WEBVTT 00:00:00.460 --> 00:00:02.746 Clouds. 00:00:02.770 --> 00:00:05.368 Have you ever noticed how much people moan about them? 00:00:05.392 --> 00:00:07.615 They get a bad rap. 00:00:07.639 --> 00:00:10.162 If you think about it, the English language 00:00:10.186 --> 00:00:14.455 has written into it negative associations towards the clouds. 00:00:14.479 --> 00:00:16.922 Someone who's down or depressed, 00:00:16.946 --> 00:00:18.613 they're under a cloud. 00:00:18.637 --> 00:00:20.304 And when there's bad news in store, 00:00:20.328 --> 00:00:23.152 there's a cloud on the horizon. 00:00:23.176 --> 00:00:25.184 I saw an article the other day. 00:00:25.208 --> 00:00:28.370 It was about problems with computer processing 00:00:28.394 --> 00:00:30.192 over the Internet. 00:00:30.216 --> 00:00:35.116 "A cloud over the cloud," was the headline. 00:00:35.140 --> 00:00:37.099 It seems like they're everyone's default 00:00:37.123 --> 00:00:39.373 doom-and-gloom metaphor. 00:00:39.397 --> 00:00:41.526 But I think they're beautiful, don't you? 00:00:41.550 --> 00:00:44.639 It's just that their beauty is missed 00:00:44.663 --> 00:00:46.639 because they're so omnipresent, 00:00:46.663 --> 00:00:49.988 so, I don't know, commonplace, 00:00:50.012 --> 00:00:51.441 that people don't notice them. 00:00:51.465 --> 00:00:54.656 They don't notice the beauty, but they don't even notice the clouds 00:00:54.680 --> 00:00:56.933 unless they get in the way of the sun. 00:00:56.957 --> 00:00:59.238 And so people think of clouds as 00:00:59.262 --> 00:01:01.318 things that get in the way. 00:01:01.342 --> 00:01:06.389 They think of them as the annoying, frustrating obstructions, 00:01:06.413 --> 00:01:09.309 and then they rush off and do some blue-sky thinking. 00:01:09.333 --> 00:01:11.694 (Laughter) 00:01:11.718 --> 00:01:13.917 But most people, when you stop to ask them, 00:01:13.941 --> 00:01:18.767 will admit to harboring a strange sort of fondness for clouds. 00:01:18.791 --> 00:01:21.426 It's like a nostalgic fondness, 00:01:21.450 --> 00:01:24.560 and they make them think of their youth. 00:01:24.584 --> 00:01:27.796 Who here can't remember thinking, well, 00:01:27.820 --> 00:01:30.398 looking and finding shapes in the clouds 00:01:30.422 --> 00:01:31.741 when they were kids? 00:01:31.765 --> 00:01:38.472 You know, when you were masters of daydreaming? 00:01:38.496 --> 00:01:41.239 Aristophanes, the ancient Greek playwright, 00:01:41.263 --> 00:01:44.590 he described the clouds as the patron godesses 00:01:44.614 --> 00:01:46.374 of idle fellows 00:01:46.398 --> 00:01:48.018 two and a half thousand years ago, 00:01:48.042 --> 00:01:49.471 and you can see what he means. 00:01:49.495 --> 00:01:53.928 It's just that these days, us adults seem reluctant 00:01:53.952 --> 00:01:57.288 to allow ourselves the indulgence 00:01:57.312 --> 00:01:59.920 of just allowing our imaginations 00:01:59.944 --> 00:02:03.590 to drift along in the breeze, and I think that's a pity. 00:02:03.614 --> 00:02:05.976 I think we should perhaps do a bit more of it. 00:02:06.000 --> 00:02:08.996 I think we should be a bit more willing, perhaps, 00:02:09.020 --> 00:02:12.939 to look at the beautiful sight of the sunlight bursting out 00:02:12.963 --> 00:02:16.405 from behind the clouds and go, "Wait a minute, 00:02:16.429 --> 00:02:18.744 that's two cats dancing the salsa!" 00:02:18.768 --> 00:02:20.141 (Laughter) (Applause) 00:02:20.165 --> 00:02:25.907 Or seeing the big, white, puffy one up there 00:02:25.931 --> 00:02:27.829 over the shopping center looks like 00:02:27.853 --> 00:02:31.462 the Abominable Snowman going to rob a bank. 00:02:31.486 --> 00:02:34.658 (Laughter) 00:02:34.682 --> 00:02:38.576 They're like nature's version of those inkblot images, 00:02:38.600 --> 00:02:40.981 you know, that shrinks used to show their patients 00:02:41.005 --> 00:02:42.248 in the '60s, 00:02:42.272 --> 00:02:45.973 and I think if you consider the shapes you see in the clouds, 00:02:45.997 --> 00:02:49.863 you'll save money on psychoanalysis bills. 