TEDxWarwick2013: A Ted Perspective
I’ve finally found some time to stop and think after the actual event! Looking through the folders and editing the photos really made me ponder about the 6-month journey.
For starters, I never actually got over the fact that I’m actually part of the TEDxWarwick team. Having followed TED videos and having seen TEDxWarwick in the background of some of them, I was really excited to know that I’d be so close to a TED event as a undergraduate at Warwick. Six months down the road, even after countless Ted-and-TED jokes and a succcessful 2013 event, this fact is still rather surreal to me.
These sentiments are not simply brought about by hearing TED talks, but also by working with like-minded people on the team. When I say like-minded, I don’t mean that every person on the team is the same. We come from different walks of life, we speak different languages, we all enjoy being involved in TED at varying degrees. We are very different. And some more different than others. Yet, we enjoy each other’s company and ideas, knowing that our collective effort will bring us somewhere – indeed, it has.
To the TEDxWarwick 2013 team: thank you for being there for me. I really enjoyed working with each of you. Tim and Alex, you guys are so good at handling so many things at once I suspect either of you have found the secret to human cloning. Give a TED talk about it next year? Sharika and Operations, my Tuesday 10am-s are not the same again. Liam, I still remember our first skype session that got me into filming and media. Enjoyed every bit of it! Melody and Sharon, both of you have artistic minds with deadly adobe skillz to match. Vishal and Content, you guys did amazing work with the speakers! What would a TED event be without speakers? Rish and ER, you guys are way too cool with all those partnerships going on. Bukola, what could we do without you arranging all the information for us. Community, you guys are awesome as well. And David: the team joker, the executor, and the executioner all in one person. Let’s just say that the lawyers’ league will never be the same once you graduate. =) The simple things that people do for one another on the team really warm my heart. Am really glad to have been part of the success of TEDxWarwick 2013. To quote a friend, TEDxWarwick 2013 was “the best I’ve been to this whole year!” High five team!
What next? The road ahead is uncertain, especially after such a successful event. Building Bridges was an awesome idea that aptly encapsulated the ethos of TED and all the efforts of the team propelled it forward. Bridges – intellectual, social, friendships – were definitely built this year. It was truly enriching doing so many different things and meeting so many awesome people through the event. Unfortunately, we can’t have a similar theme next year and remain credible as an exceptional TEDx society. It seems daunting for any of us who intend to stay on the team. Nevertheless, what we need is something very simple: one idea. An idea to spark a whole event, bring fantastic people together and make TEDxWarwick 2014 another success.
So why is TEDx such a big thing to me? Indeed, in the grander scheme of things, it is not. TED is but one organisation; a great idea, but possibly a trend that will fade in decades to come. What really strikes me is not all the hype about revolutionary ideas or the excitement about wonderful people. It is not even the similarity of the brand to my name! Rather, what fuels my passion is the power of the simple things: a small shift in perspective; a bit of effort to make a difference; a slight nudge that causes a landslide of change. A tipping point. We are so close to change.