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Agile programming -- for your family

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    So here's the good news about families.
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    The last 50 years have seen a revolution
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    in what it means to be a family.
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    We have blended families, adopted families,
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    we have nuclear families living in separate houses
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    and divorced families living in the same house.
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    But through it all, the family has grown stronger.
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    Eight in 10 say the family they have today
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    is as strong or stronger than the family they grew up in.
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    Now, here's the bad news.
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    Nearly everyone is completely overwhelmed
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    by the chaos of family life.
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    Every parent I know, myself included,
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    feels like we're constantly playing defense.
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    Just when our kids stop teething, they start having tantrums.
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    Just when they stop needing our help taking a bath,
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    they need our help dealing with cyberstalking or bullying.
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    And here's the worst news of all.
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    Our children sense we're out of control.
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    Ellen Galinsky of the Families and Work Institute
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    asked 1,000 children, "If you were granted
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    one wish about your parents, what would it be?"
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    The parents predicted the kids would say,
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    spending more time with them.
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    They were wrong. The kids' number one wish?
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    That their parents be less tired and less stressed.
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    So how can we change this dynamic?
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    Are there concrete things we can do to reduce stress,
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    draw our family closer,
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    and generally prepare our children to enter the world?
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    I spent the last few years trying to answer that question,
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    traveling around, meeting families, talking to scholars,
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    experts ranging from elite peace negotiators
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    to Warren Buffett's bankers to the Green Berets.
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    I was trying to figure out, what do happy families do right
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    and what can I learn from them to make my family happier?
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    I want to tell you about one family that I met,
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    and why I think they offer clues.
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    At 7 p.m. on a Sunday in Hidden Springs, Idaho,
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    where the six members of the Starr family are sitting down
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    to the highlight of their week: the family meeting.
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    The Starrs are a regular American family
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    with their share of regular American family problems.
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    David is a software engineer. Eleanor takes care
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    of their four children, ages 10 to 15.
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    One of those kids tutors math on the far side of town.
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    One has lacrosse on the near side of town.
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    One has Asperger syndrome. One has ADHD.
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    "We were living in complete chaos," Eleanor said.
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    What the Starrs did next, though, was surprising.
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    Instead of turning to friends or relatives,
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    they looked to David's workplace.
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    They turned to a cutting-edge program called agile development
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    that was just spreading from manufacturers in Japan
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    to startups in Silicon Valley.
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    In agile, workers are organized into small groups
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    and do things in very short spans of time.
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    So instead of having executives issue grand proclamations,
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    the team in effect manages itself.
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    You have constant feedback. You have daily update sessions.
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    You have weekly reviews. You're constantly changing.
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    David said when they brought this system into their home,
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    the family meetings in particular increased communication,
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    decreased stress, and made everybody
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    happier to be part of the family team.
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    When my wife and I adopted these family meetings and other techniques
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    into the lives of our then-five-year-old twin daughters,
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    it was the biggest single change we made since our daughters were born.
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    And these meetings had this effect
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    while taking under 20 minutes.
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    So what is Agile, and why can it help
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    with something that seems so different, like families?
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    In 1983, Jeff Sutherland was a technologist
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    at a financial firm in New England.
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    He was very frustrated with how software got designed.
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    Companies followed the waterfall method, right,
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    in which executives issued orders that slowly trickled down
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    to programmers below,
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    and no one had ever consulted the programmers.
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    Eighty-three percent of projects failed.
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    They were too bloated or too out of date
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    by the time they were done.
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    Sutherland wanted to create a system where
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    ideas didn't just percolate down but could percolate up from the bottom
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    and be adjusted in real time.
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    He read 30 years of Harvard Business Review
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    before stumbling upon an article in 1986
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    called "The New New Product Development Game."
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    It said that the pace of business was quickening --
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    and by the way, this was in 1986 --
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    and the most successful companies were flexible.
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    It highlighted Toyota and Canon
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    and likened their adaptable, tight-knit teams to rugby scrums.
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    As Sutherland told me, we got to that article,
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    and said, "That's it."
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    In Sutherland's system, companies don't use
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    large, massive projects that take two years.
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    They do things in small chunks.
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    Nothing takes longer than two weeks.
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    So instead of saying, "You guys go off into that bunker
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    and come back with a cell phone or a social network,"
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    you say, "You go off and come up with one element,
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    then bring it back. Let's talk about it. Let's adapt."
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    You succeed or fail quickly.
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    Today, agile is used in a hundred countries,
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    and it's sweeping into management suites.
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    Inevitably, people began taking some of these techniques
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    and applying it to their families.
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    You had blogs pop up, and some manuals were written.
