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Speech by Sabyasachi Sengupta

Just Nod
Transcript
Highlights
I love you so, so much. I was talking to the stage. Uh, if you're wondering, you should know what the stage does to us. This is that one safe space where we can be creative, weird, wacky, right? Give me a little woo-hoo if you love the stage. Woo-hoo! I knew that. Because when we're up here, nothing else in this world matters except the stage, our craft, and our audience. But do we often take this performer energy into our day-to-day lives? Or we think the world will judge us, label us, maybe even laugh at us. Contest chair, Toastmasters, and my performers in this room and all over the world, for me, finding the stage was not easy. Because I grew up in India, where my dad told me I have three career options: to be a doctor, engineer, or be a disappointment. But disappointment had its own hierarchy. Like, if, if I'm in a corporate job, I'm least disappointment, but I wanted to climb the Mount Everest of disappointment. I wanted to be a Bollywood actor. You're a Bollywood actor, right? Fix the bulb, pet the dog, fix the bulb, pet the dog. That kind. But I never had the courage to tell my father, because if I did, just like any other Indian dad, he would say,"Actor? Somebody is going to get a beating." So I knew the dream to be an actor was too far, but life, like a Bollywood movie, had its twists and turns, and I ended up in a city called Amsterdam. And one day, while I was attending a boring finance lecture, I thought,"What if I gave myself this chance to be an actor?" Next day, I skipped class, and I went for an audition of a play, Romeo and Juliet. I wanted to be conservative, so I went for the role of Romeo. The director looked at me and said,"You want to be a Romeo?" You know why? Because there were 20 other actors, tall, chiseled jaw, and enthusiastic. And there was me, enthusiastic."You want to be an actor? Okay, Mr. Bollywood, show me how would you propose to your Juliet." Showtime. I looked at Juliet and said,"Oh, Juliet, oh, Juliet, you are the love of my life. Your eyes are as pretty as the River Ganga. Your figure is as perfect as the Taj Mahal. Your breath is as fresh as Indian curry. Tell me, Juliet, tell me, will you be mine? If your answer is yes, just nod. But if your answer is no, just nod. And I'll understand.""Cut, cut, cut! Oh, my God, you're the best actor. You deserve an Oscar." I believed him-... for five seconds. And then I saw everyone laughing. Then I knew my dream to be an actor was definitely dead. I can never be a performer. So I did what anybody with a broken dream in the city of Amsterdam would do: take up a job in finance. Now, finance professionals are really fun. They are curious, they are energetic, open to new ideas. You know, they only believe in data and numbers, and I'm sure when they sleep at night, they sleep with a spreadsheet on. And there I was, crunching numbers, making Excel sheets, wearing blue and black suits to fit in. And one day... And also, attending town halls, finance town halls, that were as interesting as the Toastmasters annual general meetings. Not the one from yesterday-... from past years. And one day, we had to do a presentation within 24 hours notice, and everybody panicked. Nobody knew what to do. Something in me woke up, the performer. I went to my manager and said,"Can I do the presentation?""Are you sure, Sabi?" That was a yes, by the way."Use the existing slides." That was a no, by the way. I threw away those data-heavy slides, I put on my red suit, and I used s- a story that had opening, connection, laughter. And guess what? I saw my colleagues laugh for the first time. Agree, this never happens in finance....After the presentation, my manager came to me and said,"Dude, you should be the new CEO!" Promotion? No, Chief Entertainment Officer."You do this so well, you should do more often. You should teach us." These guys liked my performance? Like, I thought to fit in in finance, I need to be one of them, those blue suits, and that day, I unleashed the performer in me, and people liked me? People liked my performance? And that's when it hit me, my friends, I do not need a movie set to live my dream. I can be a performer even in a boardroom with a clicker and a projector. A clicker and a projector. My dear performers in the room, too often we hold our energy, we hold our ideas because we think it's not appropriate for the room. My dear performers, let's not do that. Let's unleash that ideas. Let's unleash the energy. Yes, some days you will be trolled, some days you will be rejected, some days you'll be made fun of, but trust me, some days you'll light up a room. Someday, you'll make someone's day, and who knows, someday, you may even change someone's life. So my dear performers, if life asks you wherever you are, whichever stage you want to be on, asks you,"Are you ready?" Just put on your red suit or put on your red dress, step on the stage, smile, and just-... just nod.
Speech Summary

“Just Nod” is a funny, vivid story that lands a clear takeaway: you do not need a spotlight to be a performer. Your journey from Bollywood dreams to a finance boardroom gives the message credibility, and your ending invites the audience to act.

