't have to believe anything I say - just give it a try, and see if it works for you. So I'm a rhseraceer at the University of crbmadige, studying aentixy and depression. And whenever I tell people what I do, many times, they point to themselves and say, "You've got a case study right here." It's almost a ritual now: I say what I do, and people tell me that either they have these cionidntos or they know someone who has them. And, many times, when you have anxiety and depression, you feel lonely. It's hard enough dealing with, say, anxiety on its own, but it's even worse when you're alienated by other people because you can't talk to them because you feel alone. So they label you as rude, or they steer clear because they think you're weird. And so you become lonely. A little while ago, I was talking to one of my fedrnis, and she was rictfneelg back on her university experience. When she started talking, you could feel the sadness in her voice when she said that she was always lonely and never felt like she fit in. She would ask herself, "What's wrong with me?" And I thought, you know, to have to ask yourself this question is so painful. But it's the question that many people who have anxiety or who are lolney ask themselves: "What's wnorg with me?" So to do something about it, I started researching loneliness. I became iremmsed. I wanted to find out how we can get rid of it and become happy because this is what we all want, isn't it? The number one thing that connects hmuan beings together is that we all want to be happy and free from suffering. This is the number one human desire that makes you the same as your friends and also the same as the people you don't get along with. The ancient Buddhist monks used to say that happiness and snuireffg are all in the mind - they're not out there. So happiness is not out there, found through other people or objects. Rather, it's in here. So if happiness and suffering are in the mind, then it follows that the causes of happiness and suffering are also in the mind. It truns out that if you want to stop being lonely, you have to change how you perceive the world. And this is where the dfnirefcee lies between people who are lonely and those who aren't. People who are lonely - if something doesn't work out for them, they say it's their fault, and they ask themselves, "What's wrong with me?" But if you're not lonely, you don't arubittte failure to yourself, and instead, you look at the arpoacph that you took and think about other ways that you can reach your goal of, say, making friends. There's one qtoue that comes to mind. The difference between humans and mice is this. So if mice see something doesn't work out - you know, in those little einpmxteres when they're put through a maze - if mice see something doesn't work out, they try something else. But humans will go back to doing the same thing they've always done and repeat their mistakes. So how can we stop reinpetag our mkaietss, change, and become happy? These next two tips are key, and I will share them with you. The first saettgry to get rid of loneliness is to start talking with as many pepole as you can. Now, I know you've heard advice like "Get out there and meet people, go to events, because this is how you get rid of lnilneoess." But let's be honest: such opportunities are limited because it's hard to go to places alone just to meet people. It's forced, not natural. How many times, though, do you go to the grocery store or a coffee shop? Which is a much more realistic scenario because it's part of your weekly routine. And how many temis have you been asked something - let's say, dtnoerciis out on the street - and instead of just answering the question, you also initiated a salml conversation or asekd the person something about themselves like "Are you just visiting?" or "What city are you from?" Think about how different your day might be if you did that. This can also introduce you to new friends when you least expect it, and you begin to nrwtoek with people everywhere you go. So start talking with as many people as possible and especially the ones that you normally wouldn't talk to, because these are often the ones that we come into contact with on an almost daily basis. These are people like the bus driver, the cashier, the prsoen preparing your sadcnwih at your local deli. If you do this, this will really make a difference. The second way to get rid of loneliness is to share about yourself. You might say you're doing everything you can. You're asking questions, which is good for establishing that iintial cnntoiceon, but it's still not working out and you're not creating the kinds of cnocineotns that you want to - the ones that are meaningful. That's because when people are lonely, they tend to disclose less about themselves when they talk to others. They reciprocate less. So if you want to take your interactions to a whole new level and create connections that are real with people, then you have to share about yourself and open up. Tell stories about yourself. Say what you like, what you think. For example, if you're talking to somebody and they think social media is a great idea, but you think that, actually, it's doing more harm than good, it kind of - you feel a little bit down when you're looking at other people's pictures of their perfect holidays, the food that they're etnaig, and perfect jobs that they have - then say what you think. Believe it or not, when we take the risk to say exactly - to say what's really on our mind, that's when we cetare connections that are real and meaningful with people and people want to come back to us. Now, I'd like to go back to the sroty about my friend who was very lonely and would ask herself, "What's wrong with me?" She made it a point to talk to everyone everywhere and to open up. She started talking with the person helping her out at the phone stroe. And when she was in a bookstore and someone asked her what the book she was reading was called, instead of just answering the queiostn, she talked a little bit more. She said what she thought of the book, she recommended some other ones on that same topic, and she talked about how what she was reading tied into the work that she was doing. That day was the first day of their friendship. Who would have thought that just because she had made this small resolve to talk to everyone everywhere, that this would happen - that she would make a new firend when she least expected it? So I would encarugoe you all to give these strategies a try. Practice using them, and don't think about how much you're going to change in one week or in one month. Just take it day by day. I'd like to leave you with a quote by Martin Luther King: "You don't have to see the whole sstraicae. Just take the first step." Thank you. (Applause)

