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  • 00:10

    So I had the chance to meet with some of the kids in the program today.

  • 00:15

    Where are you?

  • 00:16

    Scream out.

  • 00:17

    There you go.

  • 00:18

    I love those kids.

  • 00:19

    What I thought I would do cause they gave me a little bit of time to say whatever I

  • 00:26

    want… is offer you a little bit of observations for your future.

  • 00:34

    I have five little that you can follow as you find your spark and bring your spark to

  • 00:39

    life.

  • 00:41

    The first is to go after the things that you want.

  • 00:45

    Let me tell you a story.

  • 00:47

    So a friend of mine and I, we went for a run in central park, the road runners organization

  • 00:53

    on the weekends, they host races and it's very common at the end of the race they'll

  • 00:58

    have a sponsor who will give away something; apples or bagels or something, and on this

  • 01:03

    particular day when we got to the end of the run there were some free bagels and they had

  • 01:09

    picnic tables set up and on one side was a group of volunteers; on the table were boxes

  • 01:14

    of bagels and on the other side was a long line of runners waiting to get their free

  • 01:20

    bagel so I said to my friend, "let's get a bagel", and he looked at me and said, "that

  • 01:26

    line too long", and I said free bagel and he said, "I don't want to wait in line", and

  • 01:35

    I was like free bagel and he says no, it's too long and that's when I realized that there's

  • 01:43

    two ways to see the world.

  • 01:46

    Some people see the thing that they want and some people see the thing that prevents them

  • 01:51

    from getting the thing that they want.

  • 01:53

    I could only see the bagels.

  • 01:55

    He could only see the line and so I walked up to the line.

  • 02:02

    I leaned in between two people put my hand in the box and pulled out two bagels and no

  • 02:10

    one got mad at me because the rule is "you can go after whatever you want, you just cannot

  • 02:15

    deny anyone else to go after whatever they want".

  • 02:19

    Now I had to sacrifice choice, I didn't get to choose which bagel I got.

  • 02:23

    I got whatever I pulled out but I didn't have to wait in line.

  • 02:27

    So the point is you don't have to wait in line; you don't have to so the way everybody

  • 02:31

    else has done it.

  • 02:32

    You can do it your way.

  • 02:34

    You can break the rules, you just can't get in the way of somebody else getting what they

  • 02:38

    want.

  • 02:39

    That's rule number one.

  • 02:42

    Rule Number Two, I like this one.

  • 02:48

    In the eighteenth century, there was something that spread across Europe and eventually made

  • 02:55

    its way to America called puerperal fever also known as The Black Death of childbed.

  • 03:03

    Basically what was happening is women were giving birth and they would die within 48

  • 03:10

    hours after giving birth.

  • 03:12

    This black death of childbirth was the ravage of Europe and it got worse and worse and worse

  • 03:18

    over the course of over a century.

  • 03:21

    In some hospitals, it was as high as 70% of women who gave birth who would die as a result

  • 03:29

    of giving birth but this was the Renaissance this was the time of empirical data and science

  • 03:36

    and we had thrown away things like tradition and mysticism.

  • 03:40

    These were men of science.

  • 03:41

    These were doctors and men of science wanted to study and try and find the reason for this

  • 03:48

    black death of childbed and so they got to work studying and they would study the corpses

  • 03:55

    of the of the women who had died and in the morning they would conduct autopsies and then

  • 04:01

    in the afternoon they would go and deliver babies and finish their rounds and it wasn't

  • 04:06

    until somewhere in the mid-1800s that Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Father of Supreme Court

  • 04:12

    justice, Oliver Wendell Holmes realized that all of these doctors who conducting autopsies

  • 04:18

    in the morning weren't washing their hands before they delivered babies in the afternoon

  • 04:25

    and he pointed it out and said, "guys, you're the problem", and they ignored him and called

  • 04:32

    him crazy for 30 years until finally, somebody realized that if they simply washed their

  • 04:41

    hands it would go away and that's exactly what happened.

  • 04:46

    When they started sterilizing their instruments and washing their hands the black death of

  • 04:50

    childbed disappeared.

  • 04:53

    My point is, the lesson here is sometimes you're the problem.

  • 05:00

    We've seen this happen all too recently with our new men of science and empirical studiers

  • 05:07

    and these men of finance who are smarter than the rest of us until the thing collapsed and

  • 05:16

    they blamed everything else except themselves and my point is take accountability for your

  • 05:22

    actions.

  • 05:23

    You can take all the credit in the world for the things that you do right as long as you

  • 05:28

    also take responsibility for the things you do wrong.

  • 05:31

    It must be a balanced equation you don't get it one way and not the other; you get to take

  • 05:37

    credit when you also take accountability that's lesson two.

