When you achieve your dreams, it's not so much what you get — it's who you become.
Diana Nyad
Middlebury College Commencement 2014, 2014
Film zaczyna się od 0:37 — momentu, w którym padł ten cytat
Historia tego cytatu
Diana Nyad, the marathon swimmer who at age 64 became the first person to swim from Cuba to Florida without a shark cage, opened her Middlebury College commencement address with this phrase. She listed the things she 'got' after her historic swim — sitting in the Oval Office with President Obama, a long interview with Oprah, a book contract, even Dancing with the Stars — but made clear that none of these rewards compared to the internal transformation the journey produced. Nyad's entire speech was structured around the concept of giving everything you have to the point where you can say 'I couldn't have done it a fingernail better.' This wasn't about achievement in the conventional sense but about the person you become when you commit fully. She had failed the Cuba swim four times before succeeding on the fifth attempt, each failure literally life-threatening. The getting was secondary; the becoming was the point. For Middlebury graduates standing at the beginning of their adult lives, the distinction was crucial. The culture around them measured success in acquisitions — jobs, salaries, status. Nyad was offering an alternative metric: not what you accumulate but who you are when you look in the mirror.