1 00:00:00,976 --> 00:00:05,206 "Even in purely nonreligious terms, 2 00:00:05,230 --> 00:00:10,446 homosexuality represents a misuse of the sexual faculty. 3 00:00:10,970 --> 00:00:15,691 It is a pathetic little second-rate substitute for reality -- 4 00:00:15,715 --> 00:00:17,661 a pitiable flight from life. 5 00:00:18,167 --> 00:00:21,913 As such, it deserves no compassion, 6 00:00:21,937 --> 00:00:27,119 it deserves no treatment as minority martyrdom, 7 00:00:27,143 --> 00:00:33,083 and it deserves not to be deemed anything but a pernicious sickness." 8 00:00:33,687 --> 00:00:38,713 That's from "Time" magazine in 1966, when I was three years old. 9 00:00:39,215 --> 00:00:42,719 And last year, the president of the United States 10 00:00:42,743 --> 00:00:45,406 came out in favor of gay marriage. 11 00:00:45,992 --> 00:00:52,956 (Applause) 12 00:00:53,488 --> 00:00:55,045 And my question is: 13 00:00:55,069 --> 00:00:58,625 How did we get from there to here? 14 00:00:58,649 --> 00:01:02,711 How did an illness become an identity? 15 00:01:03,497 --> 00:01:06,564 When I was perhaps six years old, 16 00:01:06,588 --> 00:01:09,128 I went to a shoe store with my mother and my brother. 17 00:01:09,152 --> 00:01:11,723 And at the end of buying our shoes, 18 00:01:11,747 --> 00:01:15,193 the salesman said to us that we could each have a balloon to take home. 19 00:01:15,611 --> 00:01:17,727 My brother wanted a red balloon, 20 00:01:17,751 --> 00:01:20,291 and I wanted a pink balloon. 21 00:01:21,092 --> 00:01:25,694 My mother said that she thought I'd really rather have a blue balloon. 22 00:01:25,718 --> 00:01:26,749 (Laughter) 23 00:01:26,773 --> 00:01:29,111 But I said that I definitely wanted the pink one. 24 00:01:29,135 --> 00:01:34,239 And she reminded me that my favorite color was blue. 25 00:01:34,752 --> 00:01:39,119 The fact that my favorite color now is blue, but I'm still gay -- 26 00:01:39,143 --> 00:01:42,372 (Laughter) 27 00:01:42,396 --> 00:01:45,247 is evidence of both my mother's influence 28 00:01:45,271 --> 00:01:46,425 and its limits. 29 00:01:46,449 --> 00:01:48,666 (Laughter) 30 00:01:48,690 --> 00:01:55,109 (Applause) 31 00:01:55,704 --> 00:01:58,374 When I was little, my mother used to say, 32 00:01:58,398 --> 00:02:02,985 "The love you have for your children is like no other feeling in the world. 33 00:02:03,009 --> 00:02:06,185 And until you have children, you don't know what it's like." 34 00:02:06,209 --> 00:02:09,659 And when I was little, I took it as the greatest compliment in the world 35 00:02:09,683 --> 00:02:12,445 that she would say that about parenting my brother and me. 36 00:02:12,469 --> 00:02:15,787 And when I was an adolescent, I thought, "But I'm gay, 37 00:02:15,811 --> 00:02:18,143 and so I probably can't have a family." 38 00:02:18,167 --> 00:02:20,532 And when she said it, it made me anxious. 39 00:02:20,556 --> 00:02:22,253 And after I came out of the closet, 40 00:02:22,277 --> 00:02:25,180 when she continued to say it, it made me furious. 41 00:02:25,204 --> 00:02:29,498 I said, "I'm gay. That's not the direction that I'm headed in. 42 00:02:29,522 --> 00:02:31,558 And I want you to stop saying that." 43 00:02:35,400 --> 00:02:37,099 About 20 years ago, 44 00:02:37,123 --> 00:02:40,174 I was asked by my editors at the "New York Times Magazine" 45 00:02:40,198 --> 00:02:42,894 to write a piece about Deaf culture. 46 00:02:42,918 --> 00:02:44,324 And I was rather taken aback. 47 00:02:44,348 --> 00:02:46,652 I had thought of deafness entirely as an illness: 48 00:02:46,676 --> 00:02:48,636 those poor people, they couldn't hear, 49 00:02:48,660 --> 00:02:51,280 they lacked hearing, and what could we do for them? 50 00:02:51,304 --> 00:02:53,798 And then I went out into the Deaf world. 51 00:02:53,822 --> 00:02:55,703 I went to Deaf clubs. 52 00:02:55,727 --> 00:03:00,105 I saw performances of Deaf theater and of Deaf poetry. 53 00:03:00,129 --> 00:03:05,835 I even went to the Miss Deaf America contest in Nashville, Tennessee, 54 00:03:05,859 --> 00:03:09,502 where people complained about that slurry Southern signing. 55 00:03:10,031 --> 00:03:13,575 (Laughter) 56 00:03:14,035 --> 00:03:18,148 And as I plunged deeper and deeper into the Deaf world, 57 00:03:18,172 --> 00:03:21,146 I became convinced that Deafness was a culture 58 00:03:21,170 --> 00:03:23,392 and that the people in the Deaf world who said, 59 00:03:23,416 --> 00:03:26,887 "We don't lack hearing; we have membership in a culture," 60 00:03:26,911 --> 00:03:29,173 were saying something that was viable. 