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Hello.
This is 6 Minute English from
BBC Learning English.
I’m Neil.
And I’m Beth.
When I was a boy, I wanted to be
a fireman when I grew up.
How about you, Beth?
Did you have
any childhood dreams?
I wanted to be an astronaut
and fly to the Moon…
When we’re young most of us have
big dreams and plans for the future.
Unfortunately, as we grow up these
childhood dreams often get lost in the
adult world of jobs, money,
families and careers.
But not for everyone…
Daisy, from New Zealand, and, Herman,
from Argentina are two
people who decided
to follow their childhood dreams.
They
wanted the world to become a utopia – a
perfect, ideal society where everyone is
happy and gets along with each other.
In this programme, we’ll be hearing how
Daisy and Herman made their dreams
come true – not by changing the world,
but by changing themselves.
And, as usual,
we’ll be learning some new vocabulary too.
But before that I have a question
for you, Beth.
Following your dreams can
be tough, but not following them can leave
you regretting all the things you wanted
to do but didn’t.
In 2012, Australian nurse,
Bronnie Ware, wrote her bestselling book,
The Top Five Regrets of the Dying, after
interviewing terminally ill patients about
their life regrets.
So, what do you think
their top regret was?
Was it:
a) I wish I hadn’t worked so hard?
b) I wish I had followed my dreams?
or
c) I wish I’d made more money?
Well, I’ll guess it’s b) they wish they
had followed their dreams.
OK, Beth.
I’ll reveal the correct answer
at the end of the programme.
The first dreamer we’re going to meet lives
in Riverside, a peace-loving community in
New Zealand where everyone shares
everything.
Riverside members work for
the community’s businesses, including
a farm, a hotel and a café.
All the money they
earn is collected and shared
between everyone equally.
Daisy, who was born in East Germany,
joined Riverside in 2004.
Here she explains
her belief in sharing to BBC
World Service programme, The Documentary.
What I think I always believed in is that
the sharing of resources can provide
a group of people with quite a great
advantage, but it doesn’t matter how
many hours you work or what work
you do, everyone is getting the
same amount.
And that is something
that many people outside of
Riverside struggle with, and where
we’re often getting this ‘communism’
label attached to us, because it’s so…
it seems so outlandish for people.
Riverside isn’t a communist community.
In fact, people with many different political
views live there.
But Daisy says that local
people struggle with the idea that
everything is shared.
If you struggle with
an idea, you find it difficult to
accept or think about it.
Daisy also says some local people
call Riverside outlandish –
strange and unusual.
Our second group of dreamers are
a family - the Zapps.
In 2000, childhood
sweethearts, Herman and Candelaria Zapp,
bought a vintage car and set off
from Argentina to travel around
the world with less than 3.500 dollars
in their pockets.
Twenty-two years and
three children later they have visited
over a hundred countries, meeting
with countless people and
experiences on the way.
Here, Herman Zapp explains to BBC
World Service’s, The Documentary, how
following his dream has
changed him for the better.
I am so happy with the Herman there is now,
that I know now – not the one who
wanted to conquer the world, but the one
who was conquered by the world.
I learn
so much from people, and it’s
amazing how the more you meet people,
the more you know stories, how
much more humble you become because
you notice that you are a beautiful, tiny
piece of sand, but a very important piece
of sand like everyone is, right?
After many years travelling, meeting
new people and hearing their stories,
Herman is more humble – not proud or
arrogant.
He no longer wants to
conquer the world – to control it by force;
rather, he has been conquered
by his experiences.
Herman compares himself to a beautiful
but tiny piece of sand and uses the phrase
'a grain of sand' to describe things which
are insignificant in themselves, but
at the same time are an important
part of the whole.
Daisy and Herman are rare examples
of dreamers who followed their dream
and found a happy life, lived without
regret – which reminds me
of your question, Neil.
Yes, I asked about Bronnie Ware’s book, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying.
What do you think the number one regret was, Beth?
I guessed it was b) not following your dreams.
Which was the right answer!
Not having
the courage to follow your dreams was
listed as the top life regret.
At least we
have people like Daisy and Herman
to remind us dreams can come true!
OK, let’s recap the vocabulary from
this programme, starting with
'utopia' – a perfect world where
everyone is happy.
If you 'struggle with an idea',
you find it difficult to accept.
The adjective, outlandish, means
strange and unusual.
'To conquer' something means
to control it by force.
Someone who is 'humble' is
not proud or arrogant.
And finally, the phrase 'a grain of sand'
describes something which is both
insignificant yet somehow important.
Once again, our six minutes are up.
Bye for now!
Goodbye!