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    Even the Sutherlands told me that they had
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    an Agile Thanksgiving,
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    where you had one group of people working on the food,
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    one setting the table, and one greeting visitors at the door.
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    Sutherland said it was the best Thanksgiving ever.
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    So let's take one problem that families face,
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    crazy mornings, and talk about how agile can help.
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    A key plank is accountability,
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    so teams use information radiators,
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    these large boards in which everybody is accountable.
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    So the Starrs, in adapting this to their home,
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    created a morning checklist
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    in which each child is expected to tick off chores.
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    So on the morning I visited, Eleanor came downstairs,
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    poured herself a cup of coffee, sat in a reclining chair,
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    and she sat there,
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    kind of amiably talking to each of her children
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    as one after the other they came downstairs,
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    checked the list, made themselves breakfast,
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    checked the list again, put the dishes in the dishwasher,
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    rechecked the list, fed the pets or whatever chores they had,
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    checked the list once more, gathered their belongings,
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    and made their way to the bus.
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    It was one of the most astonishing family dynamics I have ever seen.
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    And when I strenuously objected this would never work in our house,
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    our kids needed way too much monitoring,
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    Eleanor looked at me.
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    "That's what I thought," she said.
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    "I told David, 'keep your work out of my kitchen.'
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    But I was wrong."
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    So I turned to David: "So why does it work?"
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    He said, "You can't underestimate the power of doing this."
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    And he made a checkmark.
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    He said, "In the workplace, adults love it.
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    With kids, it's heaven."
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    The week we introduced a morning checklist into our house,
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    it cut parental screaming in half. (Laughter)
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    But the real change didn't come until we had these family meetings.
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    So following the agile model, we ask three questions:
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    What worked well in our family this week,
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    what didn't work well, and what will we agree to work on in the week ahead?
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    Everyone throws out suggestions
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    and then we pick two to focus on.
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    And suddenly the most amazing things started coming out of our daughters' mouths.
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    What worked well this week?
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    Getting over our fear of riding bikes. Making our beds.
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    What didn't work well? Our math sheets,
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    or greeting visitors at the door.
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    Like a lot of parents, our kids are something like Bermuda Triangles.
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    Like, thoughts and ideas go in, but none ever comes out,
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    I mean at least not that are revealing.
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    This gave us access suddenly to their innermost thoughts.
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    But the most surprising part was when we turned to,
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    what are we going to work on in the week ahead?
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    You know, the key idea of agile is that
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    teams essentially manage themselves,
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    and it works in software and it turns out that it works with kids.
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    Our kids love this process.
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    So they would come up with all these ideas.
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    You know, greet five visitors at the door this week,
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    get an extra 10 minutes of reading before bed.
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    Kick someone, lose desserts for a month.
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    It turns out, by the way, our girls are little Stalins.
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    We constantly have to kind of dial them back.
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    Now look, naturally there's a gap between
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    their kind of conduct in these meetings and their behavior the rest of the week,
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    but the truth is it didn't really bother us.
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    It felt like we were kind of laying these underground cables
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    that wouldn't light up their world for many years to come.
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    Three years later -- our girls are almost eight now --
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    We're still holding these meetings.
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    My wife counts them among her most treasured moments as a mom.
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    So what did we learn?
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    The word "agile" entered the lexicon in 2001
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    when Jeff Sutherland and a group of designers
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    met in Utah and wrote a 12-point Agile Manifesto.
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    I think the time is right for an Agile Family Manifesto.
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    I've taken some ideas from the Starrs and from many other families I met.
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    I'm proposing three planks.
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    Plank number one: Adapt all the time.
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    When I became a parent, I figured, you know what?
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    We'll set a few rules and we'll stick to them.
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    That assumes, as parents, we can anticipate every problem that's going to arise.
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    We can't. What's great about the agile system
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    is you build in a system of change
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    so that you can react to what's happening to you in real time.
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    It's like they say in the Internet world:
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    if you're doing the same thing today you were doing six months ago,
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    you're doing the wrong thing.
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    Parents can learn a lot from that.
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    But to me, "adapt all the time" means something deeper, too.
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    We have to break parents out of this straitjacket
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    that the only ideas we can try at home
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    are ones that come from shrinks or self-help gurus
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    or other family experts.
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    The truth is, their ideas are stale,
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    whereas in all these other worlds there are these new ideas
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    to make groups and teams work effectively.
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    Let's just take a few examples.
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    Let's take the biggest issue of all: family dinner.
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    Everybody knows that having family dinner
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    with your children is good for the kids.
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    But for so many of us, it doesn't work in our lives.
