Ed Sheeran Speech: Embrace Your Weirdness
Learn English with Ed Sheeran. June 8, 2015, 9th Annual American Institute for Stuttering Freeing Voices, Changing Lives Benefit Gala. Mistress of Ceremonies Emily Blunt and Honoree Ed Sheeran lend their star power to an important cause.
The American Institute for Stuttering (AIS) is a leading non-profit organization in the United States that offers state-of-the-art treatment to people who stutter, and support to their families. To learn more about therapy at AIS, visit stutteringtreatment.org.
Edward Christopher Sheeran MBE is an English singer-songwriter, record producer, musician, and actor. Sheeran has sold more than 150 million records worldwide, making him one of the world’s best-selling music artists.
In this speech, he also quotes: “Be yourself βcause thereβs no one in the world that can be a better you than you, and if you try to be the cool kid from class, youβll end up being very boring, and doing plumbing for someone that you donβt really want to do plumbing for. And just be yourself, embrace your quirks. Being weird is a wonderful thing.”
– English subtitles make it even more enjoyable. Watch, learn, and share –
Ed Sheeran Quote:
“Be yourself, embrace your quirks. Being weird is a wonderful thing.” Ed Sheeran
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“This is the second award Iβve ever got in America, so thatβs pretty nice.
I didnβt actually know I was getting an award tonight, because I didnβt expect one. I was coming here to support the cause. I got an email from Emily a couple of months ago telling me about the thing, I said, βof course Iβll turn up.β So turning up today and saying your getting an award is pretty wild, but yeah.
I was a very, very weird child. Very weird child. And I had a port-wine stain birthmark on my face that I got lasered off when I was very young, and one day they forgot to put the anesthetic on, and then ever since then I had a stutterβand I also had very, very big blue NHS glasses β NHS is the National Health Service, one day, I hope youβll have the same.
And I lacked an ear drum on one side of my faceβone side of my earβso stuttering was actually the least of my problems when I went to school, but it was still quite a difficult thing, and the thing that I found most difficult about it was, knowing what to say but not really being able to express it in the right way.
So I did different speech therapies and stuff, which wasnβt very successful. I had homeopathy, which is like herbs and sh*t, where youβre drinking… It’s alright.
But I got heavily into music at a young age, and got very, very into rap musicβEminem was the first album that my dad bought me. I remember my uncle Jim told my dad that Eminem was the next Bob Dylan when I wasβsay what you want, it’s pretty similar, but it’s all just story-telling. So my dad bought me the Marshall Mathers LP when I was nine years old, not knowing what was on it. And he let me listen to it, and I learned every word of it back to front by the age I was ten, and he raps very fast and very melodically, and very percussively, and it helped me get rid of the stutter. And then from there, I just carried on and did some music, but it’s I think the one thing I actually wanted to convey in my speech today for not so much the adults here because I feel like the adults are fineβyouβre solid, everybodyβs got a lot of money and everyoneβs chillinβ. But more the kids that are going through the therapy, and I want to stress the point that itβs notβstuttering is not a thing you have to be worried about at all, and even if you have quirks and weirdness, you shouldnβt be worried about that. I think the people I went to school with that were the most normal and were the coolest when we grew upβI was telling Emily earlier that one of the cool kids from school now does my plumbing. So thatβs a fact. Thatβs a fact, so being my thing that I want to stress most here tonight is not necessarily to shed light on stuttering or make it a thing. It’s just to stress to kids in general is to just be yourself βcause thereβs no one in the world that can be a better you than you, and if you try to be the cool kid from class, youβll end up being very boring, and doing plumbing for someone that you donβt really want to do plumbing for.
And just be yourself, embrace your quirks. Being weird is a wonderful thing. It’s led for so many creative people. Not even just creative people. Like you own a f*cking football team now, thatβs pretty cool! But I think, you know, Iβm not very good at speeches, I donβt really do a lot of speeches but I think the one thing I want to say is be yourself, embrace yourself, embrace your quirks, and embrace your weirdness.
And from from a stuttering point of view, donβt treat it as an issueβwork through it and get the treatment that you want to get, but donβt ever treat it as an issue, donβt see it as a plight on your life, and carry on pushing forward. And I did alright. You can do alright as well. Emily did alright. Nice, thank you.”[/read]
Ed Sheeran
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