61 00:03:29,197 --> 00:03:30,625 It wasn't my culture, 62 00:03:30,649 --> 00:03:33,578 and I didn't particularly want to rush off and join it, 63 00:03:33,602 --> 00:03:36,112 but I appreciated that it was a culture 64 00:03:36,136 --> 00:03:38,503 and that for the people who were members of it, 65 00:03:38,527 --> 00:03:44,857 it felt as valuable as Latino culture or gay culture or Jewish culture. 66 00:03:44,881 --> 00:03:48,913 It felt as valid, perhaps, even as American culture. 67 00:03:49,898 --> 00:03:53,190 Then a friend of a friend of mine had a daughter who was a dwarf. 68 00:03:53,214 --> 00:03:54,713 And when her daughter was born, 69 00:03:54,737 --> 00:03:57,086 she suddenly found herself confronting questions 70 00:03:57,110 --> 00:03:59,743 that now began to seem quite resonant to me. 71 00:03:59,767 --> 00:04:03,353 She was facing the question of what to do with this child. 72 00:04:03,377 --> 00:04:07,131 Should she say, "You're just like everyone else but a little bit shorter?" 73 00:04:07,155 --> 00:04:10,372 Or should she try to construct some kind of dwarf identity, 74 00:04:10,396 --> 00:04:12,767 get involved in the Little People of America, 75 00:04:12,791 --> 00:04:15,368 become aware of what was happening for dwarfs? 76 00:04:15,704 --> 00:04:17,187 And I suddenly thought, 77 00:04:17,211 --> 00:04:19,716 "Most deaf children are born to hearing parents. 78 00:04:19,740 --> 00:04:22,189 Those hearing parents tend to try to cure them. 79 00:04:22,213 --> 00:04:26,342 Those deaf people discover community somehow in adolescence. 80 00:04:26,366 --> 00:04:28,502 Most gay people are born to straight parents. 81 00:04:28,526 --> 00:04:31,097 Those straight parents often want them to function 82 00:04:31,121 --> 00:04:33,349 in what they think of as the mainstream world, 83 00:04:33,373 --> 00:04:36,824 and those gay people have to discover identity later on. 84 00:04:36,848 --> 00:04:38,486 And here was this friend of mine, 85 00:04:38,510 --> 00:04:42,030 looking at these questions of identity with her dwarf daughter. 86 00:04:42,054 --> 00:04:43,768 And I thought, "There it is again: 87 00:04:43,792 --> 00:04:46,287 a family that perceives itself to be normal 88 00:04:46,311 --> 00:04:48,932 with a child who seems to be extraordinary." 89 00:04:48,956 --> 00:04:52,993 And I hatched the idea that there are really two kinds of identity. 90 00:04:53,518 --> 00:04:54,987 There are vertical identities, 91 00:04:55,011 --> 00:04:58,182 which are passed down generationally from parent to child. 92 00:04:58,206 --> 00:05:00,330 Those are things like ethnicity, 93 00:05:00,354 --> 00:05:03,679 frequently nationality, language, often religion. 94 00:05:03,703 --> 00:05:08,183 Those are things you have in common with your parents and with your children. 95 00:05:08,207 --> 00:05:10,635 And while some of them can be difficult, 96 00:05:10,659 --> 00:05:12,603 there's no attempt to cure them. 97 00:05:12,627 --> 00:05:15,859 You can argue that it's harder in the United States -- 98 00:05:15,883 --> 00:05:18,002 our current presidency notwithstanding -- 99 00:05:18,026 --> 00:05:19,666 to be a person of color. 100 00:05:19,690 --> 00:05:22,406 And yet, we have nobody who is trying to ensure 101 00:05:22,430 --> 00:05:26,476 that the next generation of children born to African-Americans and Asians 102 00:05:26,500 --> 00:05:29,352 come out with creamy skin and yellow hair. 103 00:05:30,027 --> 00:05:34,117 There are these other identities which you have to learn from a peer group, 104 00:05:34,141 --> 00:05:36,217 and I call them "horizontal identities," 105 00:05:36,241 --> 00:05:39,346 because the peer group is the horizontal experience. 106 00:05:39,370 --> 00:05:41,947 These are identities that are alien to your parents 107 00:05:41,971 --> 00:05:46,165 and that you have to discover when you get to see them in peers. 108 00:05:46,189 --> 00:05:49,250 And those identities, those horizontal identities, 109 00:05:49,274 --> 00:05:53,007 people have almost always tried to cure. 110 00:05:53,031 --> 00:05:55,366 And I wanted to look at what the process is 111 00:05:55,390 --> 00:05:57,945 through which people who have those identities 112 00:05:57,969 --> 00:06:00,438 come to a good relationship with them. 113 00:06:00,462 --> 00:06:04,609 And it seemed to me that there were three levels of acceptance 114 00:06:04,633 --> 00:06:06,271 that needed to take place. 