世界500强CEO访谈 第66期:联邦快递弗雷德里克史密斯 世界将会改变(2)(在线收听

   Reporter: How did you learn those things?

  记者:您是怎样学习到那些事情的呢?
  Smith: Through a lot of hard knocks. Learning when to stand up, when to sit down, when to shut up and when not to. I had a couple of uncles that were very helpful to me, but I was not around them every day. But in the summers and so forth they were very good to me in terms of teaching me a few things about life. Certainly, my coaches were very important to me. My high school football coach was very important to me, in setting me straight on a few things.
  史密斯:通过很多次的碰壁之后, 我自己学会了什么时候应该起来, 什么时候应该坐下,什么时候应该保持沉默,而什么时间应该说话。我还有几个叔叔,他们都对我帮助很多,但是我并不是每天都跟他们在一起的。但是在夏天或者是其他的一些时间时,他们会教我一些有关生活方面的知识。当然, 我的教练们对我的人生也很重要,我在高中的足球教练对我很重要,教会我看清很多事情。
  Reporter: What did you learn from your high school football coach?
  记者:您从高中时的足球教练那里学到了什么?
  Smith: He was a little guy who was a great football player at Georgia Tech, and he just was indefatigable. He just would never, ever say die. He absolutely proved to me that persistence was a very big part of making it in life. I never forgot that lesson.
  史密斯:他是佐治亚理工学院的一名出色的足球运动员,他有着不屈不挠的精神品质,他从来不会说放弃。他也确实证明给我看,坚持不懈的品质对于一个人的生活是多么重要。我永远都不会忘记他教给我的东西。
  Reporter : Do you have siblings?
  记者:您有兄弟姐妹吗?
  Smith: I have a half-brother and had another half-brother who passed away. I had an adopted sister and a half-sister, but I never lived with them.
  史密斯:我有一个同母异父的兄弟,还有一个同母异父的兄弟已经去世了。我有一个收养的妹妹,还有一个同母异父的妹妹,但是我从没跟他们生活在一起过。
  Reporter: How did you get along with your brothers and sisters?
  记者:您是怎样与您的兄弟姐妹相处呢?
  Smith: Well, my middle brother and I used to try to beat the devil out of one another on a regular basis. Just kid stuff. He was about five or six years older than I was. And then of course, like most siblings, we grew up and got to be very close. I thank goodness for my big brother, who always mediated between the two of us.
  史密斯:我与我二哥经常互相痛打,那些只是小孩子的一些玩法,他比我大大约五六岁。当然与其他的兄弟姐妹一样,我们一起长大,关系也很亲密。我非常感谢我的大哥,因为他总是会在中间协调我和二哥之间的矛盾。
  Reporter: Did you think being a younger brother affected you in any way?
  记者:您认为作为兄弟中较小的一个,这从某些方面对您产生了一定的影响吗?
  Smith: Perhaps it did, but the age differences were so great that it wasn't to the extent that it might be with brothers who are closer in age.
  史密斯:也许是有的,但是我们的年龄差别很大,所以并不像年龄相仿的兄弟那样影响很大。
  Reporter: Were there any important experiences that influenced you or inspired you as a youngster?
  记者:当您还是一名少年的时候,有对您影响很大或者是很激励您的一些重要的经历吗?
  Smith: I don’t think that there was any one incident that had changed my life. It was simply the observation of a lot of people that I admired. I synthesized a lot of things from my coach, my uncles, my teachers in a certain area. When I was a student, I had a marvelous English teacher who opened my eyes to the fact there’d been a lot of people on this planet before my time who might have a thing or two to say that were of use. So, I got a lot of things from a lot of people. I picked and chose.
  史密斯:我认为并没有改变了我人生的事件。我只是会去观察那些我仰慕的人。我将我的教练、叔叔和老师身上的优点进行整合。学生时代我有一位很了不起的英语老师,是他开阔了我的眼界,他告诉我在这个世界上有很多前人对我们的世界作出了一定的贡献。所以我从很多人的身上学到了很多东西, 我对其进行了挑选。
  Reporter: What kind of a student were you?
  记者:您以前是一个怎样的学生呢?
  Smith: I was a good student. I liked to read enormously. I loved history. It was not difficult for me to make good grades.
  史密斯:我是一个好学生,我喜欢进行广泛的阅读,我喜欢历史。而且对于我来说,学习上取得一个好的分数并不是一件难事。
  Reporter: Were there any books that were important to you or had significant influence on you when you were a kid?
  记者:孩提时代,有什么书籍对您产生了很重要的影响吗?
  Smith: I read a lot of history, and still do, as a matter of fact. I remember reading a very famous book called Death Be Not Proud, that affected me a lot. It’s about a young boy who had a brain tumor and how he handled that. I read an awful lot about famous people, the generals and the presidents, and things of that nature.
  史密斯:我以前读过很多历史方面的书籍,实际上我现在仍然会看很多那方面的书。我记得我读过一本很有名的书, 名字叫做〈死神,你莫骄傲 >,它带给我很多的影响。那讲的是有关于一个得脑瘤的小男孩如何应对他的病的故一。 我还读过很多有关于名人、 将军、总统以及这一类人的书籍。
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