  • 05:43

    Lesson Three, take care of each other.

  • 05:46

    The United States Navy SEALs are perhaps the most elite warriors in the world and one of

  • 05:55

    the seals was asked who makes it through the selection process; who is able to become a

  • 06:04

    seal?

  • 06:05

    And his answer was I can't tell you the kind of person that becomes a seal; I can't tell

  • 06:11

    you the kind of person that makes it through buds but I can tell you the kind of people

  • 06:16

    who don't become seals.

  • 06:18

    He says the guys that show up with huge bulging muscles covered in tattoos who want to prove

  • 06:24

    to the world how tough they are; none of them make it through.

  • 06:29

    He said the preening leaders who like to delegate all their responsibilities and never do anything

  • 06:34

    themselves; none of them make it through.

  • 06:37

    He said the star college athletes who've never really been tested to the core of their being

  • 06:43

    none of them make it through.

  • 06:46

    He says some of the guys that make it through worse and scrawny.

  • 06:51

    He said some of the guys that make it through you will see them shivering out of fear.

  • 06:57

    He says however, all the guys that make it through when they find themselves physically

  • 07:04

    spent, emotionally spent, when they have nothing left to give physically or emotionally; somehow,

  • 07:12

    someway they are able to find the energy to dig down deep inside themselves to find the

  • 07:20

    energy to help the guy next to them.

  • 07:23

    They become seals he said you want to be an elite warrior, it's not about how tough you

  • 07:29

    are, it's not about how smart you are, it's not about how fast you are; if you want to

  • 07:34

    be an elite warrior you better get really really good at helping the person to the left

  • 07:39

    of you and helping the person to the right of you because that's how people advance in

  • 07:44

    the world, the world is too dangerous in the world is too difficult for you to think that

  • 07:48

    you can do these things alone.

  • 07:50

    If you find your spark, I commend you, now who you gonna ask for help and when are you

  • 07:54

    gonna accept help when it's offered.

  • 07:57

    Learn that skill.

  • 08:00

    Learn by practicing helping each other it'll be the single most valuable thing you ever

  • 08:04

    learn in your entire life to accept help when it's offered and to ask for it when you know

  • 08:10

    that you can't do it.

  • 08:12

    The amazing thing is when you learn to ask for help you'll discover that there are people

  • 08:16

    all around you who've always wanted to help you they just didn't think you needed it because

  • 08:20

    you kept pretending that you had everything under control and the minute you say, I don't

  • 08:24

    know what I'm doing, I'm stuck, I'm scared, I don't think I can do this; you will find

  • 08:31

    that lots of people who love you will rush in and take care of you but that'll only happen

  • 08:37

    if you learn to take care of them first.

  • 08:48

    Lesson Four.

  • 08:51

    Nelson Mandela is a particularly special case study in the leadership world because he is

  • 08:58

    universally regarded as a great leader.

  • 09:01

    You can take other personalities and depending on the nation you go to we have different

  • 09:05

    opinions about other personalities but Nelson Mandela across the world is universally regarded

  • 09:11

    as a great leader.

  • 09:13

    He was actually the son of a tribal chief and he was asked one day how did you learn

  • 09:20

    to be a great leader?

  • 09:22

    And he responded that he would go with his father to tribal meetings and he remembers

  • 09:28

    two things when his father would meet with other elders; one, they would always sit in

  • 09:35

    a circle and two, his father was always the last to speak.

  • 09:42

    You will be told your whole life that you need to learn to listen, I would say that

  • 09:46

    you need to learn to be the last to speak.

  • 09:49

    I see it in boardrooms every day of the week even people who consider themselves good leaders

  • 09:54

    who may actually be decent leaders will walk into a room and say here's the problem, here's

  • 09:58

    what I think, but I'm interested in your opinion let's go around the room, it's too late.

  • 10:03

    The skill to hold your opinions to yourself until everyone has spoken does two things

  • 10:08

    one it gives everybody else the feeling that they have been heard.

  • 10:13

    It gives everyone else the ability to feel that they have contributed and two, you get

  • 10:19

    the benefit of hearing what everybody else has to think before you render your opinion.

  • 10:24

    The skill is really to keep your opinions to yourself if you agree with somebody don't

  • 10:29

    nod 'yes'; if you disagree with somebody don't nod 'no'.

  • 10:34

    Simply sit there take it all in and the only thing you're allowed to do is ask questions

  • 10:39

    so that you can understand what they mean and why they have the opinion that they have

  • 10:43

    you must understand from where they are speaking, why they have the opinion they have not just

  • 10:51

    what they are saying and at the end you will get your turn.

  • 10:57

    It sounds easy, it's not.