115 00:06:06,295 --> 00:06:11,646 There's self-acceptance, there's family acceptance, and there's social acceptance. 116 00:06:11,670 --> 00:06:13,892 And they don't always coincide. 117 00:06:13,916 --> 00:06:17,730 And a lot of the time, people who have these conditions are very angry, 118 00:06:17,754 --> 00:06:21,236 because they feel as though their parents don't love them, 119 00:06:21,260 --> 00:06:24,988 when what actually has happened is that their parents don't accept them. 120 00:06:25,012 --> 00:06:28,186 Love is something that, ideally, is there unconditionally 121 00:06:28,210 --> 00:06:31,479 throughout the relationship between a parent and a child. 122 00:06:31,503 --> 00:06:34,637 But acceptance is something that takes time. 123 00:06:34,661 --> 00:06:36,405 It always takes time. 124 00:06:37,199 --> 00:06:41,287 One of the dwarfs I got to know was a guy named Clinton Brown. 125 00:06:41,859 --> 00:06:45,093 When he was born, he was diagnosed with diastrophic dwarfism, 126 00:06:45,117 --> 00:06:46,767 a very disabling condition, 127 00:06:46,791 --> 00:06:49,188 and his parents were told that he would never walk, 128 00:06:49,212 --> 00:06:50,386 he would never talk, 129 00:06:50,410 --> 00:06:52,433 he would have no intellectual capacity, 130 00:06:52,457 --> 00:06:54,897 and he would probably not even recognize them. 131 00:06:54,921 --> 00:06:58,451 And it was suggested to them that they leave him at the hospital 132 00:06:58,475 --> 00:07:00,515 so that he could die there quietly. 133 00:07:00,539 --> 00:07:02,699 His mother said she wasn't going to do it, 134 00:07:02,723 --> 00:07:04,430 and she took her son home. 135 00:07:04,454 --> 00:07:08,231 And even though she didn't have a lot of educational or financial advantages, 136 00:07:08,255 --> 00:07:12,279 she found the best doctor in the country for dealing with diastrophic dwarfism, 137 00:07:12,303 --> 00:07:14,445 and she got Clinton enrolled with him. 138 00:07:14,469 --> 00:07:16,639 And in the course of his childhood, 139 00:07:16,663 --> 00:07:19,471 he had 30 major surgical procedures. 140 00:07:19,495 --> 00:07:21,761 And he spent all this time stuck in the hospital 141 00:07:21,785 --> 00:07:23,578 while he was having those procedures, 142 00:07:23,602 --> 00:07:25,681 as a result of which, he now can walk. 143 00:07:25,705 --> 00:07:30,165 While he was there, they sent tutors around to help him with his schoolwork, 144 00:07:30,189 --> 00:07:33,166 and he worked very hard, because there was nothing else to do. 145 00:07:33,190 --> 00:07:34,741 He ended up achieving at a level 146 00:07:34,765 --> 00:07:38,152 that had never before been contemplated by any member of his family. 147 00:07:38,557 --> 00:07:41,653 He was the first one in his family, in fact, to go to college, 148 00:07:41,677 --> 00:07:44,817 where he lived on campus and drove a specially fitted car 149 00:07:44,841 --> 00:07:47,788 that accommodated his unusual body. 150 00:07:47,812 --> 00:07:50,917 And his mother told me the story of coming home one day -- 151 00:07:50,941 --> 00:07:52,612 and he went to college nearby -- 152 00:07:52,636 --> 00:07:55,628 and she said, "I saw that car, which you can always recognize, 153 00:07:55,652 --> 00:07:58,779 in the parking lot of a bar," she said. 154 00:07:58,803 --> 00:08:00,176 (Laughter) 155 00:08:00,200 --> 00:08:01,938 "And I thought to myself, 156 00:08:01,962 --> 00:08:04,599 'They're six feet tall, he's three feet tall. 157 00:08:04,623 --> 00:08:07,032 Two beers for them is four beers for him.'" 158 00:08:07,056 --> 00:08:09,866 She said, "I knew I couldn't go in there and interrupt him, 159 00:08:09,890 --> 00:08:13,268 but I went home, and I left him eight messages on his cell phone." 160 00:08:13,933 --> 00:08:15,388 She said, "And then I thought, 161 00:08:15,412 --> 00:08:17,510 if someone had said to me, when he was born, 162 00:08:17,534 --> 00:08:21,240 that my future worry would be that he'd go drinking and driving 163 00:08:21,264 --> 00:08:22,757 with his college buddies ..." 164 00:08:22,781 --> 00:08:24,352 (Laughter) 165 00:08:24,376 --> 00:08:31,353 (Applause) 166 00:08:31,861 --> 00:08:33,026 And I said to her, 167 00:08:33,050 --> 00:08:35,522 "What do you think you did that helped him to emerge 168 00:08:35,546 --> 00:08:38,395 as this charming, accomplished, wonderful person?" 