Information

Move Past the Need for Revenge | Winner's Minute With Mac Hammond

Basic shortcuts

Ctrl + SSave subtitles
Ctrl + click
Double click
Edit highlighted caption
TabEdit next caption
Shift + TabEdit previous caption
EscLeave edit mode
Ctrl + SpacePlay / pause video
Ctrl + HomePlay selected caption
Ctrl + EnterSplit caption at cursor position
at current time

Advanced shortcuts

Ctrl + InsertAdd new caption
Ctrl + DeleteDelete selected caption
Ctrl + IEdit currently played segment
Shift + EnterNew line when editing
Ctrl + LeftPlay from -1s
Ctrl + RightPlay from +1s
Alt + LeftShift caption start time -0.1s
Alt + RightShift caption start time +0.1s
Alt + DownShift caption end time -0.1s
Alt + UpShift caption end time +0.1s

Annotation shortcuts

Ctrl + 1Hesitation
Ctrl + 2Speaker noise
Ctrl + 3Background noise
Ctrl + 4Unknown word
Ctrl + 5Wrong segment
Ctrl + 6Crosstalk segment
You are in the read-only mode. Close
00:04.4
00:12.6
Revenge provides the illusion that the person who hurt you will be harmed as much—or even more—than you were.
00:12.7
00:19.6
The reality, however, is that revenge is a quicksand that drags people deeper into hurt and regret.
00:19.7
00:26.0
No forward progress will be made in life until the need for revenge disappears.
00:26.1
00:33.4
We must all realize that kindness and personal character should never be dependent on other people’s action.
00:33.5
00:41.7
If you have been hurt by someone, don’t allow other people’s misdeeds to ruin your life. Make a deliberate choice to forgive—
00:41.8
00:49.4
and then choose forgiveness daily. As Martin Luther King Jr. stated, “Forgiveness is not an occasional act;
00:49.5
00:54.2
it is a constant attitude.” I’m Mac Hammond, and this is the Winner’s Minute.