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The joy of surfing in ice-cold water

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    So if I told you that
    this was the face of pure joy,
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    would you call me crazy?
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    I wouldn't blame you,
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    because every time I look at this
    Arctic selfie, I shiver just a little bit.
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    I want to tell you
    a little bit about this photograph.
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    I was swimming around
    in the Lofoten Islands in Norway,
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    just inside the Arctic Circle,
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    and the water was hovering
    right at freezing.
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    The air? A brisk -10 with windchill,
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    and I could literally feel the blood
    trying to leave my hands,
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    feet and face, and rush
    to protect my vital organs.
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    It was the coldest I've ever been.
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    But even with swollen lips, sunken eyes,
    and cheeks flushed red,
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    I have found that this place right here
    is somewhere I can find great joy.
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    Now, when it comes to pain,
    psychologist Brock Bastian
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    probably said it best when he wrote,
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    "Pain is a kind of shortcut
    to mindfulness.
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    It makes us suddenly aware
    of everything in the environment.
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    It brutally draws us in
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    to a virtual sensory awareness
    of the world much like meditation."
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    If shivering is a form of meditation,
    then I would consider myself a monk.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, before we get into the why
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    would anyone ever want to surf
    in freezing cold water?
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    I would love to give you
    a little perspective
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    on what a day in my life can look like.
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    (Music)
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    (Video) Man: I mean, I know
    we were hoping for good waves,
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    but I don't think anybody thought
    that was going to happen.
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    I can't stop shaking.
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    I am so cold.
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    (Music)
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    (Applause)
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    Chris Burkard: So,
    surf photographer, right?
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    I don't even know
    if it's a real job title, to be honest.
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    My parents definitely didn't think so
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    when I told them at 19 I was quitting
    my job to pursue this dream career:
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    blue skies, warm tropical beaches,
    and a tan that lasts all year long.
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    I mean, to me, this was it.
    Life could not get any better.
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    Sweating it out, shooting surfers
    in these exotic tourist destinations.
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    But there was just this one problem.
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    You see, the more time I spent traveling
    to these exotic locations,
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    the less gratifying it seemed to be.
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    I set out seeking adventure,
    and what I was finding was only routine.
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    It was things like wi-fi, TV, fine dining,
    and a constant cellular connection
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    that to me were all the trappings
    of places heavily touristed
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    in and out of the water,
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    and it didn't take long
    for me to start feeling suffocated.
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    I began craving wild, open spaces,
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    and so I set out to find the places
    others had written off
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    as too cold, too remote,
    and too dangerous to surf,
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    and that challenge intrigued me.
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    I began this sort of personal crusade
    against the mundane,
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    because if there's
    one thing I've realized,
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    it's that any career,
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    even one as seemingly glamorous
    as surf photography,
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    has the danger of becoming monotonous.
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    So in my search to break up
    this monotony, I realized something:
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    There's only about a third
    of the Earth's oceans that are warm,
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    and it's really just that thin band
    around the equator.
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    So if I was going to find perfect waves,
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    it was probably going
    to happen somewhere cold,
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    where the seas are notoriously rough,
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    and that's exactly where I began to look.
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    And it was my first trip to Iceland
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    that I felt like I found
    exactly what I was looking for.
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    I was blown away
    by the natural beauty of the landscape,
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    but most importantly, I couldn't believe
    we were finding perfect waves
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    in such a remote and rugged
    part of the world.
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    At one point, we got to the beach
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    only to find massive chunks of ice
    had piled on the shoreline.
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    They created this barrier
    between us and the surf,
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    and we had to weave
    through this thing like a maze
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    just to get out into the lineup.
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    and once we got there,
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    we were pushing aside these ice chunks
    trying to get into waves.
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    It was an incredible experience,
    one I'll never forget,
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    because amidst those harsh conditions,
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    I felt like I stumbled onto
    one of the last quiet places,
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    somewhere that I found a clarity