169 00:08:38,419 --> 00:08:41,064 And she said, "What did I do? 170 00:08:41,088 --> 00:08:43,146 I loved him, that's all. 171 00:08:43,170 --> 00:08:46,564 Clinton just always had that light in him. 172 00:08:46,588 --> 00:08:51,554 And his father and I were lucky enough to be the first to see it there." 173 00:08:52,887 --> 00:08:55,410 I'm going to quote from another magazine of the '60s. 174 00:08:55,434 --> 00:08:58,070 This one is from 1968 -- 175 00:08:58,094 --> 00:09:01,501 "The Atlantic Monthly," voice of liberal America -- 176 00:09:01,525 --> 00:09:03,915 written by an important bioethicist. 177 00:09:03,939 --> 00:09:07,836 He said, "There is no reason to feel guilty 178 00:09:07,860 --> 00:09:11,415 about putting a Down's syndrome child away, 179 00:09:11,439 --> 00:09:16,404 whether it is 'put away' in the sense of hidden in a sanitarium 180 00:09:16,428 --> 00:09:19,406 or in a more responsible, lethal sense. 181 00:09:20,189 --> 00:09:23,169 It is sad, yes. Dreadful. 182 00:09:23,193 --> 00:09:25,058 But it carries no guilt. 183 00:09:25,082 --> 00:09:29,213 True guilt arises only from an offense against a person, 184 00:09:29,237 --> 00:09:32,598 and a Down's is not a person." 185 00:09:33,838 --> 00:09:37,617 There's been a lot of ink given to the enormous progress that we've made 186 00:09:37,641 --> 00:09:39,665 in the treatment of gay people. 187 00:09:39,689 --> 00:09:43,918 The fact that our attitude has changed is in the headlines every day. 188 00:09:43,942 --> 00:09:48,318 But we forget how we used to see people who had other differences, 189 00:09:48,342 --> 00:09:50,641 how we used to see people who were disabled, 190 00:09:50,665 --> 00:09:53,522 how inhuman we held people to be. 191 00:09:53,546 --> 00:09:55,753 And the change that's been accomplished there, 192 00:09:55,777 --> 00:09:57,337 which is almost equally radical, 193 00:09:57,361 --> 00:10:00,382 is one that we pay not very much attention to. 194 00:10:00,406 --> 00:10:04,104 One of the families I interviewed, Tom and Karen Robards, 195 00:10:04,128 --> 00:10:07,660 were taken aback when, as young and successful New Yorkers, 196 00:10:07,684 --> 00:10:10,635 their first child was diagnosed with Down syndrome. 197 00:10:11,316 --> 00:10:15,466 They thought the educational opportunities for him were not what they should be, 198 00:10:15,490 --> 00:10:19,319 and so they decided they would build a little center -- 199 00:10:19,343 --> 00:10:22,920 two classrooms that they started with a few other parents -- 200 00:10:22,944 --> 00:10:25,262 to educate kids with DS. 201 00:10:25,286 --> 00:10:29,346 And over the years, that center grew into something called the Cooke Center, 202 00:10:29,370 --> 00:10:32,068 where there are now thousands upon thousands of children 203 00:10:32,092 --> 00:10:33,741 with intellectual disabilities 204 00:10:33,765 --> 00:10:35,280 who are being taught. 205 00:10:35,304 --> 00:10:38,548 In the time since that "Atlantic Monthly" story ran, 206 00:10:38,572 --> 00:10:43,095 the life expectancy for people with Down syndrome has tripled. 207 00:10:43,119 --> 00:10:47,664 The experience of Down syndrome people includes those who are actors, 208 00:10:47,688 --> 00:10:52,690 those who are writers, some who are able to live fully independently in adulthood. 209 00:10:53,579 --> 00:10:55,419 The Robards had a lot to do with that. 210 00:10:55,443 --> 00:10:56,896 And I said, "Do you regret it? 211 00:10:56,920 --> 00:10:59,415 Do you wish your child didn't have Down syndrome? 212 00:10:59,439 --> 00:11:01,264 Do you wish you'd never heard of it?" 213 00:11:01,288 --> 00:11:03,942 And interestingly, his father said, 214 00:11:03,966 --> 00:11:06,106 "Well, for David, our son, I regret it, 215 00:11:06,130 --> 00:11:09,598 because for David, it's a difficult way to be in the world, 216 00:11:09,622 --> 00:11:12,427 and I'd like to give David an easier life. 217 00:11:12,451 --> 00:11:15,258 But I think if we lost everyone with Down syndrome, 218 00:11:15,282 --> 00:11:17,643 it would be a catastrophic loss." 219 00:11:17,667 --> 00:11:20,932 And Karen Robards said to me, "I'm with Tom. 220 00:11:20,956 --> 00:11:24,818 For David, I would cure it in an instant, to give him an easier life. 221 00:11:24,842 --> 00:11:26,753 But speaking for myself -- 222 00:11:26,777 --> 00:11:30,254 well, I would never have believed 23 years ago when he was born 223 00:11:30,278 --> 00:11:32,356 that I could come to such a point. 