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Your new playlist might be right outside your door #TEDTalks
Your new playlist might be right outside your door #TEDTalks
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0:00
Close your eyes
0:01
and open your ears.
0:07
That beautiful melody was a hooded
0:09
butcher bird, which believe it or not is
0:10
carnivorous. Didn't think predators
0:12
could sing like that, right?
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How do you feel?
0:16
Different, right? We're all
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evolutionarily hardwired to nature's
0:19
sonic language. So much so the birdsong,
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choruses of birdsong,
0:26
percussion of insects, the symphony of
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amphibians has all been shown
0:30
scientifically to trigger your
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parasympathetic nervous system, aka make
0:34
you feel relaxed. Reconnecting to nature
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is fundamental for our type of future on
0:39
this planet.
0:40
Cuz planetary health and our health go
0:42
hand in hand.
0:44
Our ancestors were polyglots of ecology.
0:52
To listen was to know. Inattention was
0:55
literally life-threatening. For our
0:56
entire evolution, listening has been a
0:59
big part of our compass.
1:01
But now we turn that off.
1:03
It's no wonder that we lost our bearing.
1:05
See, nature sounds are so important to
1:07
us as a species. We evolved not just to
1:09
hear the information,
1:11
but to have an emotional response to it.
1:14
It's probably why music is so powerful
1:16
for us. It transcends barriers. Where
1:19
words fail, it adds meaning. It
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resonates. We're not so neatly separable
1:23
from nature.
1:25
And listening to it doesn't just tell
1:27
you that, makes you feel it.
1:34
Being more attentive
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to nature's sonic language
1:39
might help us better exist with it, cuz
1:41
listening requires embodied respect.