    and a connection with the world
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    I knew I would never find
    on a crowded beach.
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    I was hooked. I was hooked. (Laughter)
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    Cold water was constantly on my mind,
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    and from that point on,
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    my career focused on these types of harsh
    and unforgiving environments,
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    and it took me to places like Russia,
    Norway, Alaska, Iceland, Chile,
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    the Faroe Islands,
    and a lot of places in between.
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    And one of my favorite things
    about these places
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    was simply the challenge and
    the creativity it took just to get there:
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    hours, days, weeks spent on Google Earth
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    trying to pinpoint any remote stretch
    of beach or reef we could actually get to.
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    And once we got there,
    the vehicles were just as creative:
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    snowmobiles, six-wheel
    Soviet troop carriers,
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    and a couple of super-sketchy
    helicopter flights.
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    (Laughter)
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    Helicopters really scare me, by the way.
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    There was this one particularly
    bumpy boat ride
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    up the coast of Vancouver Island
    to this kind of remote surf spot,
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    where we ended up watching
    helplessly from the water
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    as bears ravaged our camp site.
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    They walked off with our food
    and bits of our tent,
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    clearly letting us know that we
    were at the bottom of the food chain
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    and that this was their spot, not ours.
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    But to me, that trip
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    was a testament to the wildness
    I traded for those touristy beaches.
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    Now, it wasn't until I traveled
    to Norway -- (Laughter) --
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    that I really learned
    to appreciate the cold.
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    So this is the place
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    where some of the largest,
    the most violent storms in the world
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    send huge waves smashing
    into the coastline.
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    We were in this tiny, remote fjord,
    just inside the Arctic Circle.
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    It had a greater population
    of sheep than people,
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    so help if we needed it
    was nowhere to be found.
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    I was in the water
    taking pictures of surfers,
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    and it started to snow.
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    And then the temperature began to drop.
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    And I told myself, there's not a chance
    you're getting out of the water.
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    You traveled all this way, and this is
    exactly what you've been waiting for:
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    freezing cold conditions
    with perfect waves.
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    And although I couldn't even feel
    my finger to push the trigger,
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    I knew I wasn't getting out.
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    So I just did whatever I could.
    I shook it off, whatever.
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    But that was the point that I felt
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    this wind gush through
    the valley and hit me,
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    and what started as this light snowfall
    quickly became a full-on blizzard,
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    and I started to lose
    perception of where I was.
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    I didn't know if I was drifting
    out to sea or towards shore,
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    and all I could really make out
    was the faint sound of seagulls
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    and crashing waves.
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    Now, I knew this place had a reputation
    for sinking ships and grounding planes,
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    and while I was out there floating,
    I started to get a little bit nervous.
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    Actually, I was totally freaking out
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    -- (Laughter) -- and I was
    borderline hypothermic,
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    and my friends eventually
    had to help me out of the water.
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    And I don't know if it was
    delirium setting in or what,
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    but they told me later
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    I had a smile on my face the entire time.
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    Now, it was this trip
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    and probably that exact experience
    where I really began to feel
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    like every photograph was precious,
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    because all of a sudden in that moment,
    it was something I was forced to earn.
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    And I realized, all this shivering
    had actually taught me something:
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    in life, there are no shortcuts to joy.
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    Anything that is worth pursuing
    is going to require us to suffer
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    just a little bit,
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    and that tiny bit of suffering
    that I did for my photography,
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    it added a value to my work
    that was so much more meaningful to me
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    than just trying to fill
    the pages of magazines.
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    See, I gave a piece of myself
    in these places,
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    and what I walked away with
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    was a sense of fulfillment
    I had always been searching for.
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    So I look back at this photograph.
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    It's easy to see frozen fingers
    and cold wetsuits
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    and even the struggle
    that it took just to get there,
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    but most of all,
    what I see is just joy.
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    Thank you so much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The joy of surfing in ice-cold water
Speaker:
Chris Burkard
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:42

English subtitles

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