Open Cloze


Eunice Tan, Translator

Tanya Cushman, ________

Loneliness can make you depressed. It can lead to early death, and it can make it more likely that you get Alzheimer's _______. I'm sure you would agree that this is so interesting - the fact that loneliness can physically harm you. The problem is that more and more people are lonely _____. In fact, it's almost one in three. You'd think that with all of this social media, smartphones, and FaceTiming that allow us to get in touch with one another instantly, that we'd feel more connected. But actually, the opposite is true. We're lonelier than ever, more depressed and anxious than ever, and people are turning to therapy and antidepressants to cope. The reason that loneliness has such serious consequences is that the human being is a social animal, and if it's on its own for too long, it gets sick. Today, I'll be talking to you about how to get rid of loneliness and become _____. Now, you don't have to believe anything I say - just give it a try, and see if it works for you. So I'm a __________ at the University of _________, studying _______ and depression. And whenever I tell people what I do, many times, they point to themselves and say, "You've got a case study right here." It's almost a ritual now: I say what I do, and people tell me that either they have these __________ or they know someone who has them. And, many times, when you have anxiety and depression, you feel lonely. It's hard enough dealing with, say, anxiety on its own, but it's even worse when you're alienated by other people because you can't talk to them because you feel alone. So they label you as rude, or they steer clear because they think you're weird. And so you become lonely. A little while ago, I was talking to one of my _______, and she was __________ back on her university experience. When she started talking, you could feel the sadness in her voice when she said that she was always lonely and never felt like she fit in. She would ask herself, "What's wrong with me?" And I thought, you know, to have to ask yourself this question is so painful. But it's the question that many people who have anxiety or who are ______ ask themselves: "What's _____ with me?" So to do something about it, I started researching loneliness. I became ________. I wanted to find out how we can get rid of it and become happy because this is what we all want, isn't it? The number one thing that connects _____ beings together is that we all want to be happy and free from suffering. This is the number one human desire that makes you the same as your friends and also the same as the people you don't get along with. The ancient Buddhist monks used to say that happiness and _________ are all in the mind - they're not out there. So happiness is not out there, found through other people or objects. Rather, it's in here. So if happiness and suffering are in the mind, then it follows that the causes of happiness and suffering are also in the mind. It _____ out that if you want to stop being lonely, you have to change how you perceive the world. And this is where the __________ lies between people who are lonely and those who aren't. People who are lonely - if something doesn't work out for them, they say it's their fault, and they ask themselves, "What's wrong with me?" But if you're not lonely, you don't _________ failure to yourself, and instead, you look at the ________ that you took and think about other ways that you can reach your goal of, say, making friends. There's one _____ that comes to mind. The difference between humans and mice is this. So if mice see something doesn't work out - you know, in those little ___________ when they're put through a maze - if mice see something doesn't work out, they try something else. But humans will go back to doing the same thing they've always done and repeat their mistakes. So how can we stop _________ our ________, change, and become happy? These next two tips are key, and I will share them with you. The first ________ to get rid of loneliness is to start talking with as many ______ as you can. Now, I know you've heard advice like "Get out there and meet people, go to events, because this is how you get rid of __________." But let's be honest: such opportunities are limited because it's hard to go to places alone just to meet people. It's forced, not natural. How many times, though, do you go to the grocery store or a coffee shop? Which is a much more realistic scenario because it's part of your weekly routine. And how many _____ have you been asked something - let's say, __________ out on the street - and instead of just answering the question, you also initiated a _____ conversation or _____ the person something about themselves like "Are you just visiting?" or "What city are you from?" Think about how different your day might be if you did that. This can also introduce you to new friends when you least expect it, and you begin to _______ with people everywhere you go. So start talking with as many people as possible and especially the ones that you normally wouldn't talk to, because these are often the ones that we come into contact with on an almost daily basis. These are people like the bus driver, the cashier, the ______ preparing your ________ at your local deli. If you do this, this will really make a difference. The second way to get rid of loneliness is to share about yourself. You might say you're doing everything you can. You're asking questions, which is good for establishing that _______ __________, but it's still not working out and you're not creating the kinds of ___________ that you want to - the ones that are meaningful. That's because when people are lonely, they tend to disclose less about themselves when they talk to others. They reciprocate less. So if you want to take your interactions to a whole new level and create connections that are real with people, then you have to share about yourself and open up. Tell stories about yourself. Say what you like, what you think. For example, if you're talking to somebody and they think social media is a great idea, but you think that, actually, it's doing more harm than good, it kind of - you feel a little bit down when you're looking at other people's pictures of their perfect holidays, the food that they're ______, and perfect jobs that they have - then say what you think. Believe it or not, when we take the risk to say exactly - to say what's really on our mind, that's when we ______ connections that are real and meaningful with people and people want to come back to us. Now, I'd like to go back to the _____ about my friend who was very lonely and would ask herself, "What's wrong with me?" She made it a point to talk to everyone everywhere and to open up. She started talking with the person helping her out at the phone _____. And when she was in a bookstore and someone asked her what the book she was reading was called, instead of just answering the ________, she talked a little bit more. She said what she thought of the book, she recommended some other ones on that same topic, and she talked about how what she was reading tied into the work that she was doing. That day was the first day of their friendship. Who would have thought that just because she had made this small resolve to talk to everyone everywhere, that this would happen - that she would make a new ______ when she least expected it? So I would _________ you all to give these strategies a try. Practice using them, and don't think about how much you're going to change in one week or in one month. Just take it day by day. I'd like to leave you with a quote by Martin Luther King: "You don't have to see the whole _________. Just take the first step." Thank you. (Applause)

