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Hey, everybody.
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Thanks for joining me here on Apple TV+.
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I know we're all watching the global death toll rise
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and seeing it recede in some places,
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and I--my concern is, how do we all get through this
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and not let it become
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one of the most traumatic experiences of our lives?
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I thought to have a conversation
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with one of the world's leading trauma experts
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could be helpful to us today.
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Let me introduce you to Dr. Bruce Perry.
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I've known him for quite a long time, over 25 years.
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He's a senior fellow of the Child Trauma Academy
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in Houston.
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He's worked with children who've endured
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some of the most high-profile tragedies of our time,
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like the Waco massacre
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and the Columbine and Sandy Hook school shootings.
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And he is a person who knows
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probably more about trauma
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than almost anybody else in the world--
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Dr. Bruce Perry.
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So you and I have done a lot of talk over the years
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about trauma and its impact on children,
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its impact on adults,
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and how it forms and shapes what happened to us,
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and what happened to us determines
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how we then behave in the world.
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You speak a lot about regulation,
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and you say it is important
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for us to keep ourselves regulated right now,
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And that means what, regulated?
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Because I think when people don't know what to do
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with their emotions, they do irregular things.
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[Bruce] Right.
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So, you know, every system in our body,
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whether it's our bones, our muscles, our lungs,
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in our brain,
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we have these systems
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that are taxed by everyday living.
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And so when you get up and walk,
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you're sort of taxing your cardiovascular system.
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And when you are doing a jigsaw puzzle,
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you might be taxing parts of your brain.
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And so the key is that when these systems get taxed
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and pushed to the l--
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they get pushed in a moderate way,
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and then we sort of-- we step back,
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and so the ability to kind of get back
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to your baseline
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is being regulated.
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And so part of what we have to figure out
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in our own lives is,
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how can we make some of this manageable?
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How do I actually bring
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a little bit of predictability,
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a little bit of regulation into my day
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so that this is not as overwhelming
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as it otherwise would be?
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I think it's so important--
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Stedman just said this the other day.
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We're all noticing that if you don't--
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he just said, "I got to get a routine.
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I got to start working out; I got to do something."
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Otherwise the day just completely slips away
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and melts into the next day,
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and you don't even know what day it is.
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Exactly.
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And the days that-- they do merge together,
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and one of the real risks here
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is that without that structure and those routines,
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we're letting the world determine how we get...
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Oh, yeah.
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As opposed to us controlling
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our day-to-day activity.
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So things as simple as
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trying to get up at the same time every day--
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try to have meals at the same time every day.
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Try to make sure that you are active
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or exercise a little bit a couple times a day.
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You know, I was talking to nurses the other day
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from New York and also in Detroit and Louisiana,
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and one nurse in New York, Idara, who's--
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all the nurses are heroes now,
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but one nurse said something so moving.
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She said,
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"Yes, I'm afraid,
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but I've learned to start taking my fear
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and channeling it into courage,"
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which I thought was so powerful,
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and I know a lot of people are afraid right now
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or feeling anxious, feeling confused,
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feeling like, "When is this gonna be over?"
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How can we learn to do what Idara said?
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How do we take that fear
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and literally channel it into courage?
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Well, you know, I think that the key to that
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is not letting yourself get in a loop of anxiety.
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And so the first step in really moving to courage
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is regulating yourself.
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Is doing exactly what you just said.
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-Right. -Yeah.
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And once you're regulated,
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you're able to actually use the top part of your brain,
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and you can do a whole bunch of very reassuring things.
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You can say, "All right, this is going to end.
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There are people, there are things I can control.
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I can control who I call.
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I can control who I connect with.
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I can control my body movements.
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I can control when I eat, when I sleep."
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These are controllable things.
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And if I start to bring some structure
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to my day,
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I'm gonna be in a much better position
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to continue to be hopeful, be future-oriented,
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be reflective--
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reflect on the past-- past times when,
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"Man, I did get through some hard times."
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Yeah.
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And basically stay more centered.
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How is this lockdown, do you think--
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I know you've done so much work
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with people who are mentally ill,
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children who've been traumatized
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and therefore developed mental illnesses.
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How is this lockdown
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going to affect people who are mentally ill?