224 00:11:32,380 --> 00:11:36,691 Speaking for myself, it's made me so much better and so much kinder 225 00:11:36,715 --> 00:11:41,621 and so much more purposeful in my whole life that, speaking for myself, 226 00:11:41,645 --> 00:11:45,121 I wouldn't give it up for anything in the world." 227 00:11:46,422 --> 00:11:50,440 We live at a point when social acceptance for these and many other conditions 228 00:11:50,464 --> 00:11:52,087 is on the up and up. 229 00:11:52,111 --> 00:11:54,172 And yet we also live at the moment 230 00:11:54,196 --> 00:11:56,827 when our ability to eliminate those conditions 231 00:11:56,851 --> 00:11:59,676 has reached a height we never imagined before. 232 00:11:59,700 --> 00:12:02,548 Most deaf infants born in the United States now 233 00:12:02,572 --> 00:12:04,548 will receive cochlear implants, 234 00:12:04,572 --> 00:12:09,280 which are put into the brain and connected to a receiver, 235 00:12:09,304 --> 00:12:12,288 and which allow them to acquire a facsimile of hearing 236 00:12:12,312 --> 00:12:14,435 and to use oral speech. 237 00:12:14,459 --> 00:12:18,700 A compound that has been tested in mice, BMN-111, 238 00:12:18,724 --> 00:12:23,297 is useful in preventing the action of the achondroplasia gene. 239 00:12:23,321 --> 00:12:26,276 Achondroplasia is the most common form of dwarfism, 240 00:12:26,300 --> 00:12:28,388 and mice who have been given that substance 241 00:12:28,412 --> 00:12:30,256 and who have the achondroplasia gene 242 00:12:30,280 --> 00:12:31,993 grow to full size. 243 00:12:32,017 --> 00:12:34,937 Testing in humans is around the corner. 244 00:12:34,961 --> 00:12:37,414 There are blood tests which are making progress 245 00:12:37,438 --> 00:12:41,494 that would pick up Down syndrome more clearly and earlier in pregnancies 246 00:12:41,518 --> 00:12:42,673 than ever before, 247 00:12:42,697 --> 00:12:47,587 making it easier and easier for people to eliminate those pregnancies, 248 00:12:47,611 --> 00:12:48,934 or to terminate them. 249 00:12:48,958 --> 00:12:53,913 So we have both social progress and medical progress. 250 00:12:53,937 --> 00:12:55,519 And I believe in both of them. 251 00:12:55,543 --> 00:12:59,834 I believe the social progress is fantastic and meaningful and wonderful, 252 00:12:59,858 --> 00:13:02,816 and I think the same thing about the medical progress. 253 00:13:02,840 --> 00:13:07,179 But I think it's a tragedy when one of them doesn't see the other. 254 00:13:07,203 --> 00:13:09,251 And when I see the way they're intersecting 255 00:13:09,275 --> 00:13:11,651 in conditions like the three I've just described, 256 00:13:11,675 --> 00:13:15,296 I sometimes think it's like those moments in grand opera 257 00:13:15,320 --> 00:13:17,877 when the hero realizes he loves the heroine 258 00:13:17,901 --> 00:13:22,165 at the exact moment that she lies expiring on a divan. 259 00:13:22,189 --> 00:13:24,564 (Laughter) 260 00:13:25,401 --> 00:13:28,876 We have to think about how we feel about cures altogether. 261 00:13:28,900 --> 00:13:31,712 And a lot of the time the question of parenthood is: 262 00:13:31,736 --> 00:13:33,487 What do we validate in our children, 263 00:13:33,511 --> 00:13:35,316 and what do we cure in them? 264 00:13:35,340 --> 00:13:39,487 Jim Sinclair, a prominent autism activist, said, 265 00:13:39,511 --> 00:13:44,088 "When parents say, 'I wish my child did not have autism,' 266 00:13:44,112 --> 00:13:48,923 what they're really saying is, 'I wish the child I have did not exist 267 00:13:48,947 --> 00:13:52,299 and I had a different, nonautistic child instead.' 268 00:13:52,858 --> 00:13:57,964 Read that again. This is what we hear when you mourn over our existence. 269 00:13:57,988 --> 00:14:01,013 This is what we hear when you pray for a cure: 270 00:14:01,037 --> 00:14:05,439 that your fondest wish for us is that someday we will cease to be, 271 00:14:05,463 --> 00:14:10,082 and strangers you can love will move in behind our faces." 272 00:14:11,241 --> 00:14:13,710 It's a very extreme point of view, 273 00:14:13,734 --> 00:14:18,047 but it points to the reality that people engage with the life they have 274 00:14:18,071 --> 00:14:22,612 and they don't want to be cured or changed or eliminated. 