When you're screwing up and nobody's saying anything to you anymore, that means they gave up. Your critics are your ones telling you they still love you and care.
Randy Pausch
Carnegie Mellon University 'The Last Lecture' 2007, 2007
视频从10:14开始——这句语录被说出的那一刻
这句语录背后的故事
This wisdom came from Pausch's youth football days. His coach Jim Graham rode him mercilessly through one entire practice — 'You're doing this wrong, you're doing this wrong. Go back and do it again. You owe me. You're doing pushups after practice.' Afterward, an assistant coach came over and explained: 'Coach Graham rode you pretty hard, didn't he? That's a good thing.' The assistant coach's insight became a life lesson Pausch carried through his entire career as a professor and mentor. The silence of indifference is far worse than the noise of criticism. When people stop correcting you, it doesn't mean you've gotten better — it means they've written you off. Pausch applied this to teaching (pushing students harder was an act of investment in them), to relationships, and ultimately to how he chose to spend his remaining months: surrounded by people who cared enough to be honest with him.