Most people are just about as happy as they make up their minds to be. Delaying happiness along with gratification is quite another thing, because each milestone along your path ought to have its own form of happiness.
Larry Bock
UC Berkeley College of Chemistry Commencement 2007, 2007
Film zaczyna się od 7:14 — momentu, w którym padł ten cytat
Historia tego cytatu
Entrepreneur Larry Bock delivered the commencement address at UC Berkeley's College of Chemistry in 2007, speaking with raw honesty about a nervous breakdown he had suffered just a year earlier — triggered by severe vision loss, his brother's suicide, unresolved grief over his father's death, and an ambition that could never be satisfied. These experiences had given him hard-won perspective on what truly matters. Quoting Abraham Lincoln, Bock warned the high-achieving chemistry graduates against the trap of perpetual delayed gratification — the habit of saying 'I will be happy when my company goes public' or 'when I win the Nobel Prize.' While delayed gratification is essential for achievement, Bock argued that delaying happiness is a different and dangerous thing. Each milestone along the way deserves its own celebration, and waiting for some ultimate achievement to grant permission for joy is a recipe for a joyless life.