  • 11:00

    Practice being the last to speak that's what Nelson Mandela did.

  • 11:06

    Number three…number five, this Monty Python.

  • 11:09

    One, two, five, three.

  • 11:13

    For all the other nerds in the audience.

  • 11:17

    There’s one.

  • 11:22

    Number Five, my favorite one of all.

  • 11:25

    True Story.

  • 11:27

    There was a former Undersecretary of Defense who was invited to give a speech at a large

  • 11:32

    conference about a thousand people and he was standing on the stage with his cup of

  • 11:38

    coffee in a Styrofoam cup giving his prepare to march with his PowerPoint behind him and

  • 11:44

    he took a sip of his coffee and he smiled and he looked down at the coffee and then

  • 11:49

    he went off-script and he said you know last year, I spoke at this exact same conference.

  • 11:56

    Last year, I was still the undersecretary and when I spoke here last year they flew

  • 12:01

    me here business class and when I arrived at the airport there was somebody waiting

  • 12:06

    for me to take me to my hotel and they took me to my hotel and they had already checked

  • 12:10

    me in and they just took me up to my room and the next morning, I came downstairs and

  • 12:15

    there was someone waiting in the lobby to greet me and they drove me to this here same

  • 12:19

    venue.

  • 12:20

    They took me through the back entrance and took me into the green room and handed me

  • 12:24

    a coffee cup of coffee in a beautiful ceramic cup.

  • 12:29

    He says I am no longer the undersecretary.

  • 12:31

    I flew here coach.

  • 12:33

    I took a taxi to my hotel and I checked myself in.

  • 12:37

    When I came down the lobby this morning I took another taxi to this venue.

  • 12:42

    I came in the front door and found my way backstage and when I asked someone do you

  • 12:47

    have any coffee he pointed to the coffee machine in the corner and I poured myself a cup of

  • 12:52

    coffee into this here Styrofoam cup.

  • 12:56

    He says the lesson is the ceramic cup was never meant for me, it was meant for the position

  • 13:02

    I held.

  • 13:04

    I deserve a Styrofoam cup.

  • 13:08

    Remember this as you gain fame, as you gain fortune, as you gain position and seniority

  • 13:16

    people will treat you better; they will hold doors open for you.

  • 13:19

    They will get you a cup of tea and coffee without you even asking.

  • 13:23

    They will call you sir and ma'am and they will give you stuff.

  • 13:27

    None of that stuff is meant for you, that stuff is meant for the position you hold.

  • 13:32

    It is meant for the level that you have achieved of leader or success or whatever you want

  • 13:37

    to call it but you will always deserve a Styrofoam cup.

  • 13:44

    Remember that, remember that lesson of humility and gratitude, you can accept all the free

  • 13:50

    stuff.

  • 13:51

    You can accept all the perks, absolutely you can enjoy them, but just be grateful for them

  • 13:56

    and know that they're not for you.

  • 13:58

    I remember getting off the Acela.

  • 14:02

    I took the Acela from New York to Washington DC and I got off the train like everybody

  • 14:07

    else and I was walking down the platform like everyone else and I walked past General Norty

  • 14:14

    Schwartz who used to be the chief of staff of the United States Air Force.

  • 14:20

    The head of the Air Force and here I did you see a guy in a suit, schlepping his own suitcase

  • 14:27

    down the platform just like me and just a couple months ago he was flying on private

  • 14:32

    jets and an entourage and other people carried his luggage but he no longer held the position

  • 14:38

    and so now he got to drag his own suitcase and never did it sort of remind me more that

  • 14:43

    none of us deserve the perks that we get; we all deserve a Styrofoam cup.

  • 14:50

    It was a pleasure meeting you guys this afternoon, I was blown away by your honesty and your

  • 14:55

    curiosity and your poise and I am confident that the future is bright despite the fact

  • 15:02

    that America looks like an absolute mess right now.

  • 15:05

    I am confident that the future is bright for one reason and one reason only because you

  • 15:10

    will grow up and you will be our future.

  • 15:15

    Thank you very very much guys.

  • 15:21

    You're wonderful.

  • 15:31

    Thank you.

All

The example sentences of UNDERSECRETARY in videos (1 in total of 2)

last proper noun, singular year noun, singular or mass , i personal pronoun was verb, past tense still adverb the determiner undersecretary adjective and coordinating conjunction when wh-adverb i personal pronoun spoke verb, past tense here adverb last adjective year noun, singular or mass they personal pronoun flew verb, non-3rd person singular present

Definition and meaning of UNDERSECRETARY

What does "undersecretary mean?"

/ˌəndərˈsekrəˌterē/

noun
Junior administrative officer in government.