00:02:49.887 --> 00:02:51.742 Let's say you're in love. All right? 00:02:51.766 --> 00:02:53.939 And you look up and what do you see? 00:02:53.963 --> 00:02:56.565 Right? Or maybe the opposite. 00:02:56.589 --> 00:02:58.609 You've just been dumped by your partner, 00:02:58.633 --> 00:03:01.718 and everywhere you look, it's kissing couples. 00:03:01.742 --> 00:03:03.670 (Laughter) 00:03:03.694 --> 00:03:07.426 Perhaps you're having a moment of existential angst. 00:03:07.450 --> 00:03:09.879 You know, you're thinking about your own mortality. 00:03:09.903 --> 00:03:12.875 And there, on the horizon, it's the Grim Reaper. 00:03:12.899 --> 00:03:15.834 (Laughter) 00:03:15.858 --> 00:03:19.279 Or maybe you see a topless sunbather. 00:03:19.303 --> 00:03:20.908 (Laughter) 00:03:20.932 --> 00:03:23.980 What would that mean? 00:03:24.004 --> 00:03:29.511 What would that mean? I have no idea. 00:03:29.535 --> 00:03:31.741 But one thing I do know is this: 00:03:31.765 --> 00:03:35.116 The bad press that clouds get is totally unfair. 00:03:35.140 --> 00:03:36.855 I think we should stand up for them, 00:03:36.879 --> 00:03:38.308 which is why, a few years ago, 00:03:38.332 --> 00:03:40.994 I started the Cloud Appreciation Society. 00:03:41.018 --> 00:03:43.566 Tens of thousands of members now 00:03:43.590 --> 00:03:45.592 in almost 100 countries around the world. 00:03:45.616 --> 00:03:48.593 And all these photographs that I'm showing, 00:03:48.617 --> 00:03:50.949 they were sent in by members. 00:03:50.973 --> 00:03:54.413 And the society exists to remind people of this: 00:03:54.437 --> 00:03:57.460 Clouds are not something to moan about. 00:03:57.484 --> 00:03:59.843 Far from it. They are, in fact, 00:03:59.867 --> 00:04:07.553 the most diverse, evocative, poetic aspect of nature. 00:04:07.577 --> 00:04:10.820 I think, if you live with your head in the clouds 00:04:10.844 --> 00:04:13.797 every now and then, it helps you keep your feet on the ground. 00:04:13.821 --> 00:04:15.419 And I want to show you why, with the help of 00:04:15.443 --> 00:04:17.499 some of my favorite types of clouds. 00:04:17.523 --> 00:04:19.857 Let's start with this one. It's the cirrus cloud, 00:04:19.880 --> 00:04:22.776 named after the Latin for a lock of hair. 00:04:22.800 --> 00:04:24.397 It's composed entirely of ice crystals 00:04:24.421 --> 00:04:26.913 cascading from the upper reaches of the troposphere, 00:04:26.937 --> 00:04:28.414 and as these ice crystals fall, 00:04:28.438 --> 00:04:31.058 they pass through different layers with different winds 00:04:31.082 --> 00:04:32.742 and they speed up and slow down, 00:04:32.766 --> 00:04:35.801 giving the cloud these brush-stroked appearances, 00:04:35.825 --> 00:04:38.736 these brush-stroke forms known as fall streaks. 00:04:38.760 --> 00:04:40.747 And these winds up there can be very, very fierce. 00:04:40.771 --> 00:04:43.328 They can be 200 miles an hour, 300 miles an hour. 00:04:43.352 --> 00:04:44.829 These clouds are bombing along, 00:04:44.853 --> 00:04:46.612 but from all the way down here, 00:04:46.636 --> 00:04:49.760 they appear to be moving gracefully, slowly, 00:04:49.784 --> 00:04:51.969 like most clouds. 00:04:51.993 --> 00:04:55.192 And so to tune into the clouds is to slow down, 00:04:55.216 --> 00:04:57.137 to calm down. 00:04:57.161 --> 00:04:59.970 It's like a bit of everyday meditation. 00:04:59.994 --> 00:05:01.130 Those are common clouds. 00:05:01.154 --> 00:05:03.932 What about rarer ones, like the lenticularis, 00:05:03.956 --> 00:05:06.283 the UFO-shaped lenticularis cloud? 00:05:06.307 --> 00:05:08.803 These clouds form in the region of mountains. 