To help them with this Grand Canyon step, speakers are
invited to give inspirational talks to the graduates in hopes that they will
keep walking when they reach the other side of the stage, somehow get a job and
start sending money immediately to benefit the alumni cash register.
As in all things, though, some of the speeches are better
than others.
Columnist David Brooks told graduates that they will not
find their passion. It will find them. For many of the teens I know, that passion
includes racking up hours of "Call of Duty: Black Ops II" from the living room couch
while consuming mountains of Doritos dipped in Cheez Whiz.
Dick Costelo, CEO with Twitter, told students they won't
recognize the impact they're having in life until they're having it. That's
sort of like realizing you've backed your car into a tree when you hear the
thud.
Katie Couric knows how to inspire an audience. She told
the graduates at Randolph Macon College in Virginia that everybody's terminal.
Exactly what 18-year-olds who can finally buy beer legally want to hear.
Rep. John Lewis from Georgia probably gave a speech that
got the most applause – he told the Class of 2013 to go out and find a way to
get in trouble. Good trouble, he cautioned, but I don't know a teenager who
would've listened for the caveat after hearing they had the green light to dabble
in shenanigans.
Activist Bill McKibben told graduates in Florida not to
let their minds go back to sleep. As if any of them been chomping at the bit in
their morning classes. Ever try staying awake in a statistics or Elizabethan
poetry class? I rest my case.
Newark Mayor Cory Booker told students to listen to the
still voice in their heads. I don't know about the graduates at Yale, but the
little voice inside my head when I was 18 told me to go back to bed, listen to
my "Rubber Soul" album for the 98th time and keep believing the
Beatles would, one day, reunite.
Oprah told Harvard graduates that failure is "life
trying to move us into another direction." That direction, for some, might
be the serving frappuccino at the local coffee house if they decided to major
in the offbeat. Case in point, a course my Aggie son actually took and I paid
for: "The Language of Love."
Seriously. I paid for that.
Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson told Rice graduates
that they still have a lot to learn. Most 18-year-olds believe they already
know everything. Asking them to admit they have a lot yet to learn is like asking
my dog to sing "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall."
Television writer Jon Lovett told the graduates at Pitzer
College that it's time to move on. They annoyed their parents for years and
their professors for the past four. Now it's time to go out into the world and
annoy someone else. Unfortunately, many of them will repeat the cycle, move
back home and resume annoying their parents.
Rob Lazebnik, a writer on "The Simpsons" penned
a great tongue-in-cheek articles advising graduates to do what they do best –
get lucky.
So roll the dice, Class of 2013 and hope Lady Luck is on
your side.
This column was originally published in The Fort Bend Herald.
No comments:
Post a Comment