Solution


  1. eating
  2. people
  3. store
  4. friends
  5. reviewer
  6. lonely
  7. staircase
  8. encourage
  9. connection
  10. difference
  11. sandwich
  12. immersed
  13. initial
  14. experiments
  15. wrong
  16. repeating
  17. loneliness
  18. quote
  19. friend
  20. network
  21. asked
  22. anxiety
  23. strategy
  24. disease
  25. human
  26. create
  27. today
  28. mistakes
  29. cambridge
  30. directions
  31. story
  32. conditions
  33. attribute
  34. question
  35. researcher
  36. times
  37. approach
  38. reflecting
  39. turns
  40. person
  41. small
  42. happy
  43. suffering
  44. connections

Original Text


Eunice Tan, Translator

Tanya Cushman, Reviewer

Loneliness can make you depressed. It can lead to early death, and it can make it more likely that you get Alzheimer's disease. I'm sure you would agree that this is so interesting - the fact that loneliness can physically harm you. The problem is that more and more people are lonely today. In fact, it's almost one in three. You'd think that with all of this social media, smartphones, and FaceTiming that allow us to get in touch with one another instantly, that we'd feel more connected. But actually, the opposite is true. We're lonelier than ever, more depressed and anxious than ever, and people are turning to therapy and antidepressants to cope. The reason that loneliness has such serious consequences is that the human being is a social animal, and if it's on its own for too long, it gets sick. Today, I'll be talking to you about how to get rid of loneliness and become happy. Now, you don't have to believe anything I say - just give it a try, and see if it works for you. So I'm a researcher at the University of Cambridge, studying anxiety and depression. And whenever I tell people what I do, many times, they point to themselves and say, "You've got a case study right here." It's almost a ritual now: I say what I do, and people tell me that either they have these conditions or they know someone who has them. And, many times, when you have anxiety and depression, you feel lonely. It's hard enough dealing with, say, anxiety on its own, but it's even worse when you're alienated by other people because you can't talk to them because you feel alone. So they label you as rude, or they steer clear because they think you're weird. And so you become lonely. A little while ago, I was talking to one of my friends, and she was reflecting back on her university experience. When she started talking, you could feel the sadness in her voice when she said that she was always lonely and never felt like she fit in. She would ask herself, "What's wrong with me?" And I thought, you know, to have to ask yourself this question is so painful. But it's the question that many people who have anxiety or who are lonely ask themselves: "What's wrong with me?" So to do something about it, I started researching loneliness. I became immersed. I wanted to find out how we can get rid of it and become happy because this is what we all want, isn't it? The number one thing that connects human beings together is that we all want to be happy and free from suffering. This is the number one human desire that makes you the same as your friends and also the same as the people you don't get along with. The ancient Buddhist monks used to say that happiness and suffering are all in the mind - they're not out there. So happiness is not out there, found through other people or objects. Rather, it's in here. So if happiness and suffering are in the mind, then it follows that the causes of happiness and suffering are also in the mind. It turns out that if you want to stop being lonely, you have to change how you perceive the world. And this is where the difference lies between people who are lonely and those who aren't. People who are lonely - if something doesn't work out for them, they say it's their fault, and they ask themselves, "What's wrong with me?" But if you're not lonely, you don't attribute failure to yourself, and instead, you look at the approach that you took and think about other ways that you can reach your goal of, say, making friends. There's one quote that comes to mind. The