- Maple Ryn wanted inspiration. Marie Matias wanted to get out of her apartment. Brendan Bellman wanted to get his mind off being mugged. Anna Evita wanted to meet someone else. Joseph wanted to read a book about a Praying Mantis. CJ wanted free access to the internet. Elaina wanted to revisit all of the places she used to go to but had not visited recently. Master Gooway wanted to take the advice of Tyson in his search for his son. Tyson wanted to follow Master Gooway.For whatever reason the whole town ended up at the library at the exact same time. Nobody’s reason for going there was for Ryan Lochte's Ted Talk but that was what they all ended up watching. Ryan has fallen off significantly from his days of an olympic swimmer and talks about trying to get back where he was until he eventually made the realization that he just needs to embrace who he is now as a different person. Right before Ryan’s speech a rat sprinted across the stage in front of him to everyone's appall.Everybody is going to write a small piece of Lochte’s speech. Anna Evita is going to start the speech and Violet Cortezz is going to end the speech. The rest of you just make up something that sounds like it could go in the middle of the speech and have your character reflect on what is being said. Maybe it somehow does give them the inspiration or guidance they needed. We can put together the whole speech after the posts are done, with the order going by the order of the names in the margins. So the order after Anna would go Arizona, Brendan, Caris, CJ, etc.Also Coach K, Duke basketball’s head coach, aka rat face, was supposed to speak after Ryan Lochte and a lot of people are actually excited to listen to him. But Ryan’s speech goes overtime and rat face gets skipped.
- Post due by the start of class Feb. 13th.
- 1. Pause2. While I was a swimmer, I focused on only one thing: speed. I wanted to be the fastest person in the pool, and if I wasn’t, I either got more determined or depressed. Most of the time, it was the latter. I threw everything into swimming during the season and partied constantly during breaks to avoid acknowledging my emotions, all while refusing to admit to my friends and family that I was in a dark place. This dangerous behavior came to a head at Rio in 2016.”3. "I am a firm believer that anything is possible, so when people told me I cannot return to my Olympic swimming form, I tuned them out. I did not care what they had to say because I had a plan. I traveled to the Himalayas to meet the Yeti Monks because they offered me a remedy for my athletic low. A metal box locked away in a cave on Mount Everest. When I flew into Nepal, I had nothing on me except my iron spirit. The monks informed me that this box contains my future, my destiny, and if I was to ever swim again I would need this box. I trekked for days in the blistering cold, dodging death at every turn. I reached the cave only to find the box locked, but before I could get the monks to open the box, I lost it in a blinding snowstorm. Despite not getting the box, I felt fulfilled in that I came out of Mount Everest alive. It gave me all the motivation I needed to get back in form. That's all you need really, a box and a goal."4. I didn’t understand the importance of the opportunities I had. I took them for granted and let the fame get to my head. I thought that my popularity and status could be used to cover up my immature actions. I didn’t realize that I should’ve used it to help others. I have since realized this which is why I am here now. I want to help you all realize that you have many opportunities around you, and maybe some you haven’t discovered yet. there are many important opportunities around you that shouldn’t be taken for granted.”5. Pause6. A lot of people didn’t get to see how I felt after the situation. People got to see the cleaned up version
of me that I quickly created to stay composed for interviews and clean off my name in the media, but
no one really got to see what I was like at my lowest point. You see, swimming was me and I was
swimming. I lived for swimming and dedicated every day of my life to it. I didn’t know how to explain my
identity without mentioning swimming. Once I was forced to stop, I can’t lie, it was one of the hardest
experiences I have had to deal with in my life. I questioned who I was, if I could still be me and not
swim, and how I had reduced myself to only become one thing. I relied on swimming to define my
sense of self, and without it I was powerless…”7. “Hey kid, put your book away and listen, I’m talking up here,” Ryan Lochte shouted from his Ted Talk stage.8. At that point I was at the height of my fame. I thought everybody knew my name. I spent most of my time training, but I appeared on lots of TV shows and I got calls from interviewers and sponsors and my manager was loving it. When I floated the idea for my own TV show, no one thought I could do it. But I told them that I was going to be successful. That's the only mentality that works. It's how I get through any competition or anything.