275 00:14:22,636 --> 00:14:25,698 They want to be whoever it is that they've come to be. 276 00:14:26,245 --> 00:14:29,856 One of the families I interviewed for this project 277 00:14:29,880 --> 00:14:31,607 was the family of Dylan Klebold, 278 00:14:31,631 --> 00:14:35,016 who was one of the perpetrators of the Columbine massacre. 279 00:14:35,040 --> 00:14:37,681 It took a long time to persuade them to talk to me, 280 00:14:37,705 --> 00:14:40,329 and once they agreed, they were so full of their story 281 00:14:40,353 --> 00:14:42,049 that they couldn't stop telling it, 282 00:14:42,073 --> 00:14:44,872 and the first weekend I spent with them, the first of many, 283 00:14:44,896 --> 00:14:47,882 I recorded more than 20 hours of conversation. 284 00:14:47,906 --> 00:14:49,928 And on Sunday night, we were all exhausted. 285 00:14:49,952 --> 00:14:53,192 We were sitting in the kitchen. Sue Klebold was fixing dinner. 286 00:14:53,216 --> 00:14:55,866 And I said, "If Dylan were here now, 287 00:14:55,890 --> 00:14:58,537 do you have a sense of what you'd want to ask him?" 288 00:14:58,561 --> 00:15:00,765 And his father said, "I sure do. 289 00:15:00,789 --> 00:15:03,634 I'd want to ask him what the hell he thought he was doing." 290 00:15:04,068 --> 00:15:07,326 And Sue looked at the floor, and she thought for a minute. 291 00:15:08,286 --> 00:15:10,631 And then she looked back up and said, 292 00:15:10,655 --> 00:15:14,288 "I would ask him to forgive me for being his mother 293 00:15:14,312 --> 00:15:17,393 and never knowing what was going on inside his head." 294 00:15:18,586 --> 00:15:21,531 When I had dinner with her a couple of years later -- 295 00:15:21,555 --> 00:15:23,768 one of many dinners that we had together -- 296 00:15:23,792 --> 00:15:26,648 she said, "You know, when it first happened, 297 00:15:26,672 --> 00:15:30,731 I used to wish that I had never married, that I had never had children. 298 00:15:30,755 --> 00:15:34,182 If I hadn't gone to Ohio State and crossed paths with Tom, 299 00:15:34,206 --> 00:15:35,903 this child wouldn't have existed, 300 00:15:35,927 --> 00:15:38,135 and this terrible thing wouldn't have happened. 301 00:15:38,159 --> 00:15:42,188 But I've come to feel that I love the children I had so much 302 00:15:42,212 --> 00:15:44,919 that I don't want to imagine a life without them. 303 00:15:45,563 --> 00:15:48,410 I recognize the pain they caused to others, 304 00:15:48,434 --> 00:15:50,548 for which there can be no forgiveness, 305 00:15:50,572 --> 00:15:54,131 but the pain they caused to me, there is," she said. 306 00:15:54,155 --> 00:15:57,743 "So while I recognize that it would have been better for the world 307 00:15:57,767 --> 00:16:00,313 if Dylan had never been born, 308 00:16:00,337 --> 00:16:04,532 I've decided that it would not have been better for me." 309 00:16:06,420 --> 00:16:07,938 I thought it was surprising 310 00:16:07,962 --> 00:16:10,614 how all of these families had all of these children 311 00:16:10,638 --> 00:16:12,104 with all of these problems, 312 00:16:12,128 --> 00:16:15,180 problems that they mostly would have done anything to avoid, 313 00:16:15,204 --> 00:16:19,094 and that they had all found so much meaning in that experience of parenting. 314 00:16:19,118 --> 00:16:22,241 And then I thought, all of us who have children 315 00:16:22,265 --> 00:16:25,176 love the children we have, with their flaws. 316 00:16:25,200 --> 00:16:29,129 If some glorious angel suddenly descended through my living-room ceiling 317 00:16:29,153 --> 00:16:31,355 and offered to take away the children I have 318 00:16:31,379 --> 00:16:33,708 and give me other, better children -- 319 00:16:33,732 --> 00:16:37,178 more polite, funnier, nicer, smarter -- 320 00:16:37,202 --> 00:16:38,411 (Laughter) 321 00:16:38,435 --> 00:16:43,029 I would cling to the children I have and pray away that atrocious spectacle. 322 00:16:43,053 --> 00:16:44,422 And ultimately, 323 00:16:44,446 --> 00:16:48,931 I feel that in the same way that we test flame-retardant pajamas in an inferno 324 00:16:48,955 --> 00:16:53,140 to ensure they won't catch fire when our child reaches across the stove, 325 00:16:53,164 --> 00:16:57,177 so these stories of families negotiating these extreme differences 326 00:16:57,201 --> 00:16:59,864 reflect on the universal experience of parenting, 327 00:16:59,888 --> 00:17:04,408 which is always that sometimes, you look at your child, and you think, 328 00:17:04,432 --> 00:17:06,368 "Where did you come from?" 329 00:17:06,392 --> 00:17:08,916 (Laughter) 330 00:17:08,940 --> 00:17:13,653 It turns out that while each of these individual differences is siloed -- 331 00:17:13,677 --> 00:17:16,462 there are only so many families dealing with schizophrenia, 332 00:17:16,486 --> 00:17:19,084 only so many families of children who are transgender, 333 00:17:19,108 --> 00:17:20,970 only so many families of prodigies -- 334 00:17:20,994 --> 00:17:23,483 who also face similar challenges in many ways -- 335 00:17:23,507 --> 00:17:26,354 there are only so many families in each of those categories. 