00:05:08.827 --> 00:05:11.688 When the wind passes, rises to pass over the mountain, 00:05:11.712 --> 00:05:14.927 it can take on a wave-like path in the lee of the peak, 00:05:14.951 --> 00:05:17.654 with these clouds hovering at the crest 00:05:17.678 --> 00:05:20.314 of these invisible standing waves of air, 00:05:20.338 --> 00:05:22.576 these flying saucer-like forms, 00:05:22.600 --> 00:05:25.240 and some of the early black-and-white UFO photos 00:05:25.264 --> 00:05:28.156 are in fact lenticularis clouds. It's true. 00:05:28.180 --> 00:05:31.995 A little rarer are the fallstreak holes. All right? 00:05:32.019 --> 00:05:34.400 This is when a layer is made up of very, very cold 00:05:34.424 --> 00:05:37.247 water droplets, and in one region they start to freeze, 00:05:37.271 --> 00:05:40.414 and this freezing sets off a chain reaction which spreads outwards 00:05:40.438 --> 00:05:43.118 with the ice crystals cascading and falling down below, 00:05:43.142 --> 00:05:47.957 giving the appearance of jellyfish tendrils down below. 00:05:47.981 --> 00:05:52.037 Rarer still, the Kelvin–Helmholtz cloud. 00:05:52.061 --> 00:05:55.479 Not a very snappy name. Needs a rebrand. 00:05:55.503 --> 00:05:59.239 This looks like a series of breaking waves, 00:05:59.263 --> 00:06:01.933 and it's caused by shearing winds -- the wind 00:06:01.957 --> 00:06:04.196 above the cloud layer and below the cloud layer 00:06:04.220 --> 00:06:06.751 differ significantly, and in the middle, in between, 00:06:06.775 --> 00:06:08.634 you get this undulating of the air, 00:06:08.658 --> 00:06:11.135 and if the difference in those speeds is just right, 00:06:11.159 --> 00:06:13.037 the tops of the undulations curl over 00:06:13.061 --> 00:06:16.599 in these beautiful breaking wave-like vortices. 00:06:16.623 --> 00:06:19.004 All right. Those are rarer clouds than the cirrus, 00:06:19.028 --> 00:06:20.711 but they're not that rare. 00:06:20.735 --> 00:06:23.559 If you look up, and you pay attention to the sky, 00:06:23.583 --> 00:06:25.432 you'll see them sooner or later, 00:06:25.456 --> 00:06:28.218 maybe not quite as dramatic as these, but you'll see them. 00:06:28.242 --> 00:06:30.272 And you'll see them around where you live. 00:06:30.296 --> 00:06:32.833 Clouds are the most egalitarian 00:06:32.857 --> 00:06:35.507 of nature's displays, because we all have a good, 00:06:35.531 --> 00:06:38.138 fantastic view of the sky. 00:06:38.162 --> 00:06:39.978 And these clouds, these rarer clouds, 00:06:40.002 --> 00:06:44.698 remind us that the exotic can be found in the everyday. 00:06:44.722 --> 00:06:47.457 Nothing is more nourishing, more stimulating 00:06:47.481 --> 00:06:50.924 to an active, inquiring mind than being surprised, 00:06:50.948 --> 00:06:54.620 being amazed. It's why we're all here at TED, right? 00:06:54.644 --> 00:06:57.565 But you don't need to rush off 00:06:57.589 --> 00:06:59.925 away from the familiar, across the world 00:06:59.949 --> 00:07:01.387 to be surprised. 00:07:01.411 --> 00:07:04.162 You just need to step outside, 00:07:04.186 --> 00:07:06.738 pay attention to what's so commonplace, so everyday, 00:07:06.762 --> 00:07:10.725 so mundane that everybody else misses it. 00:07:10.749 --> 00:07:13.139 One cloud that people rarely miss is this one: 00:07:13.163 --> 00:07:16.107 the cumulonimbus storm cloud. 00:07:16.131 --> 00:07:18.608 It's what's produces thunder and lightning and hail. 00:07:18.632 --> 00:07:21.716 These clouds spread out at the top in this enormous 00:07:21.740 --> 00:07:24.538 anvil fashion stretching 10 miles up into the atmosphere. 00:07:24.562 --> 00:07:27.957 They are an expression of the majestic architecture 00:07:27.981 --> 00:07:29.842 of our atmosphere. 00:07:29.866 --> 00:07:33.228 But from down below, they are the embodiment 00:07:33.252 --> 00:07:37.359 of the powerful, elemental force and power 00:07:37.383 --> 00:07:39.253 that drives our atmosphere. 00:07:39.277 --> 00:07:43.367 To be there is to be connected in the driving rain 00:07:43.391 --> 00:07:46.669 and the hail, to feel connected to our atmosphere. 