Each moment is a procession from the future into the past and the sweet spot is always the present. Live in that sweet spot. Be present.
speech graduation balance
Wynton Marsalis
University of Vermont Commencement 2013, 2013
This is not preparation for life. This is life.
speech graduation wisdom
Wynton Marsalis
University of Vermont Commencement 2013, 2013
The more distracted we become, and the more emphasis we put on speed at the expense of depth, the less able we are to care.
speech graduation empathy
Jonathan Safran Foer
Middlebury College Commencement 2013, 2013
There is no better use of a life than to be attentive to such needs. There are as many ways to do this as there are kinds of loneliness, but all of them require presence, all of them require the hard work of human computing.
speech graduation empathy
Jonathan Safran Foer
Middlebury College Commencement 2013, 2013
Life is about nouns and verbs. It's about action, about people doing. When you cut out adjectives and adverbs, you cut out the things that qualify action, or interpret or analyze action. You reach the pure essence of experience.
speech graduation wisdom
Tracy Chevalier
Oberlin College Commencement, 2013, 2013
I hope if you learn anything from me today, if you remember anything that I say today, I hope you'll remember about the power of the pause. Pausing today and throughout your entire life allows you to take a breath. It allows you to take a beat. It allows you to be in the moment.
speech graduation patience
Maria Shriver
USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism Commencement 2012, 2012
When someone close to you dies, it is not the big moments you remember, but small moments — the seemingly insignificant way Dave wheezed slightly when he laughed hard, or how he loved the way the earth smelled in the fall. If you can notice these moments, breathe them in, even for a second, then you have achieved success.
speech graduation gratitude
Marian Fontana
Massachusetts School of Law Commencement 2006, 2006
When someone close to you dies, it is not the big moments you remember, but small moments. If you can notice these moments, breathe them in, even for a second, on your way to the courtroom, or the office, then you have achieved success.
speech graduation gratitude
Marian Fontana
Massachusetts School of Law Commencement 2006, 2006
The most obvious, important realities are often the ones that are hardest to see and talk about.
speech graduation wisdom
David Foster Wallace
Kenyon College Commencement 2005, 2005
Do one thing at a time. Give each experience all your attention. Try to resist being distracted by other sights and sounds, other thoughts and tasks, and when it is, guide your mind back to what you're doing.
speech graduation discipline
John Walsh
Wheaton College Commencement 2000, 2000