difference between humans and mice is this. So if mice see something doesn't work out - you know, in those little experiments when they're put through a maze - if mice see something doesn't work out, they try something else. But humans will go back to doing the same thing they've always done and repeat their mistakes. So how can we stop repeating our mistakes, change, and become happy? These next two tips are key, and I will share them with you. The first strategy to get rid of loneliness is to start talking with as many people as you can. Now, I know you've heard advice like "Get out there and meet people, go to events, because this is how you get rid of loneliness." But let's be honest: such opportunities are limited because it's hard to go to places alone just to meet people. It's forced, not natural. How many times, though, do you go to the grocery store or a coffee shop? Which is a much more realistic scenario because it's part of your weekly routine. And how many times have you been asked something - let's say, directions out on the street - and instead of just answering the question, you also initiated a small conversation or asked the person something about themselves like "Are you just visiting?" or "What city are you from?" Think about how different your day might be if you did that. This can also introduce you to new friends when you least expect it, and you begin to network with people everywhere you go. So start talking with as many people as possible and especially the ones that you normally wouldn't talk to, because these are often the ones that we come into contact with on an almost daily basis. These are people like the bus driver, the cashier, the person preparing your sandwich at your local deli. If you do this, this will really make a difference. The second way to get rid of loneliness is to share about yourself. You might say you're doing everything you can. You're asking questions, which is good for establishing that initial connection, but it's still not working out and you're not creating the kinds of connections that you want to - the ones that are meaningful. That's because when people are lonely, they tend to disclose less about themselves when they talk to others. They reciprocate less. So if you want to take your interactions to a whole new level and create connections that are real with people, then you have to share about yourself and open up. Tell stories about yourself. Say what you like, what you think. For example, if you're talking to somebody and they think social media is a great idea, but you think that, actually, it's doing more harm than good, it kind of - you feel a little bit down when you're looking at other people's pictures of their perfect holidays, the food that they're eating, and perfect jobs that they have - then say what you think. Believe it or not, when we take the risk to say exactly - to say what's really on our mind, that's when we create connections that are real and meaningful with people and people want to come back to us. Now, I'd like to go back to the story about my friend who was very lonely and would ask herself, "What's wrong with me?" She made it a point to talk to everyone everywhere and to open up. She started talking with the person helping her out at the phone store. And when she was in a bookstore and someone asked her what the book she was reading was called, instead of just answering the question, she talked a little bit more. She said what she thought of the book, she recommended some other ones on that same topic, and she talked about how what she was reading tied into the work that she was doing. That day was the first day of their friendship. Who would have thought that just because she had made this small resolve to talk to everyone everywhere, that this would happen - that she would make a new friend when she least expected it? So I would encourage you all to give these strategies a try. Practice using them, and don't think about how much you're going to change in one week or in one month. Just take it day by day. I'd like to leave you with a quote by Martin Luther King: "You don't have to see the whole staircase. Just take the first step." Thank you. (Applause)

