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  • Hello.

  • This is 6 Minute English from

  • BBC Learning English.

  • I’m Neil.

  • And I’m Beth.

  • When I was a boy, I wanted to be

  • a fireman when I grew up.

  • How about you, Beth?

  • Did you have

  • any childhood dreams?

  • I wanted to be an astronaut

  • and fly to the Moon

  • When were young most of us have

  • big dreams and plans for the future.

  • Unfortunately, as we grow up these

  • childhood dreams often get lost in the

  • adult world of jobs, money,

  • families and careers.

  • But not for everyone

  • Daisy, from New Zealand, and, Herman,

  • from Argentina are two

  • people who decided

  • to follow their childhood dreams.

  • They

  • wanted the world to become a utopia – a

  • perfect, ideal society where everyone is

  • happy and gets along with each other.

  • In this programme, well be hearing how

  • Daisy and Herman made their dreams

  • come truenot by changing the world,

  • but by changing themselves.

  • And, as usual,

  • well be learning some new vocabulary too.

  • But before that I have a question

  • for you, Beth.

  • Following your dreams can

  • be tough, but not following them can leave

  • you regretting all the things you wanted

  • to do but didn’t.

  • In 2012, Australian nurse,

  • Bronnie Ware, wrote her bestselling book,

  • The Top Five Regrets of the Dying, after

  • interviewing terminally ill patients about

  • their life regrets.

  • So, what do you think

  • their top regret was?

  • Was it:

  • a) I wish I hadn’t worked so hard?

  • b) I wish I had followed my dreams?

  • or

  • c) I wish I’d made more money?

  • Well, I’ll guess it’s b) they wish they

  • had followed their dreams.

  • OK, Beth.

  • I’ll reveal the correct answer

  • at the end of the programme.

  • The first dreamer were going to meet lives

  • in Riverside, a peace-loving community in

  • New Zealand where everyone shares

  • everything.

  • Riverside members work for

  • the community’s businesses, including

  • a farm, a hotel and a café.

  • All the money they

  • earn is collected and shared

  • between everyone equally.

  • Daisy, who was born in East Germany,

  • joined Riverside in 2004.

  • Here she explains

  • her belief in sharing to BBC

  • World Service programme, The Documentary.

  • What I think I always believed in is that

  • the sharing of resources can provide

  • a group of people with quite a great

  • advantage, but it doesn’t matter how

  • many hours you work or what work

  • you do, everyone is getting the

  • same amount.

  • And that is something

  • that many people outside of

  • Riverside struggle with, and where

  • were often getting thiscommunism

  • label attached to us, because it’s so

  • it seems so outlandish for people.

  • Riverside isn’t a communist community.

  • In fact, people with many different political

  • views live there.

  • But Daisy says that local

  • people struggle with the idea that

  • everything is shared.

  • If you struggle with

  • an idea, you find it difficult to

  • accept or think about it.

  • Daisy also says some local people

  • call Riverside outlandish

  • strange and unusual.

  • Our second group of dreamers are

  • a family - the Zapps.

  • In 2000, childhood

  • sweethearts, Herman and Candelaria Zapp,

  • bought a vintage car and set off

  • from Argentina to travel around

  • the world with less than 3.500 dollars

  • in their pockets.

  • Twenty-two years and

  • three children later they have visited

  • over a hundred countries, meeting

  • with countless people and

  • experiences on the way.

  • Here, Herman Zapp explains to BBC

  • World Service’s, The Documentary, how

  • following his dream has

  • changed him for the better.

  • I am so happy with the Herman there is now,

  • that I know nownot the one who

  • wanted to conquer the world, but the one

  • who was conquered by the world.

  • I learn

  • so much from people, and it’s

  • amazing how the more you meet people,

  • the more you know stories, how

  • much more humble you become because

  • you notice that you are a beautiful, tiny

  • piece of sand, but a very important piece

  • of sand like everyone is, right?

  • After many years travelling, meeting

  • new people and hearing their stories,

  • Herman is more humblenot proud or

  • arrogant.

  • He no longer wants to

  • conquer the worldto control it by force;

  • rather, he has been conquered

  • by his experiences.

  • Herman compares himself to a beautiful

  • but tiny piece of sand and uses the phrase

  • 'a grain of sand' to describe things which

  • are insignificant in themselves, but

  • at the same time are an important

  • part of the whole.

  • Daisy and Herman are rare examples

  • of dreamers who followed their dream

  • and found a happy life, lived without

  • regretwhich reminds me

  • of your question, Neil.

  • Yes, I asked about Bronnie Ware’s book, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying.

  • What do you think the number one regret was, Beth?

  • I guessed it was b) not following your dreams.

  • Which was the right answer!

  • Not having

  • the courage to follow your dreams was

  • listed as the top life regret.

  • At least we

  • have people like Daisy and Herman

  • to remind us dreams can come true!

  • OK, let’s recap the vocabulary from

  • this programme, starting with

  • 'utopia' – a perfect world where

  • everyone is happy.

  • If you 'struggle with an idea',

  • you find it difficult to accept.

  • The adjective, outlandish, means

  • strange and unusual.

  • 'To conquer' something means

  • to control it by force.

  • Someone who is 'humble' is

  • not proud or arrogant.

  • And finally, the phrase 'a grain of sand'

  • describes something which is both

  • insignificant yet somehow important.

  • Once again, our six minutes are up.

  • Bye for now!

  • Goodbye!

Hello.

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