Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • - Gives you better sex.

  • Increases your good cholesterol.

  • Gives you more friends.

  • Gives you more meaning, engagement,

  • life satisfaction and happiness.

  • (inspirational orchestral music)

  • If you have a purpose-driven life,

  • it adds years to your life.

  • You live longer.

  • Let me share two stories with you.

  • Story number one, we're interviewing

  • one of those schoolteachers.

  • She says, "The first year I taught was heaven.

  • "The second year I taught was hell.

  • "I had five boys that second year

  • "and they were incorrigible.

  • "And there was one kid in particular, he was impossible.

  • "One day, this kid's in the doorway of the classroom

  • "and he's kicking and moving his arms

  • "and making noises, and I lost it."

  • She said, "I'm ashamed to say these words,

  • "but I walked towards that kid

  • "with the intention of kicking him.

  • "Thank heavens he got up and ran away.

  • (audience laughs)

  • "I kept walking.

  • "I went to the principal's office.

  • "I said, this is it, it's him or me.

  • "And the principal took the kid out."

  • She said, "I felt terrible, so I went to my colleagues

  • "and poured my heart out, and they said to me,

  • "you are not the key to every door."

  • And as she said those words, she burst into tears

  • in the interview, and we waited a long time

  • and then she looked up and said, "I hated that,

  • "those words, you can't be the key to every door."

  • She said, "So I decided to become the key to every door.

  • "Instead of pushing disruptive kids away,

  • "I began to seek them out.

  • "I began to bring them into my world.

  • "I read every book I could find.

  • "I kept notes.

  • "I ran experiments.

  • "I kept notes on the experiments."

  • And then she kind of pulled herself up and said,

  • "Today, I am the key to every door.

  • "When there's a disruptive, troubled kid in the school,

  • "they say, give her to Miss so-and-so.

  • "She seems to know what to do with them."

  • That's a profoundly important story.

  • It's a story of transformative learning.

  • When I have a higher purpose, I find the energy

  • and the courage to go outside my comfort zone.

  • Now, the second story is a lot closer to home.

  • I once had a daughter.

  • She was single.

  • She was living in Washington, D.C.

  • She had reached that point in life where she said,

  • "There's not a good man left on the earth."

  • And then she found one and she got really excited.

  • The relationship grew, and then, one day, our phone rang.

  • She's talking to her mother and I know what's going on.

  • This guy just dumped her.

  • This daughter is the firstborn child.

  • Many firstborn children share a common characteristic.

  • If they're miserable, they want you to be miserable, too.

  • (audience laughs)

  • And she said, "I'm coming home this weekend."

  • I thought, "Oh, no, no."

  • (audience laughs)

  • Her mother hangs up and says, "You're the father.

  • "You go to the airport and pick her up."

  • I said (groans), so the next day I go pick her up.

  • She gets in the car and she doesn't say hello, how are you.

  • She says, "That no good dirty da-da-da-da-da."

  • Five minutes later, she takes a breath and I said,

  • "Are you problem-solving or purpose-finding?"

  • We're finally pulling in the driveway.

  • She takes another breath.

  • I say it again.

  • She says, "What are you talking about?"

  • And she said, "This is the real world."

  • I said, "Well, I think it applies to the real world."

  • By then we were in the house, I pull out

  • a sheet of paper out of my file,

  • and it says "Robert Quinn, life statement."

  • She looks at it and then she grows

  • kinda quiet, and she looks up and says,

  • "When you feel bad, you read this?"

  • I said, "No, when I feel bad, I rewrite it.

  • "It's been rewritten hundreds of times."

  • She said, "Yeah, I can hardly

  • "understand some of this stuff."

  • I said, "Yeah, it's written

  • "to a customized audience, one person."

  • Then, the first miracle happened.

  • She said, "Do ya think I could write one of these?"

  • And I said, "I'm sure you can."

  • She went in the bedroom.

  • For a day and a half, she worked on her life statement.

  • The miracle was I did not have

  • to suffer during that day and a half.

  • (audience laughs)

  • She got on the plane.

  • She flew home to D.C.

  • A couple days pass, I get an email.

  • She said, "He called me."

  • Oh, this'll be interesting, and she says,

  • "So I wrote him this letter."

  • And I'm reading this letter that she's attached.

  • It's incredibly vulnerable, open,

  • honest, and then at the bottom, it says,

  • "And my roommate said I can't give this to him."

  • Now, that's an interesting thing.

  • Why can't we give this letter to this guy?

  • You don't tell some guy that dumped you

  • that here's how you feel, and then she said,

  • "What my roommates don't understand

  • "is that what he thinks doesn't matter."

  • Whoa, wait a minute.

  • A few days ago, what he thought caused your life to shatter.

  • Now, she's saying what he thinks doesn't matter.

  • She's saying, this is who I really am.

  • Didn't know this a while ago.

  • Now, I know it.

  • It doesn't matter what other people think.

  • You see, when you clarify your purpose,

  • you take back your external locus of control,

  • where you worry about what other people think,

  • and you take an internal locus.

  • You don't become insensitive.

  • You don't become rebellious.

  • You become centered.

  • You become powerful.

  • Now, here's the interesting thing.

  • In the next few months,

  • she began to be promoted.

  • Her career turned.

  • Why?

  • This was a dating breakup.

  • Why is her career taking off?

  • Because, when you find purpose

  • and meaning in what you're doing

  • in one area of your life, it grows

  • in every area of your life 'cause you are one person.

  • That company had a woman coming in with the same dresses on,

  • body looked the same, but it wasn't the same employee.

  • This was a woman now full of leadership for the first time.

  • When someone has that meaning

  • and that integrity, things start to change.

  • The research says, when you give up self-interested goals,

  • where most of us are most of the time, and you take on

  • contributive goals, you function differently.

  • The biology changes.

  • The thought process changes.

  • Learning accelerates.

  • You grow more.

  • The only thing that I'm left to conclude is, you and I are

  • designed to be purpose-seeking mechanisms.

  • You've been shaped by life, you've had bad experiences

  • and good experiences, and both the bad experiences

  • and the good experiences are there

  • to teach you something about you.

  • And if you look very carefully at those,

  • you can determine what your purpose is.

  • Every person in this room can clarify

  • the purpose of their life, become the key to every door.

  • (inspirational orchestral music)

- Gives you better sex.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it