| I’d
like to start with a little audience participation. Close your eyes
and think of your hero. You just see them, and the way they handle
themselves, in situations, and you think to yourself, that is who
I want to be. And you aspire to be that person every day. Now I
want you, in your mind’s eye, to imagine my hero next to yours:
I’ll describe him for you. My hero’s name is Mark. He’s
tall, not impressively tall, but awkwardly tall. The kind of tall
guy that hits his head on nearly everything in sight, and gets a
“dude what the hell” face from people when he admits
that he can’t dunk. He dresses like a golf caddy, walks around
with a stupid grin on his face, and, even though he lived his whole
life in Massachusetts, inexplicably has a British accent. Ok now
you can open your eyes. All of you that already opened your eyes,
well…you should really learn how to follow directions. I’m
sure my hero isn’t nearly as impressive as the John F Kennedys,
Eleanor Roosevelts, or Frank Millet’s of the world that you
all are imagining, but I did have the pleasure of having him as
one of my best friends growing up. From the time we were young,
Mark was always trying to prove that he was smarter and more mature
than the rest of us, mostly by sharing his insights and musings
on life. Little one-liners that could have been found in fortune
cookies. Every once in a while though, Mark would come up with one
that would truly speak to me. One such little gem, “pearl”
if you will, of wisdom was this: “If you are ever faced with
a difficult problem, there are probably two choices. the smart thing
to do, and the right thing to do.” First let me clarify the
words smart and right. Smart, as Mark meant it, does not mean what
we traditionally think of as smart, like the most intelligent solution.
Smart means what everyone else thinks is smart. What your parents
or your friends, or the academic community at large think is best
for you, or is the correct course of action that your life should
take. Next, the word right. I know right is a very loaded word,
with all these moral connotations. Drop all that off the word for
a second though. What’s right, is what your conscience tells
you. That natural impulse that you can try to fight, but you never
really feel good about going against. We all have an instinct for
what’s right, but how much we listen to it can change as we
grow. Now I know what you’re thinking: There are plenty of
problems, where there is one clear choice that is both smart and
right. Think you’ve got me? Well then I hope you don’t
go to Milton, because you weren’t listening very carefully.
I said difficult problems had these two choices…that’s
why they’re difficult. My seemingly British friend Mark held
the belief that any time we are indecisive, it’s because we
are choosing between what we think is the smart thing to do, and
what we know, deep down, is the right thing. These ideas of Mark,
which I like to call Marxist thought, have come up numerous times
in my Milton career.
Milton Academy is a community of some of the finest individuals
I know. I’m not giving a sound byte for the admissions office
either, it’s true. While some prep schools methodically break
apart a student’s individuality in order to create the perfect
college applicant, Milton encourages us to be ourselves to our fullest
potential. As wonderful as that is, it is sometimes difficult to
get away from thinking of Milton as being all about us. Too often,
I see myself, or someone I know, breaking Mark’s philosophic
rule of life.—We go to a very high-pressure school. I know
that this is news for many of the students in the room, but try
to bear with me on this. I just think that at one point or another
some of us will try too hard to do what we think is the smart thing,
rather than what we know to be the right thing. There are times
when we can be so caught up in the work, that we can forget to take
care of ourselves, and more importantly, each other. Often we are
afraid to put aside an assignment for just a moment, to take care
of our friends, because we are worried it would not be the smart
thing. It’s smart to do your work as soon as possible. It’s
smart to not answer the phone when you’re studying. It’s
smart to leave your friends alone when they need you most. The reason
that you feel the pang of guilt when you ignore the people that
love you to finish an assignment is because you know you haven’t
done the right thing. But its ok…you’re being smart.
As I look back on my time at Milton, the memories that I remember
most fondly, are those when I did not compromise, when I did not
sacrifice what I knew to be right for what I thought to be smart.
For example, freshman year, when I spent all of my free periods
in a class-wide rock, paper, scissors tournament when I should have
been doing my workshop homework. Now I’m not about to stand
here on my graduation day and ask all of you current students to
not work hard…but…don’t work hard! I’m not
saying you should throw your life away in a foolish, self-destructive,
adolescent rage, but do remember that sometimes taking time off
from work doesn’t always lead away from ivy league campus
gates and towards the career of a dog walker. Parents, I know that
this can be difficult to hear, but your child is not a failure if
they don’t get A’s all the time. Sure, ok if they get
a C, put them out on the street, they deserve that, but a couple
of B+’s? come on. Sometimes we need to take a step back, and
settle ourselves a little bit. Ask yourself, what am I really doing
here? Am I really triple-checking an assignment at the expense of
a good night’s sleep? Is that the right thing to do? Actually
its not the smart thing to do either. Once you’re at the stage
where you’re triple checking minor assignments, its time to
get some help.
Someone once told me that there are three types of New England Prep
school students. Imagine three kids walking down the sidewalk. The
first is looking down at the ground. He symbolizes the student that
is always worried. “did I answer all the questions right on
that chem test? Have I studied enough for the in-class essay? Is
my class IV talk well-rehearsed?” The second student walks
with his head pointed straight up at the sky. He sees high school
as another rung on the ladder to college. He thinks, “have
I done enough community service to put on my application? Am I the
head of enough clubs? Is tour guide of the month as impressive as
I think it is?” The third student walks with a level head.
He keeps his eyes focused on what’s going on around him. He
waves to his classmates, gives a friendly nod to his teachers, and
stops to talk with his friends. This is the kind of person Mark
encouraged me to be. Whenever I would complain to him about a math
exam or a big history paper, he’d take me aside, and remind
me to that third prep school student, with a level head.
Even though Mark was always full of little tidbits of wisdom, he
was an easy guy to ignore. His peculiar accent and awkward height
insured that it was almost impossible to ever take him seriously.
I lived my life, with Mark’s ideas as background noise. All
that changed though, when earlier this year my quirky friend Mark
passed away. At his funeral, I could no longer pass off what he
said as just Mark being Mark. Everything he ever said to me began
to resonate with a heavier tone. I started to question myself. Am
I who he wanted me to be? Am I who I want to be?
When I was younger I used to be a big fan of the Calvin and Hobbes
comics by Bill Waterson. I remember one particular strip in the
collection entitled “it’s a magical world”. The
scene is one of the hallmarks of the Calvin and Hobbes collection,
the twosome on a sled, on one of the many hills that seem to make
up the acres of Calvin’s backyard. As they prepare to head
down, Calvin turns to Hobbes and says “In the short term,
it makes me happy to go play outside” in the second panel,
he says “In the long term, it would make me happier to do
well at school and become successful.” In the third panel,
he says “But in the very long term, I know which will make
better memories.” And with that, he takes off down the hill.
This is high school. The best time of your life. As Milton Academy
students, we will all go off to do amazing things, and change the
world, and come back and maybe even donate a building, or some art
or something. But no amount of degrees, awards, and Nobel prizes
will ever compare to the memories that you have made here. So do
yourself a favor, and make the most of your time. And take my Mark’s
advice, and please…please…try to be significantly less
smart.
Thank you.
[Back to Graduation 2007]
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