336 00:17:26,378 --> 00:17:27,613 But if you start to think 337 00:17:27,637 --> 00:17:31,145 that the experience of negotiating difference within your family 338 00:17:31,169 --> 00:17:33,248 is what people are addressing, 339 00:17:33,272 --> 00:17:36,593 then you discover that it's a nearly universal phenomenon. 340 00:17:36,617 --> 00:17:38,247 Ironically, it turns out, 341 00:17:38,271 --> 00:17:41,679 that it's our differences and our negotiation of difference 342 00:17:41,703 --> 00:17:42,957 that unite us. 343 00:17:43,832 --> 00:17:48,832 I decided to have children while I was working on this project. 344 00:17:49,292 --> 00:17:52,490 And many people were astonished and said, 345 00:17:52,514 --> 00:17:54,513 "But how can you decide to have children 346 00:17:54,537 --> 00:17:57,518 in the midst of studying everything that can go wrong?" 347 00:17:58,550 --> 00:18:01,656 And I said, "I'm not studying everything that can go wrong. 348 00:18:01,680 --> 00:18:04,792 What I'm studying is how much love there can be, 349 00:18:04,816 --> 00:18:08,856 even when everything appears to be going wrong." 350 00:18:09,499 --> 00:18:15,040 I thought a lot about the mother of one disabled child I had seen, 351 00:18:15,064 --> 00:18:18,650 a severely disabled child who died through caregiver neglect. 352 00:18:18,674 --> 00:18:21,698 And when his ashes were interred, his mother said, 353 00:18:22,745 --> 00:18:29,656 "I pray here for forgiveness for having been twice robbed: 354 00:18:29,680 --> 00:18:32,392 once of the child I wanted, 355 00:18:32,416 --> 00:18:35,020 and once of the son I loved." 356 00:18:35,577 --> 00:18:40,107 And I figured it was possible, then, for anyone to love any child, 357 00:18:40,131 --> 00:18:42,469 if they had the effective will to do so. 358 00:18:43,003 --> 00:18:47,966 So, my husband is the biological father of two children 359 00:18:47,990 --> 00:18:50,095 with some lesbian friends in Minneapolis. 360 00:18:51,293 --> 00:18:54,802 I had a close friend from college who'd gone through a divorce 361 00:18:54,826 --> 00:18:56,490 and wanted to have children. 362 00:18:56,514 --> 00:18:58,227 And so she and I have a daughter, 363 00:18:58,251 --> 00:19:00,466 and mother and daughter live in Texas. 364 00:19:00,490 --> 00:19:03,838 And my husband and I have a son who lives with us all the time, 365 00:19:03,862 --> 00:19:06,222 of whom I am the biological father, 366 00:19:06,246 --> 00:19:09,970 and our surrogate for the pregnancy was Laura, 367 00:19:09,994 --> 00:19:12,771 the lesbian mother of Oliver and Lucy in Minneapolis. 368 00:19:12,795 --> 00:19:14,222 (Laughter) 369 00:19:14,246 --> 00:19:15,405 So -- 370 00:19:15,429 --> 00:19:22,131 (Applause) 371 00:19:22,155 --> 00:19:26,530 The shorthand is: five parents of four children in three states. 372 00:19:26,554 --> 00:19:27,648 (Laughter) 373 00:19:27,672 --> 00:19:30,680 And there are people who think that the existence of my family 374 00:19:30,704 --> 00:19:35,193 somehow undermines or weakens or damages their family. 375 00:19:35,217 --> 00:19:38,747 And there are people who think that families like mine 376 00:19:38,771 --> 00:19:40,425 shouldn't be allowed to exist. 377 00:19:40,449 --> 00:19:44,349 And I don't accept subtractive models of love, 378 00:19:44,373 --> 00:19:45,752 only additive ones. 379 00:19:46,137 --> 00:19:49,640 And I believe that in the same way that we need species diversity 380 00:19:49,664 --> 00:19:52,089 to ensure that the planet can go on, 381 00:19:52,113 --> 00:19:56,390 so we need this diversity of affection and diversity of family 382 00:19:56,414 --> 00:19:59,693 in order to strengthen the ecosphere of kindness. 383 00:20:01,082 --> 00:20:03,480 The day after our son was born, 384 00:20:03,504 --> 00:20:05,943 the pediatrician came into the hospital room 385 00:20:05,967 --> 00:20:07,858 and said she was concerned. 