WEBVTT 00:00:01.564 --> 00:00:03.335 What you're doing, 00:00:03.335 --> 00:00:06.139 right now, at this very moment, 00:00:06.139 --> 00:00:08.159 is killing you. 00:00:08.159 --> 00:00:10.914 More than cars or the Internet 00:00:10.914 --> 00:00:13.683 or even that little mobile device we keep talking about, 00:00:13.683 --> 00:00:16.574 the technology you're using the most almost every day 00:00:16.574 --> 00:00:19.780 is this, your tush. 00:00:19.780 --> 00:00:22.909 Nowadays people are sitting 9.3 hours a day, 00:00:22.909 --> 00:00:26.407 which is more than we're sleeping, at 7.7 hours. 00:00:26.407 --> 00:00:28.272 Sitting is so incredibly prevalent, 00:00:28.272 --> 00:00:30.249 we don't even question how much we're doing it, 00:00:30.249 --> 00:00:33.191 and because everyone else is doing it, 00:00:33.191 --> 00:00:35.965 it doesn't even occur to us that it's not okay. 00:00:35.965 --> 00:00:38.277 In that way, sitting has become 00:00:38.277 --> 00:00:42.181 the smoking of our generation. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:42.181 --> 00:00:44.609 Of course there's health consequences to this, 00:00:44.609 --> 00:00:47.390 scary ones, besides the waist. 00:00:47.390 --> 00:00:51.042 Things like breast cancer and colon cancer 00:00:51.042 --> 00:00:54.331 are directly tied to our lack of physical [activity], 00:00:54.331 --> 00:00:56.963 Ten percent in fact, on both of those. 00:00:56.963 --> 00:00:58.483 Six percent for heart disease, 00:00:58.483 --> 00:01:00.506 seven percent for type 2 diabetes, 00:01:00.506 --> 00:01:03.286 which is what my father died of. 00:01:03.286 --> 00:01:05.347 Now, any of those stats should convince each of us 00:01:05.347 --> 00:01:06.966 to get off our duff more, 00:01:06.966 --> 00:01:09.736 but if you're anything like me, it won't. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:09.736 --> 00:01:12.964 What did get me moving was a social interaction. 00:01:12.964 --> 00:01:14.272 Someone invited me to a meeting, 00:01:14.272 --> 00:01:15.445 but couldn't manage to fit me in 00:01:15.445 --> 00:01:18.283 to a regular sort of conference room meeting, and said, 00:01:18.283 --> 00:01:22.108 "I have to walk my dogs tomorrow. Could you come then?" 00:01:22.108 --> 00:01:24.155 It seemed kind of odd to do, 00:01:24.155 --> 00:01:26.265 and actually, that first meeting, I remember thinking, 00:01:26.265 --> 00:01:28.029 "I have to be the one to ask the next question," 00:01:28.029 --> 00:01:31.185 because I knew I was going to huff and puff 00:01:31.185 --> 00:01:33.369 during this conversation. 00:01:33.369 --> 00:01:36.499 And yet, I've taken that idea and made it my own. 00:01:36.499 --> 00:01:38.145 So instead of going to coffee meetings 00:01:38.145 --> 00:01:40.373 or fluorescent-lit conference room meetings, 00:01:40.373 --> 00:01:43.403 I ask people to go on a walking meeting, 00:01:43.403 --> 00:01:47.342 to the tune of 20 to 30 miles a week. 00:01:47.342 --> 00:01:49.771 It's changed my life. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:49.771 --> 00:01:53.000 But before that, what actually happened was, 00:01:53.000 --> 00:01:53.982 I used to think about it as, 00:01:53.982 --> 00:01:55.678 you could take care of your health, 00:01:55.678 --> 00:01:58.202 or you could take care of obligations, 00:01:58.202 --> 00:02:02.007 and one always came at the cost of the other. 00:02:02.007 --> 00:02:05.139 So now, several hundred of these walking meetings later, 00:02:05.139 --> 00:02:06.512 I've learned a few things. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:06.512 --> 00:02:08.386 First, there's this amazing thing 00:02:08.386 --> 00:02:11.111 about actually getting out of the box 00:02:11.111 --> 00:02:13.085 that leads to out-of-the-box thinking. 00:02:13.085 --> 00:02:17.510 Whether it's nature or the exercise itself, it certainly works. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:17.510 --> 00:02:20.530 And second, and probably the more reflective one, 00:02:20.530 --> 00:02:22.825 is just about how much each of us 00:02:22.825 --> 00:02:25.289 can hold problems in opposition 00:02:25.289 --> 00:02:27.264 when they're really not that way. 00:02:27.264 --> 00:02:28.972 And if we're going to solve problems 00:02:28.972 --> 00:02:30.570 and look at the world really differently, 00:02:30.570 --> 00:02:32.699 whether it's in governance or business 00:02:32.699 --> 00:02:35.561 or environmental issues, job creation, 00:02:35.561 --> 00:02:38.224 maybe we can think about how to reframe those problems 00:02:38.224 --> 00:02:40.426 as having both things be true. 00:02:40.426 --> 00:02:42.349 Because it was when that happened 00:02:42.349 --> 00:02:43.804 with this walk-and-talk idea 00:02:43.804 --> 00:02:47.763 that things became doable and sustainable and viable. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:47.763 --> 00:02:49.743 So I started this talk talking about the tush, 00:02:49.743 --> 00:02:53.753 so I'll end with the bottom line, which is, 00:02:53.753 --> 00:02:55.384 walk and talk. 00:02:55.384 --> 00:02:56.667 Walk the talk. 00:02:56.667 --> 00:03:00.335 You'll be surprised at how fresh air drives fresh thinking, 00:03:00.335 --> 00:03:01.931 and in the way that you do, 00:03:01.931 --> 00:03:05.459 you'll bring into your life an entirely new set of ideas. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:05.459 --> 00:03:07.186 Thank you. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:07.186 --> 00:03:11.402 (Applause)