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Well, you know, it's one of the hardest parts about this,
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is that, you know, that those of us
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who sort of have our "cup runneth over"--
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we have a place to live,
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we have a number of people to connect with
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that help us stay regulated,
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we have jobs that are gonna be there when this finishes,
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so there's--we're pretty lucky.
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And so this is gonna tap out our--
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you know, our cup is gonna get drained a little bit.
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Yeah.
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But if you start out with an empty cup--
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if you have four people living in one apartment,
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and three of them are struggling with, you know,
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impulsivity and attention problems,
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and you've got an overwhelmed parent
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who lost her job
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and who has to take care of these three kids
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and homeschool on top of it,
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that's gonna tap out this poor mother.
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And that's gonna lead to a whole bunchy of challenges
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that will make it very hard for them to recover.
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-Yeah. -And so I--
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I think what is interesting--
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you and I were talking about this the other night.
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People who are marginalized in instances such as this
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when a crisis come
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are going to be even more marginalized.
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We're gonna see rates of suffering
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like we never imagined before.
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And part of that suffering is--
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you were saying so many people aren't gonna even see it
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because kids who are being abused are not at school
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so that people can see that black eye.
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Women who are experiencing domestic violence
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aren't at work so people can see those bruises,
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and so what do we do?
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[sighs] You know, there are people
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that work in those fields that have tried
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to create opportunities
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for people in crisis to reach out and get some help,
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but even that is gonna be inadequate.
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I think the big problem is gonna be
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after this phase of this crisis rolls through,
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there will be--
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we're really gonna have to have an intentional effort
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to reach out and reconnect
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with families and marginalized folks.
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Yeah, you feel that-- and I also too--
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that we have a moral obligation, each of us.
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[Bruce] Absolutely.
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I know everybody's pulling together
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and doing songs and parties and all this virtual activity
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that's really great, supporting each other right now.
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[Bruce] Yeah.
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But the real test is gonna come once we get through this.
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Absolutely.
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And the moral obligation that we all have
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to help others who are less fortunate,
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who are marginalized,
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who are gonna be suffering even more
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than they were before this pandemic.
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Absolutely, there's just no doubt about it.
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The real work for all of us is after this is done.
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Now, you know, something you once told me
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long before this pandemic resonated with me.
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You were talking about how we as a society
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are relationally impoverished
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and that we get through anything--
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any crisis in our life, any trauma in our life--
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because of our relationships with other people.
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How does this moment impact that?
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At the very time that we're as a--
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basically as a society under duress,
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we're asking people to be physically separate.
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And so in this moment, it's really important
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that we stay emotionally connected
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by using modern technologies to the degree that we can.
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But again, when this is over,
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I think we're gonna have to spend a lot of time
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thinking about-- intentionally about,
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how do we re-weave social fabric?
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How do we really create community?
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How do we bring people together in really positive, healthy ways
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that will help buffer some of what's gonna happen
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and really over time heal what's--
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you know, the impact of this experience?
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You say we should stay physically--
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obviously, physically separate but emotionally connected.
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And now's the time.
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The other night I was watching
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something called "Our Country"
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with all these country music stars
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who were singing from their home on CBS.
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I thought that was so cool,
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and I thought--
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literally during the whole thing,
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I was just saying, "God bless you, Steve Jobs,
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wherever you are-- you're watching."
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And all these stars are being connected.
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These country music singers were being connected.
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Their wives and their children are filming them on iPads.
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So I think the technology
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has really helped us during this time.
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[Bruce] Absolutely.
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I mean, where would we be without this?
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There's no doubt about it. I mean, exactly.
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God bless you, Steve Jobs.
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And I think if we're intentional about that,
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we can really use modern technologies
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to connect us in ways that are unique and pretty powerful.
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What is the most important thing you want to say to this audience
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about this moment in time?
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Be hopeful.
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You know, this--
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humankind has gotten through all manner of challenges,
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and humankind will get through this again.
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And--but those of us who have-- our cups runneth over,
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those of us who have resources and--
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You're talking about privileged people.
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Privileged people.
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This is where the privileged versus the non-privileged
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-really comes into play. -Exactly.
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Those of us who are privileged, yeah.
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[Bruce] There's no time in my life where I've realized
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that I'm so privileged.
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You know, I've known it before,
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but to see it play out like this is overwhelming.
