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  • Back in New York, I am the head of development

  • for a non-profit called Robin Hood.

  • When I'm not fighting poverty, I'm fighting fires

  • as the assistant captain of a volunteer fire company.

  • Now in our town,

  • where the volunteers supplement a highly skilled career staff,

  • you have to get to the fire scene pretty early

  • to get in on any action.

  • I remember my first fire.

  • I was the second volunteer on the scene,

  • so there was a pretty good chance I was going to get in.

  • But still it was a real footrace against the other volunteers

  • to get to the captain in charge

  • to find out what our assignments would be.

  • When I found the captain,

  • he was having a very engaging conversation

  • with the homeowner,

  • who was surely having one of the worst days of her life.

  • Here it was, the middle of the night,

  • she was standing outside in the pouring rain,

  • under an umbrella, in her pajamas, barefoot,

  • while her house was in flames.

  • The other volunteer who had arrived just before me --

  • let's call him Lex Luther --

  • (Laughter)

  • got to the captain first

  • and was asked to go inside

  • and save the homeowner's dog.

  • The dog! I was stunned with jealousy.

  • Here was some lawyer or money manager

  • who, for the rest of his life, gets to tell people

  • that he went into a burning building

  • to save a living creature,

  • just because he beat me by five seconds.

  • Well, I was next.

  • The captain waved me over.

  • He said, "Bezos, I need you to go into the house.

  • I need you to go upstairs, past the fire,

  • and I need you to get this woman a pair of shoes."

  • (Laughter)

  • I swear.

  • So, not exactly what I was hoping for,

  • but off I went --

  • up the stairs, down the hall, past the 'real' firefighters,

  • who were pretty much done putting out the fire at this point,

  • into the master bedroom to get a pair of shoes.

  • Now I know what you're thinking,

  • but I'm no hero.

  • (Laughter)

  • I carried my payload back downstairs

  • where I met my nemesis

  • and the precious dog by the front door.

  • We took our treasures outside to the homeowner,

  • where, not surprisingly,

  • his received much more attention than did mine.

  • A few weeks later,

  • the department received a letter from the homeowner

  • thanking us for the valiant effort displayed

  • in saving her home.

  • The act of kindness she noted above all others:

  • someone had even gotten her a pair of shoes.

  • (Laughter)

  • In both my vocation at Robin Hood

  • and my avocation as a volunteer firefighter,

  • I am witness to acts of generosity and kindness

  • on a monumental scale,

  • but I'm also witness to acts of grace and courage

  • on an individual basis.

  • And you know what I've learned?

  • They all matter.

  • So as I look around this room

  • at people who either have achieved,

  • or are on their way to achieving,

  • remarkable levels of success,

  • I would offer this reminder:

  • don't wait.

  • Don't wait until you make your first million

  • to make a difference in somebody's life.

  • If you have something to give,

  • give it now.

  • Serve food at a soup kitchen. Clean up a neighborhood park.

  • Be a mentor.

  • Not every day is going to offer us a chance

  • to save somebody's life,

  • but every day offers us an opportunity to affect one.

  • So get in the game. Save the shoes.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

  • Bruno Giussani: Mark, Mark, come back.

  • (Applause)

  • Mark Bezos: Thank you.

Back in New York, I am the head of development

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