Anyway, my stereotype has always been a "dumb jock" so I wanted to prove them wrong. I wanted to be able to do this for myself. Even though not everyone knows that "What Would Ryan Lochte Do?" was a show that even existed, I'm glad I did it. Getting that show off the ground required everything I had, really. I had to prove that it was a good idea, and then go through with it, to get someplace new and be someone new. I had to prove to myself that it was even worth it. Everything I did for that show helped me first try to look beyond swimming and into something that could push me beyond my limits. And I don't regret it."9. “Family is the most important thing in life,” said Ryan, “they’re the ones who help you through tough times, provide you with good times, and gave you the greatest gift of all: life.”10. He pauses and takes a sip of water.11. "Those days were hard. It was a hard life. It was hard being me. I struggled to balance the glamour, glory, and girls with my strenuous swimming lessons twice a week. Swim, sleep, party, repeat. I learned a lot through those long, tough weeks. I don't have enough fingers and toes to count the amount of times I threw up in the pool during training after a night out. I still struggle to come to small dumpy towns like this to speak because I got used to big cities and pint house sweets. It has been a tough transition but its nice to educate people like you all who don't know too much. I enjoy coming to towns like Pointe Place and seeing how the simple life is lived sometimes. It's cool."12. Another pause, he turns back to the audience.13. “Even though I am no longer able to swim like I used to, I am still able to do great things. I might no longer be as famous but I’m still able to do great things. I go around America inspiring people and talking about my life. I get to see a large crowd of people that want to hear what I have to say. It was important for me to realize that it is ok to change as a person. Even though I was once a famous Olympic athlete, I can still be something great. Like an inspiration to all of you here today.”14. “Here’s the thing guys, even if you are a titan of your field, people fall off the path all the time, but you know what you gotta do, you just have to keep moving, keep doing stuff, it doesn’t matter what stuff, but you just have to keep doing something.” “I mean you can take that from me look at my story, I never stop doing stuff, I’m a prime example of this, and look at how successful I’ve been, a much more American swimmer than some other people.”15. He smiles and looks out at the crowd16. .“Never reveal too much about what you do in the Olympic pool, for it will come back to haunt you.”17. “Sometimes you may seem disconnected from yourself and even disconnected from who you once were. You will always try to search and find that person who you once were but your searching will be never ending until you realize that your past self can no longer be who you are in the present. Some things, some hardships, even some joyous moments you must let go of in order to be who you want to be now. If there is something you don’t like in your life then only you have the power to change it.”18. Lochte’s jumps back as the rat scuttles across the stage.19. “After being so successful in the olympics, it was really hard for me to accept that that part of my life was really over. No matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t get it back, but I’m so thankful that I have moved on to a better part of my life. I have really learned how to focus on bettering myself, and cherishing all the positive things that have happened to me since.”20. I am a changed man. I don’t feel like the swimmer I once was. Swimming was my entire life, I loved swimming more than air, and we all need air, but I don't need swimming. I think that I need to find who I am because I'm not just an athlete, I'm a human being with feelings and emotions who need more experiences in his life. I want to learn how to love something not just because it can give me money or fame but because it gives me wholeness.
People that look at a guy like me and call me a disgrace but I'm just a person. People like me mess up all the time, but because they're not famous, they don't get punished for it. I think that people should live a day in my shoes and see how all the fortune and parties and instant “friends” can change them. People who constantly tell you how great and talented you are, are not the people you need. People that lie to you no matter how wrong you will make you forget the values that you were raised with.
I'm talking to you all today to tell you that no one stays the same. We all grow up and change for better or worse. I just hope you all give me that chance. Often celebrities are painted as perfect, and if they aren’t perfect something must be wrong with them. I’m here to tell you that isn’t true. Just like you’ve all done bad things so have I. I'm allowed to mess up and learn from my mistakes. Thank you for listening to my TED Talk. I hope you all learned something new about me today and now know to treat famous people with the same respect as someone who isn’t.
“Nobody likes being alone that much. I don't go out of my way to make friends, that's all. It just leads to disappointment. ” ― Haruki Murakami, Norwegian Wood
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