Speaking Pace

Average Pace

131 WPM

Perfect

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Good
Perfect
Min: 57 WPMMax: 177 WPM
Vocal Expression

Your vocal energy and emotional tone over time

Monotone
Flat
Conversational
Expressive
5
Dynamic
Expressiveness
TenseUneasyCalmEngagedJoyful

Dominant expressions:Determination, Excitement, Distress

Your voice came across as driven and excited, with well-timed tension for stakes and confident pauses that let both laughs and key insights land.

Delivery

9 notable moments in your vocal delivery

Excellent (8)

Needs Work (1)

Rhetorical Highlights

You used 23 techniques that made your speech engaging

Improved Version
938874 words (-7%)

Using SHARE

Situation → Hindrance → Action → Result → Evaluation

I love you so, so much. I was talking to the stage. Because you should know what the stage does to us. This is that one safe space where we can be creative, weird, wacky, right? Give me a little woo-hoo if you love the stage. Woo-hoo! When we’re up here, nothing else in this world matters except the stage, our craft, and our audience. But do we take this performer energy into our day-to-day lives? Most days, we don’t. We think the world will judge us, label us, maybe even laugh at us. Contest Chair, Toastmasters, and my performers in this room and all over the world, for me, finding the stage was not easy. I grew up in India, where my dad told me I had three career options: to be a doctor, engineer, or be a disappointment. And disappointment had its own hierarchy. If I’m in a corporate job, I’m least disappointment. But I wanted to climb the Mount Everest of disappointment. I wanted to be a Bollywood actor. You know, the kind of actor who can: fix the bulb, pet the dog, fix the bulb, pet the dog. But I never had the courage to tell my father, because if I did, like any other Indian dad, he would say, “Actor? Somebody is going to get a beating.” So I kept the dream far away. Then life, like a Bollywood movie, had its twists and turns, and I ended up in Amsterdam. One day, sitting in a boring finance lecture, I thought, “What if I gave myself one chance to be an actor?” Next day, I skipped class and went for an audition of a play: Romeo and Juliet. I wanted to be conservative, so I went for the role of Romeo. The director looked at me and said, “You want to be a Romeo?” Because there were 20 other actors: tall, chiseled jaw, enthusiastic. And there was me… enthusiastic. He said, “Okay, Mr. Bollywood. Show me how you would propose to your Juliet.” Showtime. I looked at Juliet and said, “Oh Juliet, oh Juliet, you are the love of my life. Your eyes are as pretty as the River Ganga. Your figure is as perfect as the Taj Mahal. Your breath is as fresh as Indian curry. Tell me, Juliet, will you be mine? If your answer is yes, just nod. But if your answer is no, just nod. And I’ll understand.” “Cut, cut, cut! Oh my God, you’re the best actor. You deserve an Oscar.” I believed him… for five seconds. Then I saw everyone laughing. And I thought, that’s it. My dream is dead. I can never be a performer. So I did what anybody with a broken dream in Amsterdam would do: I took up a job in finance. And finance professionals are really fun. They’re curious, energetic, open to new ideas. They only believe in data and numbers, and I’m sure when they sleep at night, they sleep with a spreadsheet on. There I was: crunching numbers, making Excel sheets, wearing blue and black suits to fit in. And attending finance town halls that were as interesting as the Toastmasters annual general meetings. Not the one from yesterday… from past years. Then one day, we had to do a presentation with 24 hours’ notice. Everybody panicked. Nobody knew what to do. And something in me woke up: the performer. I went to my manager and said, “Can I do the presentation?” “Are you sure, Sabi?” (That was a yes, by the way.) “Use the existing slides.” (That was a no, by the way.) So I threw away those data-heavy slides. I put on my red suit. And I used a story with opening, connection, and laughter. And guess what? I saw my colleagues laugh for the first time. Agree, this never happens in finance. After the presentation, my manager came to me and said, “Dude, you should be the new CEO!” Promotion? No. Chief Entertainment Officer. Then he said, “You do this so well, you should do it more often. You should teach us.” And I thought, wait… to fit in, I was trying to be one of them. But the day I unleashed the performer in me, people liked me. People liked my performance. And that’s when it hit me, my friends: I do not need a movie set to live my dream. I can be a performer even in a boardroom with a clicker and a projector. A clicker and a projector. My dear performers in the room, too often we hold our energy and we hold our ideas because we think it’s not appropriate for the room. Let’s not do that. Let’s unleash the ideas. Let’s unleash the energy. Yes, some days you will be trolled. Some days you will be rejected. Some days you’ll be made fun of. But trust me, some days you’ll light up a room. Someday, you’ll make someone’s day. And who knows, someday, you may even change someone’s life. So my dear performers, if life asks you, wherever you are, whichever stage you want to be on, “Are you ready?” Put on your red suit or your red dress. Step on the stage. Smile. And just nod.

