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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
LULU GARCIA-NAVARRO, HOST:
You may know Paula Poundstone from the smash1 public radio hit - other than this program - Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! But she's also an accomplished2 author, now of two books, all the more an accomplishment3 because each book took nearly a decade to write. The latest is "The Totally Unscientific Study Of The Search For Human Happiness." And it's full of experiments Poundstone undertook to try and unlock4 the secrets happy people must surely know. And of course, her motivations were pure.
PAULA POUNDSTONE: All right, don't tell anybody that I ever said this.
GARCIA-NAVARRO: I won't say anything.
POUNDSTONE: I was hoping that the publisher would pay for the things.
GARCIA-NAVARRO: (Laughter).
POUNDSTONE: You know? Like, I could do all this fun stuff5, and somebody else would pay for it, you know, because it's research on this book.
GARCIA-NAVARRO: Right.
POUNDSTONE: Boy, I could not have been more wrong about that.
GARCIA-NAVARRO: (Laughter). Yeah, you spent eight years doing this, right? How many different experiments did you do?
POUNDSTONE: Well, I can't remember. There might be 10, maybe...
GARCIA-NAVARRO: Yeah.
POUNDSTONE: ...Or something like that. You know - let's see, I did one thing where I got fit for a long period of time. I mean, several months taking really grueling taekwondo classes. I went backpacking for a few nights and days with my oldest daughter. I - let's see, I spent a day hugging everyone I met. I rented a Lamborghini for a day. But there's a difference between enjoying something and something making you happy, you know?
The question was, when I left off doing whatever the thing was, what kind of umbrella did that leave me with for the inevitable6 rainstorm of life's difficulties that come sprinkled7 throughout every day? So the real meat of the story is, yes, I mean, hopefully they're the funniest field notes ever taken...
GARCIA-NAVARRO: (Laughter).
POUNDSTONE: ...On each individual thing, but the real story is, when I was back in my regular life - raising my children, doing my goofy, stupid job, you know, a house full of animals, constant scheduling nightmare8 - how did whatever that thing that I did bear up?
GARCIA-NAVARRO: Yeah. Well, how did you come up with these ideas? How did you come up with this very scientific study, or not so scientific?
POUNDSTONE: Well, some of them were suggested by other people. And each chapter is written as a science experiment. This one, me and my kids thought, was surefire to be the one that was really going to make us happy. My children - and I never allowed them to watch television growing up, so we decided9 that we would try watching movies all day long, which was, like, the most exotic10 thing that we could think of really for us.
GARCIA-NAVARRO: What could possibly go wrong (laughter)?
POUNDSTONE: We argued and argued. Plus, my tailbone began to hurt. But my son's movie tapes - I forget how old he was at the time. He might have been 13 maybe, 14 maybe. You know, he kept wanting to watch one of those horrible crashy one - "Fast And"...
GARCIA-NAVARRO: "The Fast And Furious11."
POUNDSTONE: Yeah. And, you know, we put it on, and me and my daughters could only last so long with it before I finally had to go - you know what? - I can't watch another second of this. And he didn't understand why, like, his films got vetoed, so I finally just simplified it. I said, you know, Honey, a good film, Vin Diesel12's not in.
(LAUGHTER)
GARCIA-NAVARRO: Aw, poor Vin Diesel.
POUNDSTONE: Oh, yeah, because he cares so much what I think.
GARCIA-NAVARRO: You also tried the power of positive thinking. Tell us some of your mantras.
POUNDSTONE: Well, let's see. One of them was, I can find my happy place. I got them off the internet. I remember one of them was, my body is my vehicle, and, you know, I fill it with hope or something. And I could get as far as my body is my vehicle. But I fill it with hope was almost speaking another language for me. So I changed it to my body is my vehicle. I'll never pass the smog test.
GARCIA-NAVARRO: (Laughter) So what of everything you tried made you the happiest?
POUNDSTONE: Well, I don't think it comes in huge, long stretches. And if it appears to, then you're probably daft. I think that the answer is very unromantic. I think that the answer is a lot of stuff that we kind of sort of knew but were hoping wasn't true, which is exercise, good sleep habits. You know, I wish I could tell you that there was, like, a class that you took, and then you're all set. But the truth is - and it's such a dry, horrible answer - drink water.
(LAUGHTER)
GARCIA-NAVARRO: Good to know.
POUNDSTONE: Yeah.
GARCIA-NAVARRO: So Paula Poundstone, are you happier now? Are you happier?
POUNDSTONE: I think I am. Yeah, I think I am
GARCIA-NAVARRO: Paula Poundstone's new book is called "The Totally Unscientific Study Of The Search For Human Happiness." Thanks so much.
POUNDSTONE: Thank you.
(SOUNDBITE OF JOHN SCOFIELD'S "BOOZER")
GARCIA-NAVARRO: And Paula Poundstone's new NPR podcast, Live, From The Poundstone Institute, launches13 in July.
1 smash | |
v.粉碎,打碎;n.轰动的演出,巨大的成功 | |
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2 accomplished | |
adj.有才艺的;有造诣的;达到了的 | |
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3 accomplishment | |
n.完成,成就,(pl.)造诣,技能 | |
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4 unlock | |
v.启示,揭示,开...的锁 | |
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5 stuff | |
n.原料,材料,东西;vt.填满;吃饱 | |
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6 inevitable | |
adj.不可避免的,必然发生的 | |
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7 sprinkled | |
vt.撒(某物)于(某物之表面),洒,喷撒 | |
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8 nightmare | |
n.恶梦,可怕的事物,无法摆脱的恐惧 | |
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9 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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10 exotic | |
adj.奇异的,异乎寻常的,外(国)来的,外国产 | |
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11 furious | |
adj.狂怒的,暴怒的,强烈的,激烈的 | |
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12 diesel | |
n.柴油发动机,内燃机 | |
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13 launches | |
v.发射( launch的第三人称单数 );[计算机]开始(应用程序);发动;开展(活动、计划等) | |
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