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-Yeah. -And this is where I think
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the moral obligation that we have--
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those of us who have things, it's our--
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we have to keep in the forefront of our minds
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the need to share with others, to be kind to others,
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to be patient with others,
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to take our gifts, and be generous with them
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to the degree that we can, and--
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Yeah, this is an opportunity, I think, Dr. Perry,
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for our entire country
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to reset itself, don't you think?
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[Bruce] Absolutely, I think that's absolutely true.
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You know, one of the-- I always hate to say it.
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There's a nice thing about something like this.
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But there is something that's very positive
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about making families spend time with each other.
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You know, some families it's a struggle,
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but some families, you know, we talk the talk.
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We talk about how much we care about our kids,
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but we don't spend time with them.
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We talk the talk about how much we value our partner,
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but we don't really spend time just sitting quietly with them,
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learning how to be with them just in silence.
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And our life is so busy, so frenetic,
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so overscheduled, so...
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externally focused that I think this is an opportunity
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for many of us--
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those of us, again, mostly, who are privileged enough
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to not worry about all of this stuff,
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to sort of think about, what are our values?
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I mean, what is-- what do we really value in life?
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What's important in life?
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Is it important that I get this memo done for work?
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Or is it important that I go play Legos with my son?
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-Yeah. -You know, that's--
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those things, I think--
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we'll be forced to have a lot of little decisions like that
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for the next few weeks.
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For the next few weeks, but as you've said to me before,
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it's not the next few weeks; it's the next few decades...
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[Bruce] Exactly.
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That's gonna determine what happens to the people
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who are the most marginalized right now,
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because those people sink even further.
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Yeah.
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Well, and again,
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you and I have been involved in this movement
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to try and help people understand the impact of trauma.
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-Mm-hmm. -And I think because of this
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global experience with stress, distress, and trauma,
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I think that the ability to move that dialogue forward
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is going to be even more powerful
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and more important.
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-Mm-hmm. -I think more people will listen
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to what you and I have to say about this in the future
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because they'll have their own personal reference to it.
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Yes.
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And I think that that is a hopeful--
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that that's a hopeful observation.
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Yes, 'cause one of the things that I've learned
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is that when a child shows up in classroom--
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in the classroom, and he's misbehaving or acting out,
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the question should not be, "What's wrong with this child?"
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but "What happened to this child?"
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And that's not just for that child;
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that's for all of us because what happened to us
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in the past, trauma or not--
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whatever the level of trauma was--
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determines how we behave now and into the future.
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Absolutely, and it influences, you know--
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when you can actually step back a little bit
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and be more generous in your view of another person,
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you know, if you really knew their story,
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you'd be much more empathic with them.
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So your most important message for us
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is that those of us who are privileged,
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this is the time to step up and use that privilege
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'cause you're gonna-- it's gonna be needed
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in ways unimaginable...
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-Absolutely. -As we move forward.
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And not just now.
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You see these wonderful things in crisis of--
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you see the best of humanity and you kind of see the worst.
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And so, again,
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part of what we have to figure out how to--
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how to, what to do is to take some of this
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awareness, generosity, and empathy,
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and help people extend it past the current crisis.
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You know, I mean your generosity,
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for example, of giving a bunch of money to help
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all of the different organizations.
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And what I'm specifically doing
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is looking for marginalized communities,
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looking how I can give back
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and how that money can go directly to the people.
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You know, during so many hurricanes and disasters,
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I've literally found people on the news
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and just, you know, gotten their names
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and gone to them and individually given money.
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That's harder to do now
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because this is so massive,
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but that's exactly what I'm trying to do,
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is trying to use my resources
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and philanthropy
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to speak directly to, to help and support directly,
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to marginalized communities.
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Which I think is absolutely a great model for all--
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And everybody has to figure out how to do that in their own way.
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Absolutely, and you know,
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if you, you know--
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if it's not financial, it can be time, you know.
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-Yes. -Volunteering time later on.
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I mean, there's no greater gift than a relationship,
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and so if you mentor a kid,
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you know, after this all sort of falls through
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and you're in the retired population,
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and you're wondering what you can do,
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go mentor a student at a high school or a junior--
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I think there's no better message that you can give us:
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finding ways to use your privilege to serve others.
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-Absolutely. -Thanks, Dr. Bruce Perry.
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-You bet. -Thank you so much.
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Thanks, Oprah.
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