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Home » Let Curiosity Lead: Yara Shahidi (Transcript) 

Let Curiosity Lead: Yara Shahidi (Transcript) 

Here is the full transcript of Yara Shahidi’s talk titled “Let Curiosity Lead” at TED conference.

Yara Shahidi’s TED talk, titled “Let Curiosity Lead,” is an inspiring exploration of how curiosity has shaped her life and career. She shares her journey from childhood, filled with imaginative play and exploration, to her adult life, where she balances acting with academic pursuits. Shahidi emphasizes the diminishing space for creativity and imagination as we grow older, urging the audience to reclaim their curiosity.

She highlights her experiences at Harvard and on her television show “Grown-ish” as examples of how she has navigated the intersection of education and entertainment. The talk underscores the importance of not allowing societal norms to dictate the pursuit of multiple interests, illustrating how curiosity can lead to unexpected and fulfilling paths.

Shahidi’s message is a powerful reminder that curiosity can be a transformative force, capable of breaking down barriers and fostering innovation. She calls for a recommitment to curiosity, encouraging everyone to see it as a valuable tool for creating new futures together.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Reflecting on Childhood

Do you remember how big the world felt when we were younger? Because my childhood was filled with time travel and adventures. I sat in awe of how flowers grew from a simple seed. I remember looking up at the sky and wondering: Was the Earth moving? Was the sun moving? Or was I moving?

And I filled the rest of the time by reading books about fantasy lands. But slowly, the time travel and adventures of my youth became using my GPS to figure out how much traffic I’d inevitably be sitting in. The flowers became the screen saver to my laptop I spent way too much time on. I only saw the sunrise when pulling all-nighters to get work done.

And those fantasy lands, well, those became essays and articles from underfunded newspapers. And yes, some of this is just a part of growing up, necessary even. But I realized the imaginative and creative forces that drove me had less and less space to thrive in my young adult life. And in being forced to look at the world as it is, I was missing out on the opportunity to look at the world as it could be.

The Power of Imagination

Now more than ever, we live in a world that requires of us an imagination so that we can envision what could be different. And while I didn’t come prepared today to answer the world’s largest problems, I would like to make a case for how one tool can help us continue to build new worlds and find our place in it. Curiosity. I don’t have any fancy graphs to show you all today, but I would like to think that I’m sort of an expert in the field as my entire life has been a case study in following my curiosities.

It started super simple. My grampy and I would reimagine and act out the entire saga of “The Odyssey” with my Polly Pocket dolls, as one does at the age of four. And around the age of five, I asked for every religious book, I mean every religious book. Fast forwarding to 13, I read my first short story from the formidable James Baldwin, and my life was forever changed.

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Needless to say, I was grateful to be surrounded by a community of people that honored my interests. But as I got older, I began to get confronted by a big question: “Are you sure about that?” Now this was a question I really could not escape. In August of 2018, right as I was embarking on my next adventure.

A Confluence of Worlds

I was beginning my freshman year at Harvard right as my television show “Grown-ish” began filming season two. And I was at a crossroads, because acting for me has been more than a career. It’s given me permission to explore my fantasies. I feel like I gain another level of empathy every time I step into a different character’s shoes.

But my education has been equally as pivotal. Because my education has fulfilled my endless desire to know: to know places, to know the events that have shaped us, the communities that have built us, the obstacles that have tried to stop us, the mistakes that haunt us. But selfishly, to know about myself and my place in the world. So my two lifelong passions were colliding, and I was being told by academic advisers and entertainment folk alike — although no one on my team — that there was no symbiotic relationship between the two worlds.

I was searching for an “and,” but I kept getting presented an “either-or.” And I almost let those five words — “Are you sure about that?” — stop me. But let me cut to the chase. I’m speaking to you now as a Harvard alum with a television show going into its sixth season. It’s cool.

Universality of Experience

And while my college predicament may have been unusual, I do think this experience is quite universal. Because, one, I’m far from the first person to go to school while working. But also I’d go so far as to say all of us juggle multiple interests, passions, and jobs. Yet there comes a moment on our paths where we’re expected to get serious, to find our one thing, stick to it.

We’re told that our multiple areas of interest that we are equally drawn to are incompatible. And hit with that all-too-familiar “Are you sure about that?” Suddenly we go from being expected to know math and a language, science and history, to operating in this narrow silo for the sake of becoming an expert or really good at one thing. I mean, think about how many times we ask each other the question, “What do you do?” Which is really a proxy in my mind for a much more pressing question, “Who are you right now?”

Because what we do is only a fraction of who we are.