00:07:46.693 --> 00:07:48.967 It's to be reminded that we are creatures 00:07:48.991 --> 00:07:50.676 that inhabit this ocean of air. 00:07:50.700 --> 00:07:54.073 We don't live beneath the sky. We live within it. 00:07:54.097 --> 00:07:58.156 And that connection, that visceral connection to our atmosphere 00:07:58.180 --> 00:08:00.592 feels to me like an antidote. 00:08:00.616 --> 00:08:03.696 It's an antidote to the growing tendency we have 00:08:03.720 --> 00:08:07.571 to feel that we can really ever experience life 00:08:07.595 --> 00:08:09.786 by watching it on a computer screen, you know, 00:08:09.810 --> 00:08:12.236 when we're in a wi-fi zone. 00:08:12.260 --> 00:08:14.520 But the one cloud that best expresses 00:08:14.544 --> 00:08:17.445 why cloudspotting is more valuable today than ever 00:08:17.469 --> 00:08:20.636 is this one, the cumulus cloud. 00:08:20.660 --> 00:08:22.715 Right? It forms on a sunny day. 00:08:22.739 --> 00:08:24.835 If you close your eyes and think of a cloud, 00:08:24.859 --> 00:08:27.184 it's probably one of these that comes to mind. 00:08:27.208 --> 00:08:29.808 All those cloud shapes at the beginning, 00:08:29.832 --> 00:08:31.951 those were cumulus clouds. 00:08:31.975 --> 00:08:35.575 The sharp, crisp outlines of this formation 00:08:35.599 --> 00:08:38.731 make it the best one for finding shapes in. 00:08:38.755 --> 00:08:40.703 And it reminds us 00:08:40.727 --> 00:08:44.647 of the aimless nature of cloudspotting, 00:08:44.671 --> 00:08:46.896 what an aimless activity it is. 00:08:46.920 --> 00:08:48.635 You're not going to change the world 00:08:48.659 --> 00:08:52.687 by lying on your back and gazing up at the sky, are you? 00:08:52.711 --> 00:08:54.910 It's pointless. It's a pointless activity, 00:08:54.934 --> 00:08:59.766 which is precisely why it's so important. 00:08:59.790 --> 00:09:03.795 The digital world conspires to make us feel 00:09:03.819 --> 00:09:06.566 eternally busy, perpetually busy. 00:09:06.590 --> 00:09:08.400 You know, when you're not dealing with 00:09:08.424 --> 00:09:11.078 the traditional pressures of earning a living 00:09:11.102 --> 00:09:13.732 and putting food on the table, raising a family, 00:09:13.756 --> 00:09:15.806 writing thank you letters, 00:09:15.830 --> 00:09:18.518 you have to now contend with 00:09:18.542 --> 00:09:22.084 answering a mountain of unanswered emails, 00:09:22.108 --> 00:09:23.942 updating a Facebook page, 00:09:23.966 --> 00:09:26.490 feeding your Twitter feed. 00:09:26.514 --> 00:09:30.276 And cloudspotting legitimizes doing nothing. 00:09:30.300 --> 00:09:32.181 (Laughter) 00:09:32.205 --> 00:09:34.833 And sometimes we need — 00:09:34.857 --> 00:09:40.441 (Applause) 00:09:40.465 --> 00:09:44.524 Sometimes we need excuses to do nothing. 00:09:44.548 --> 00:09:47.306 We need to be reminded by these 00:09:47.330 --> 00:09:50.838 patron goddesses of idle fellows 00:09:50.862 --> 00:09:53.813 that slowing down 00:09:53.837 --> 00:09:57.616 and being in the present, not thinking about 00:09:57.640 --> 00:10:00.470 what you've got to do and what you should have done, 00:10:00.494 --> 00:10:03.205 but just being here, letting your imagination 00:10:03.229 --> 00:10:05.967 lift from the everyday concerns down here 00:10:05.991 --> 00:10:08.799 and just being in the present, it's good for you, 00:10:08.823 --> 00:10:10.937 and it's good for the way you feel. 00:10:10.961 --> 00:10:14.505 It's good for your ideas. It's good for your creativity. 00:10:14.529 --> 00:10:17.855 It's good for your soul. 00:10:17.879 --> 00:10:20.082 So keep looking up, 00:10:20.106 --> 00:10:23.135 marvel at the ephemeral beauty, 00:10:23.159 --> 00:10:26.559 and always remember to live life with your head in the clouds. 00:10:26.583 --> 00:10:27.746 Thank you very much. 00:10:27.770 --> 00:10:33.417 (Applause)