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Make a Difference: Washington State University Commencement address
Tue, 05/06/2008 - 15:55 — Tom Vander Ark
A long time ago I received two degrees in extraction-mining and energy finance. I spent the first dozen years of my career implementing what I learned and thinking mostly of myself-my next promotion, my next car, my next house. It worked out pretty well, but there were people around me that reminded me about contribution-making a difference for other people. I come from a line of teachers, farmers, shop owners, and health professionals that quietly served their community. In addition to growing up around good examples, when I became an officer of a public company the CEO required me to get adopt a children's charity. The non-profit organization took me on heartbreaking field trips and showed me discouraging data. In short, they made me an education evangelist. The mentors in my life taught me that contribution is more rewarding than extraction. My work as a public school superintendent was the most difficult but most rewarding period of my life. I had the good fortune of working with thousands of talented teachers, passionate administrators, and mission driven community leaders. They all lived by a motto I was reminded of by the Noon Rotary club-service above self. There is simply nothing more rewarding than teaching, healing, contributing, and community building.
Each of you leave the Palouse headed a different direction with a chance to make a difference. You'll commence a journey where your character will be on display and where people will judge you on commitments kept. Some of you already have a clear sense of calling. Like me, many of you will bounce around for a while before finding a clear sense of purpose. One way or another, you'll find While every form of contribution has meaning and is potentially fulfilling, leadership is the highest contribution. Our world desperately needs leaders. While there's never been a better time to accumulate wealth, but I'm afraid our political process can no longer cope with the complicated and interrelated problems my generation is leaving your generation:
We need leaders in education, in health care, in the non-profit sector, and especially in business. I'm encouraged by education entrepreneurs. I'm encouraged by eco-entrepreneurs. I'm encouraged by health care professional that serve within and seek to improve the system we have. I'm encouraged by for-benefit organizations that seek profit and social benefit. I'm encouraged by new philanthropic leadership-innovative donors focusing on outcomes, taking advantage of the leverage of prizes and providing incentives for entrepreneurs. What I want to tell you is make a difference. Don't just drift. Don't just try to get yours. Find a cause, a place to serve, a place where you can help other people. If you're lucky and persistent, you'll create a place where you can nudge the trajectory of history in a slightly more equitable direction. My friend Milton Lang is being awarded a doctorate degree in education today. He and his wife Janelle are great examples of lives dedicated to service. They are everything this place stands for. They make "World class, face to face" real for young Cougs everyday. My wife, daughter and I are privileged to be here today to celebrate this important milestone with Milt, Janelle, and their beautiful daughters Zayna, and Maliza.
You commence into a world where the needs are great and the opportunities to make a difference are right in front of you.
I believe in all that has never yet been spoken. I want to free what waits within me so that what no one has dared to wish for
may for once spring clear without my contriving. If this is arrogant, God, forgive me, but this is what I need to say. May what I do flow from me like a river, no forcing and no holding back, the way it is with children. Then in these swelling and ebbing currents, these deepening tides moving out, returning, I will sing you as no one ever has, streaming through widening channels into the open sea.
Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God, Anita Barrows and Joanna Macy, Riverhead, 1996 Free what waits within you so that what no one has dared to wish for springs forth. Show the world "world class, face to face" leadership. Lift, build, teach, heal, innovate. Make a difference.
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