386 00:20:07,882 --> 00:20:11,000 He wasn't extending his legs appropriately. 387 00:20:11,024 --> 00:20:13,561 She said that might mean that he had brain damage. 388 00:20:13,585 --> 00:20:17,316 Insofar as he was extending them, he was doing so asymmetrically, 389 00:20:17,340 --> 00:20:21,054 which she thought could mean that there was a tumor of some kind in action. 390 00:20:21,078 --> 00:20:22,742 And he had a very large head, 391 00:20:22,766 --> 00:20:25,701 which she thought might indicate hydrocephalus. 392 00:20:25,725 --> 00:20:27,613 And as she told me all of these things, 393 00:20:27,637 --> 00:20:31,458 I felt the very center of my being pouring out onto the floor. 394 00:20:31,482 --> 00:20:33,930 And I thought, "Here I had been working for years 395 00:20:33,954 --> 00:20:36,479 on a book about how much meaning people had found 396 00:20:36,503 --> 00:20:40,136 in the experience of parenting children who were disabled, 397 00:20:40,160 --> 00:20:43,638 and I didn't want to join their number 398 00:20:43,662 --> 00:20:46,436 because what I was encountering was an idea of illness." 399 00:20:46,460 --> 00:20:49,202 And like all parents since the dawn of time, 400 00:20:49,226 --> 00:20:52,203 I wanted to protect my child from illness. 401 00:20:52,227 --> 00:20:55,470 And I wanted, also, to protect myself from illness. 402 00:20:55,494 --> 00:20:58,241 And yet, I knew from the work I had done 403 00:20:58,265 --> 00:21:02,081 that if he had any of the things we were about to start testing for, 404 00:21:02,105 --> 00:21:05,068 that those would ultimately be his identity, 405 00:21:05,092 --> 00:21:09,131 and if they were his identity, they would become my identity, 406 00:21:09,155 --> 00:21:13,423 that that illness was going to take a very different shape as it unfolded. 407 00:21:13,447 --> 00:21:16,576 We took him to the MRI machine, we took him to the CAT scanner, 408 00:21:16,600 --> 00:21:20,384 we took this day-old child and gave him over for an arterial blood draw. 409 00:21:20,408 --> 00:21:21,669 We felt helpless. 410 00:21:21,693 --> 00:21:23,350 And at the end of five hours, 411 00:21:23,374 --> 00:21:25,586 they said that his brain was completely clear 412 00:21:25,610 --> 00:21:28,388 and that he was by then extending his legs correctly. 413 00:21:28,412 --> 00:21:31,412 And when I asked the pediatrician what had been going on, 414 00:21:31,436 --> 00:21:35,596 she said she thought in the morning, he had probably had a cramp. 415 00:21:35,620 --> 00:21:39,071 (Laughter) 416 00:21:39,095 --> 00:21:40,357 But I thought -- 417 00:21:40,381 --> 00:21:44,306 (Laughter) 418 00:21:44,330 --> 00:21:46,929 I thought how my mother was right. 419 00:21:46,953 --> 00:21:50,425 I thought, "The love you have for your children 420 00:21:50,449 --> 00:21:53,811 is unlike any other feeling in the world. 421 00:21:53,835 --> 00:21:58,508 And until you have children, you don't know what it feels like. 422 00:22:00,158 --> 00:22:02,294 I think children had ensnared me 423 00:22:02,318 --> 00:22:05,320 the moment I connected fatherhood with loss. 424 00:22:06,138 --> 00:22:08,172 But I'm not sure I would have noticed that 425 00:22:08,196 --> 00:22:12,540 if I hadn't been so in the thick of this research project of mine. 426 00:22:13,462 --> 00:22:16,578 I'd encountered so much strange love, 427 00:22:16,602 --> 00:22:20,323 and I fell very naturally into its bewitching patterns. 428 00:22:20,347 --> 00:22:26,220 And I saw how splendor can illuminate even the most abject vulnerabilities. 429 00:22:27,206 --> 00:22:30,988 During these 10 years, I had witnessed and learned 430 00:22:31,012 --> 00:22:34,564 the terrifying joy of unbearable responsibility, 431 00:22:34,588 --> 00:22:37,676 and I had come to see how it conquers everything else. 432 00:22:38,264 --> 00:22:42,313 And while I had sometimes thought the parents I was interviewing were fools, 433 00:22:42,337 --> 00:22:47,334 enslaving themselves to a lifetime's journey with their thankless children 434 00:22:47,358 --> 00:22:50,516 and trying to breed identity out of misery, 435 00:22:50,540 --> 00:22:55,163 I realized that day that my research had built me a plank 436 00:22:55,187 --> 00:22:57,701 and that I was ready to join them on their ship. 437 00:22:58,581 --> 00:22:59,789 Thank you. 438 00:22:59,813 --> 00:23:06,792 (Applause and cheers) 439 00:23:08,096 --> 00:23:09,246 Thank you.