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Home » What Trauma Taught Me About Resilience: Charles Hunt (Transcript)

What Trauma Taught Me About Resilience: Charles Hunt (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Charles Hunt’s talk titled “What Trauma Taught Me About Resilience” at TEDxCharlotte conference.

In his TEDx talk, Charles Hunt recounts his challenging upbringing in Oakland, California, during the 1980s, a time marked by high unemployment, systemic racial issues, and the crack epidemic. He shares vivid, traumatic childhood experiences, including dealing with his mother’s addiction and his father’s incarceration and subsequent death. Despite these adversities, Hunt succeeded academically and professionally, becoming the first in his family to graduate college and enjoying a successful corporate career.

His journey illustrates the concept of resilience, which he defines as the ability to adapt to and recover from negative life changes. Hunt emphasizes that resilience is not just about being strong or thick-skinned; it’s about how beliefs and thoughts shape our actions and responses to challenges. He advocates for the power of a positive attitude and perspective in overcoming life’s obstacles, stressing the importance of acknowledging past victimhood while refusing to remain a victim.

Hunt concludes by expressing gratitude for his experiences, seeing them as instrumental in shaping his resilience and giving purpose to his trauma.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

What if I told you that you could overcome anything, that there’s no circumstance or situation known to man that you cannot overcome, that you are indeed unbreakable. Would you believe me? And more importantly than me telling you, if you told yourself those things, would you believe you? I want to talk to you about a critical element of happiness, success, and overcoming obstacles: resilience, and how it’s built through some of the most painful moments.

Early Life Challenges

I’m not sure what the ideal route to a TED Talk is, but I’m guessing that my journey isn’t it. I was born and raised in Oakland, California, coming of age in the 1980s, and its nearly 20% unemployment rate for blacks, systemic housing segregation and discrimination, education inequities, high poverty and murder rates, and the dawn of the crack epidemic, and its partner, the war on drugs, that made historical criminal justice inequities even worse.