Home Subtitle videos What I learned about freedom in a secret Chinese prison

What I learned about freedom in a secret Chinese prison

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00:04

My talk is about what I didn't have for a long time.

00:07

I received free accommodation from the Chinese government

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for over three years

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for so-called leaking state secrets overseas

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at the worst time for Australia-China relations.

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And the first phase was called RSDL, Chinese spelling for hell.

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Then in detention,

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the sort that makes jail seem like Ibiza.

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And it was through that ordeal, call it the wonder diet,

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that I realized freedom is wasted on the free.

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Let me explain.

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When you only have a few dollars, you know how to spend it.

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When you win the lottery,

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it's easy to squander and hard to get your priorities right.

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Same with freedom.

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You can be paralyzed by choice.

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You can't comprehend the vastness or the preciousness.

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So how do you make freedom count

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when you're lucky enough to have it?

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To start, what it felt like to be not free:

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In RSDL,

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I had two guards glued to me, front and side.

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At all times.

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I was made to sit for 13 hours straight each day.

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I had to request permission to make the smallest movement.

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And you know what I wanted to do the most?

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I wanted to run!

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And usually I hate running.

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I couldn't talk.

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Which to me is major torture.

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I wanted to talk to anyone,

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but in real life I have sometimes worn EarPods to shut people out.

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And I would have done anything to learn.

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Except when I was outside,

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I wasted the chance.

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I was too busy.

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Then I moved to detention.

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I had three cellmates

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and that already felt like freedom paradise.

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Nobody in the cell regrets things like money or assets,

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but we were kicking ourselves over the travel we didn't do,

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the love we didn't show,

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the risks we didn't take.

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Imprisonment is like a mini death.

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It's a taste of the real thing.

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It hit us that one day we'll lose the chance to do everything,

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even the stuff we hate now.

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So now

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I do things I want immediately.

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Another way to value freedom

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is to be super aware of the forms of prison.

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My son asked me,

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if a kid goes to the same nursery, elementary, high school,

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is that a 13-year sentence?

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It got me thinking about life as a death sentence,

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and the prisons we put ourselves in.

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Property, objects can tie us down.

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Relationships can be shackles too.

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And we sometimes give up our civil liberties

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in exchange for a neat society.

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But the maximum security prison

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is our mind.

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Our fears and conventions and biases.

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And that's why the officers in detention,

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who are so bound by doctrine,

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couldn't understand that we could learn with delight

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and make fun behind bars.

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I talk about imprisonment,

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but in fact, everyone here,

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we've all had some loss of physical freedom.

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COVID lockdowns.

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We've all been sick in bed.

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But when we lose physical freedom,

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it's an opportunity to find freedom within.

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And that's how I could,

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when I was blindfolded and handcuffed,

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think myself to infinity,

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through imagination,

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knowledge

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and a BTFI serenity.

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Beyond the Fuck It.

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(Laughter)

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It means no matter how bad things get,

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riding out the worst part,

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which for me had been

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wanting to bash my head open against the tiles

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to shut off the mental anguish.

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It had been being stripped naked in a cage.

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So the ultimate state of being

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is to be serene.

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But you can't get there until you've exhausted the other extreme.

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Anxiety, pain, despair.

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And now I'm giving a TED talk.

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(Cheers and applause)

05:18

Thank you.

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And when we are serene, we can choose kindness.

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When those guards watched me at all times,

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I would still say "good morning" to them.

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I didn't hold it against them when they enforced the strict rules,

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because I saw that they suffered too.

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During the shifts they couldn't talk, drink water or even go to the toilet.

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They had to watch me shit, shower and sleep.

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Later in detention,

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I would still show courtesy to the officers,

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even when they were rude.

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Even when they encouraged us to snitch.

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I still chose to forgive my cellmates and empathize.

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If I become vengeful and petty, then they've taken away more from me.

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I was in a cell for a while with a terrible bully.

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She made my life hell.

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But once called for a midnight interrogation,

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she was so scared

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she asked if she could hold my hand.

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I hugged her and comforted her.

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Once you realize that pain is the ultimate commonality,

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you can also give kindness as the universal gift.

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Some of the most precious gifts I've received were in detention,

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even though we had close to nothing.

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Music.

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A cellmate wrote a song in her head in solitary

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and sang it for me on my birthday.

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No Spotify or ChatGPT, or even notepad.

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From her head to our ears.

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Poetry.

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An acrostic poem knocked via the adjacent cell's walls

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through an alphabetical code.

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It took over 400 knocks and precise counting

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to receive that message.

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But you know what?

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With each knock, I could feel the power of friendship transcend those thick walls.

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Of course we were punished,

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but it was worth it.

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Crafts that we made in secrecy that were destroyed once seen

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because it was against the rules.

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But the objects

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were nothing compared to how we felt

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in making and giving those gifts.

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So you see, there can be

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endless creativity even within a world of constraints.

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And maybe by having so much,

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we lose the ability to create something out of nothing.

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I'm not promoting detention,

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but like athletes training at high altitude,

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setting some constraints may expand our minds.

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We can also expand our appreciation of life

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through some deprivation

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because that recalibrates your Richter scale for joy.

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One summer night in detention, there was a blackout.

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The only darkness we'd experienced in all those years.

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The hateful fluorescent lights were off

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and nobody could see us on the monitors.

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Five minutes of joy that we talked about for months.

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Then recently, in my hometown of Melbourne,

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there was a storm blackout.

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And instead of smiling in the lotus position,

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guess what I was worried about.

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Food in the freezer.

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Charging the electronics.

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Some other first world problems we complain about.

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Oh, the weather, the Vancouver rain.

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Well, in there I have been in tears because I could finally smell the rain.

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The traffic.

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Well, in there the only traffic was bumping into my cell mate

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along the one-meter wide corridor

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along which to walk five meters.

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Too many emails!

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I went for months without a letter.

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I had one phone call in all those years.

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Annoying kids.

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I used to have to imagine my kids' faces

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because I couldn't keep a photo of them in the cell.

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So you see, when our canvas is so full,

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we look at that little smudge

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and we magnify it.

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But when our canvas was bare,

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we could celebrate even one drop of color.

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And that's what I hope I will continue to do.

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And I hope you will join me.

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Remind ourselves

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of the blindness

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so we can see life fully.

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Like a newborn.

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Thank you.

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