Situation

I love you so, so much. I was talking to the stage. Because you should know what the stage does to us. This is that one safe space where we can be creative, weird, wacky, right? Give me a little woo-hoo if you love the stage. Woo-hoo! When we’re up here, nothing else in this world matters except the stage, our craft, and our audience.

Hindrance

But do we take this performer energy into our day-to-day lives? Most days, we don’t. We think the world will judge us, label us, maybe even laugh at us. Contest Chair, Toastmasters, and my performers in this room and all over the world, for me, finding the stage was not easy. I grew up in India, where my dad told me I had three career options: to be a doctor, engineer, or be a disappointment. And disappointment had its own hierarchy. If I’m in a corporate job, I’m least disappointment. But I wanted to climb the Mount Everest of disappointment. I wanted to be a Bollywood actor. You know, the kind of actor who can: fix the bulb, pet the dog, fix the bulb, pet the dog. But I never had the courage to tell my father, because if I did, like any other Indian dad, he would say, “Actor? Somebody is going to get a beating.”

Action

So I kept the dream far away. Then life, like a Bollywood movie, had its twists and turns, and I ended up in Amsterdam. One day, sitting in a boring finance lecture, I thought, “What if I gave myself one chance to be an actor?” Next day, I skipped class and went for an audition of a play: Romeo and Juliet. I wanted to be conservative, so I went for the role of Romeo. The director looked at me and said, “You want to be a Romeo?” Because there were 20 other actors: tall, chiseled jaw, enthusiastic. And there was me… enthusiastic. He said, “Okay, Mr. Bollywood. Show me how you would propose to your Juliet.” Showtime. I looked at Juliet and said, “Oh Juliet, oh Juliet, you are the love of my life. Your eyes are as pretty as the River Ganga. Your figure is as perfect as the Taj Mahal. Your breath is as fresh as Indian curry. Tell me, Juliet, will you be mine? If your answer is yes, just nod. But if your answer is no, just nod. And I’ll understand.” “Cut, cut, cut! Oh my God, you’re the best actor. You deserve an Oscar.” I believed him… for five seconds. Then I saw everyone laughing. And I thought, that’s it. My dream is dead. I can never be a performer. So I did what anybody with a broken dream in Amsterdam would do: I took up a job in finance. And finance professionals are really fun. They’re curious, energetic, open to new ideas. They only believe in data and numbers, and I’m sure when they sleep at night, they sleep with a spreadsheet on. There I was: crunching numbers, making Excel sheets, wearing blue and black suits to fit in. And attending finance town halls that were as interesting as the Toastmasters annual general meetings. Not the one from yesterday… from past years. Then one day, we had to do a presentation with 24 hours’ notice. Everybody panicked. Nobody knew what to do. And something in me woke up: the performer. I went to my manager and said, “Can I do the presentation?” “Are you sure, Sabi?” (That was a yes, by the way.) “Use the existing slides.” (That was a no, by the way.) So I threw away those data-heavy slides. I put on my red suit. And I used a story with opening, connection, and laughter.

Result

And guess what? I saw my colleagues laugh for the first time. Agree, this never happens in finance. After the presentation, my manager came to me and said, “Dude, you should be the new CEO!” Promotion? No. Chief Entertainment Officer. Then he said, “You do this so well, you should do it more often. You should teach us.” And I thought, wait… to fit in, I was trying to be one of them. But the day I unleashed the performer in me, people liked me. People liked my performance.

Evaluation

And that’s when it hit me, my friends: I do not need a movie set to live my dream. I can be a performer even in a boardroom with a clicker and a projector. A clicker and a projector. My dear performers in the room, too often we hold our energy and we hold our ideas because we think it’s not appropriate for the room. Let’s not do that. Let’s unleash the ideas. Let’s unleash the energy. Yes, some days you will be trolled. Some days you will be rejected. Some days you’ll be made fun of. But trust me, some days you’ll light up a room. Someday, you’ll make someone’s day. And who knows, someday, you may even change someone’s life. So my dear performers, if life asks you, wherever you are, whichever stage you want to be on, “Are you ready?” Put on your red suit or your red dress. Step on the stage. Smile. And just nod.

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