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    I met a celebrity chef in New Orleans who said,
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    "No problem, I'll just time-shift family dinner.
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    I'm not home, can't make family dinner?
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    We'll have family breakfast. We'll meet for a bedtime snack.
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    We'll make Sunday meals more important."
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    And the truth is, recent research backs him up.
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    It turns out there's only 10 minutes of productive time
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    in any family meal.
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    The rest of it's taken up with "take your elbows off the table" and "pass the ketchup."
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    You can take that 10 minutes and move it
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    to any part of the day and have the same benefit.
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    So time-shift family dinner. That's adaptability.
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    An environmental psychologist told me,
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    "If you're sitting in a hard chair on a rigid surface,
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    you'll be more rigid.
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    If you're sitting on a cushioned chair, you'll be more open."
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    She told me, "When you're discipling your children,
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    sit in an upright chair with a cushioned surface.
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    The conversation will go better."
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    My wife and I actually moved where we sit for difficult conversations
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    because I was sitting above in the power position.
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    So move where you sit. That's adaptability.
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    The point is there are all these new ideas out there.
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    We've got to hook them up with parents.
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    So plank number one: Adapt all the time.
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    Be flexible, be open-minded, let the best ideas win.
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    Plank number two: Empower your children.
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    Our instinct as parents is to order our kids around.
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    It's easier, and frankly, we're usually right.
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    There's a reason that few systems have been more
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    waterfall over time than the family.
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    But the single biggest lesson we learned
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    is to reverse the waterfall as much as possible.
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    Enlist the children in their own upbringing.
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    Just yesterday, we were having our family meeting,
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    and we had voted to work on overreacting.
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    So we said, "Okay, give us a reward and give us a punishment. Okay?"
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    So one of my daughters threw out, you get five minutes of overreacting time all week.
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    So we kind of liked that.
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    But then her sister started working the system.
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    She said, "Do I get one five-minute overreaction
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    or can I get 10 30-second overreactions?"
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    I loved that. Spend the time however you want.
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    Now give us a punishment. Okay.
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    If we get 15 minutes of overreaction time, that's the limit.
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    Every minute above that, we have to do one pushup.
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    So you see, this is working. Now look, this system isn't lax.
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    There's plenty of parental authority going on.
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    But we're giving them practice becoming independent,
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    which of course is our ultimate goal.
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    Just as I was leaving to come here tonight,
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    one of my daughters started screaming.
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    The other one said, "Overreaction! Overreaction!"
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    and started counting, and within 10 seconds it had ended.
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    To me that is a certified agile miracle.
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    And by the way, research backs this up too.
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    Children who plan their own goals, set weekly schedules,
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    evaluate their own work build up their frontal cortex
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    and take more control over their lives.
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    The point is, we have to let our children succeed on their own terms,
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    and yes, on occasion, fail on their own terms.
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    I was talking to Warren Buffett's banker,
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    and he was chiding me for not letting my children
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    make mistakes with their allowance.
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    And I said, "But what if they drive into a ditch?"
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    He said, "It's much better to drive into a ditch
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    with a $6 allowance than a $60,000-a-year salary
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    or a $6 million inheritance."
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    So the bottom line is, empower your children.
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    Plank number three: Tell your story.
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    Adaptability is fine, but we also need bedrock.
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    Jim Collins, the author of "Good To Great,"
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    told me that successful human organizations of any kind
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    have two things in common:
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    they preserve the core, they stimulate progress.
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    So agile is great for stimulating progress,
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    but I kept hearing time and again, you need to preserve the core.
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    So how do you do that?
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    Collins coached us on doing something
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    that businesses do, which is define your mission
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    and identify your core values.
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    So he led us through the process of creating a family mission statement.
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    We did the family equivalent of a corporate retreat.
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    We had a pajama party.
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    I made popcorn. Actually, I burned one, so I made two.
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    My wife bought a flip chart.
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    And we had this great conversation, like, what's important to us?
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    What values do we most uphold?
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    And we ended up with 10 statements.
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    We are travelers, not tourists.
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    We don't like dilemmas. We like solutions.
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    Again, research shows that parents should spend less time
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    worrying about what they do wrong
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    and more time focusing on what they do right,
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    worry less about the bad times and build up the good times.
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    This family mission statement is a great way to identify
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    what it is that you do right.
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    A few weeks later, we got a call from the school.
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    One of our daughters had gotten into a spat.
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    And suddenly we were worried, like, do we have a mean girl on our hands?
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    And we didn't really know what to do,
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    so we called her into my office.
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    The family mission statement was on the wall,
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    and my wife said, "So, anything up there seem to apply?"