Frequently Occurring Word Combinations


ngrams of length 2

collocation frequency
start talking 2
create connections 2



Important Words


  1. advice
  2. agree
  3. alienated
  4. ancient
  5. animal
  6. answering
  7. antidepressants
  8. anxiety
  9. anxious
  10. applause
  11. approach
  12. asked
  13. attribute
  14. basis
  15. beings
  16. bit
  17. book
  18. bookstore
  19. buddhist
  20. bus
  21. called
  22. cambridge
  23. case
  24. cashier
  25. change
  26. city
  27. clear
  28. coffee
  29. conditions
  30. connected
  31. connection
  32. connections
  33. connects
  34. consequences
  35. contact
  36. conversation
  37. cope
  38. create
  39. creating
  40. cushman
  41. daily
  42. day
  43. dealing
  44. death
  45. deli
  46. depressed
  47. depression
  48. desire
  49. difference
  50. directions
  51. disclose
  52. disease
  53. driver
  54. early
  55. eating
  56. encourage
  57. establishing
  58. eunice
  59. events
  60. expect
  61. expected
  62. experience
  63. experiments
  64. facetiming
  65. fact
  66. failure
  67. fault
  68. feel
  69. felt
  70. find
  71. fit
  72. food
  73. forced
  74. free
  75. friend
  76. friends
  77. friendship
  78. give
  79. goal
  80. good
  81. great
  82. grocery
  83. happen
  84. happiness
  85. happy
  86. hard
  87. harm
  88. heard
  89. helping
  90. holidays
  91. human
  92. humans
  93. idea
  94. immersed
  95. initial
  96. initiated
  97. instantly
  98. interactions
  99. interesting
  100. introduce
  101. jobs
  102. key
  103. kind
  104. kinds
  105. label
  106. lead
  107. leave
  108. level
  109. lies
  110. limited
  111. local
  112. lonelier
  113. loneliness
  114. lonely
  115. long
  116. luther
  117. making
  118. martin
  119. maze
  120. meaningful
  121. media
  122. meet
  123. mice
  124. mind
  125. mistakes
  126. monks
  127. month
  128. natural
  129. network
  130. number
  131. objects
  132. open
  133. opportunities
  134. painful
  135. part
  136. people
  137. perceive
  138. perfect
  139. person
  140. phone
  141. physically
  142. pictures
  143. places
  144. point
  145. practice
  146. preparing
  147. problem
  148. put
  149. question
  150. questions
  151. quote
  152. reach
  153. reading
  154. real
  155. realistic
  156. reason
  157. reciprocate
  158. recommended
  159. reflecting
  160. repeat
  161. repeating
  162. researcher
  163. researching
  164. resolve
  165. reviewer
  166. rid
  167. risk
  168. ritual
  169. routine
  170. rude
  171. sadness
  172. sandwich
  173. scenario
  174. share
  175. shop
  176. sick
  177. small
  178. smartphones
  179. social
  180. staircase
  181. start
  182. started
  183. steer
  184. step
  185. stop
  186. store
  187. stories
  188. story
  189. strategies
  190. strategy
  191. street
  192. study
  193. studying
  194. suffering
  195. talk
  196. talked
  197. talking
  198. tan
  199. tanya
  200. tend
  201. therapy
  202. thought
  203. tied
  204. times
  205. tips
  206. today
  207. topic
  208. touch
  209. translator
  210. true
  211. turning
  212. turns
  213. university
  214. visiting
  215. voice
  216. wanted
  217. ways
  218. week
  219. weekly
  220. weird
  221. work
  222. working
  223. works
  224. world
  225. worse
  226. wrong