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    And she kind of looked down the list, and she said,
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    "Bring people together?"
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    Suddenly we had a way into the conversation.
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    Another great way to tell your story
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    is to tell your children where they came from.
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    Researchers at Emory gave children a simple
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    "what do you know" test.
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    Do you know where your grandparents were born?
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    Do you know where your parents went to high school?
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    Do you know anybody in your family
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    who had a difficult situation, an illness, and they overcame it?
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    The children who scored highest on this "do you know" scale
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    had the highest self-esteem and a greater sense they could control their lives.
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    The "do you know" test was the single biggest predictor
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    of emotional health and happiness.
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    As the author of the study told me,
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    children who have a sense of -- they're part of a larger narrative
  • 15:16 - 15:19
    have greater self-confidence.
  • 15:19 - 15:22
    So my final plank is, tell your story.
  • 15:22 - 15:26
    Spend time retelling the story of your family's positive moments
  • 15:26 - 15:29
    and how you overcame the negative ones.
  • 15:29 - 15:31
    If you give children this happy narrative,
  • 15:31 - 15:37
    you give them the tools to make themselves happier.
  • 15:37 - 15:39
    I was a teenager when I first read "Anna Karenina"
  • 15:39 - 15:41
    and its famous opening sentence,
  • 15:41 - 15:43
    "All happy families are alike.
  • 15:43 - 15:47
    Each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way."
  • 15:47 - 15:51
    When I first read that, I thought, "That sentence is inane.
  • 15:51 - 15:54
    Of course all happy families aren't alike."
  • 15:54 - 15:56
    But as I began working on this project,
  • 15:56 - 15:59
    I began changing my mind.
  • 15:59 - 16:01
    Recent scholarship has allowed us, for the first time,
  • 16:01 - 16:04
    to identify the building blocks
  • 16:04 - 16:07
    that successful families have.
  • 16:07 - 16:09
    I've mentioned just three here today:
  • 16:09 - 16:14
    Adapt all the time, empower the children, tell your story.
  • 16:14 - 16:19
    Is it possible, all these years later, to say Tolstoy was right?
  • 16:19 - 16:22
    The answer, I believe, is yes.
  • 16:22 - 16:25
    When Leo Tolstoy was five years old,
  • 16:25 - 16:26
    his brother Nikolay came to him
  • 16:26 - 16:29
    and said he had engraved the secret to universal happiness
  • 16:29 - 16:32
    on a little green stick, which he had hidden
  • 16:32 - 16:35
    in a ravine on the family's estate in Russia.
  • 16:35 - 16:40
    If the stick were ever found, all humankind would be happy.
  • 16:40 - 16:45
    Tolstoy became consumed with that stick, but he never found it.
  • 16:45 - 16:50
    In fact, he asked to be buried in that ravine where he thought it was hidden.
  • 16:50 - 16:54
    He still lies there today, covered in a layer of green grass.
  • 16:54 - 16:57
    That story perfectly captures for me
  • 16:57 - 16:59
    the final lesson that I learned:
  • 16:59 - 17:02
    Happiness is not something we find,
  • 17:02 - 17:05
    it's something we make.
  • 17:05 - 17:08
    Almost anybody who's looked at well-run organizations
  • 17:08 - 17:11
    has come to pretty much the same conclusion.
  • 17:11 - 17:13
    Greatness is not a matter of circumstance.
  • 17:13 - 17:16
    It's a matter of choice.
  • 17:16 - 17:19
    You don't need some grand plan. You don't need a waterfall.
  • 17:19 - 17:22
    You just need to take small steps,
  • 17:22 - 17:24
    accumulate small wins,
  • 17:24 - 17:27
    keep reaching for that green stick.
  • 17:27 - 17:30
    In the end, this may be the greatest lesson of all.
  • 17:30 - 17:34
    What's the secret to a happy family? Try.
  • 17:34 - 17:38
    (Applause)
Title:
Agile programming -- for your family
Speaker:
Bruce Feiler
Description:

Bruce Feiler has a radical idea: To deal with the stress of modern family life, go agile. Inspired by agile software programming, Feiler introduces family practices which encourage flexibility, bottom-up idea flow, constant feedback and accountability. One surprising feature: Kids pick their own punishments.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
18:00
Thu-Huong Ha edited English subtitles for Agile programming -- for your family
Thu-Huong Ha approved English subtitles for Agile programming -- for your family
Thu-Huong Ha edited English subtitles for Agile programming -- for your family
Morton Bast accepted English subtitles for Agile programming -- for your family
Morton Bast edited English subtitles for Agile programming -- for your family
Joseph Geni added a translation

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