The
text of Linda's insipational address to the graduates follows...
"When
I was asked to speak at this graduation my first reaction was why
me? I'm just a kid. Then I remembered that a few years have passed
since I went to this college. Too many years have passed. But they
have been really good years, and maybe that is why I was asked to
speak.
I
still had some moments of panic. What would I say? What could I
possibly say that would not be forgotten a few minutes after walking
out of this room? So I thought back over some of the speeches that
I had heard in my life, and the truth was that I couldn't remember
most of them. I remembered how uncomfortable the seats were, the
clearing of throats, the fact that it was usually too hot, but I
didn't remember the speeches. Mother nature has given mankind an
amazing ability to forget. It's a blessing in times of sadness and
pain, but most of the time it's a curse.
I
may not remember most of the speeches, but every now and then I
would hear something that would stay with me. So I wrote something
down and I can only hope that somewhere in it you might find that
one thing that causes a spark that doesn't just burn out a few hours
after you walk out of here.
I
have been asked many times over the years, 'How do you get into
show business?' My answer was always the same. 'I have no idea;
it sort of fell in my lap.' But somewhere along the way my answer
started to change. I started to have an answer.
I
honestly believe
The hardest part of getting what you want is knowing what it
is you really want.
It sounds simple but it's not. Oh, it's easy to think, 'I want to
do this or I want to do that.' But unless you can actually imagine
it in detail, then you don't really understand what it is and have
no way of knowing how to get it.
I
believe that if you really know what it is that you want, then somehow
you rearrange the world around you to make it happen. What feels
like luck is really just the world responding to the energy that
you are putting out. But to do that you have to know what it is
you want
and you can't want it just a little.
I
knew what I wanted to be when I was eight years old. It was 1969.
That's the year I 'Woke Up.' It's the year that I can clearly
remember writing in the upper right hand corner of all my school
papers, and it's the year I first watched Judy Garland sing 'Somewhere
Over The Rainbow' in the Wizard of Oz. A shy eight-year-old kid
from Minnesota found her PASSION. I wanted to be a singer,
and it didn't matter that I was too shy to sing in front of anyone
except our three cows, two horses and a sheep named Clara.
I'm
not here to promote show business. Far from it.
The single most important thing that I can say tonight is
FIND YOUR PASSION.
It
doesn't matter what it is. Producing a three-legged chicken, designing
a better toothpick or running for President. The most important
thing is to FIND YOUR PASSION because it's the spark that's
going to fuel your life. It's going to get you up in the morning
and make you too excited to sleep at night. It's your single best
defense against apathy and boredom. It's the antidote to Pay Per
View, Infomercials, Soap Operas, and Reality TV.
FIND
YOUR PASSION AND DREAM BIG.
Don't
be afraid of the brass ring. If I had announced to the kids in my
9th grade math class that one day I was going to make record albums,
fly around the country giving concerts, star in a Broadway show
and sell out Carnegie Hall, they would have laughed me right out
of the class room. (I'm sure my math teacher was probably hoping
I could sing because I certainly wasn't any good at math.) Carnegie
Hall was my dream. Maybe because it was a concert hall so famous
that its name reached the ears of a kid growing up in Garrison,
Minnesota. (You have to multiply the entire population of Garrison
16 times in order to fill Carnegie Hall.) I may have had to use
a calculator to figure that out, but I have now played Carnegie
Hall four times.
DREAMS
DO COME TRUE IF YOU KNOW WHAT IT IS YOU WANT AND YOU HAVE A PASSION
FOR IT.
Maybe
all the parents and teachers will cringe at this next remark, but
I'll say it anyway.
DON'T WORRY ABOUT REALITY.
Reality
sounds like a nice word, but think about how it is so often used.
'You
have to face reality
'
'I know you WANT this but the reality is
'
'You have to face the reality of the situation
'
'You have to live in the real world
'
I'm
not saying live in fantasyland. I'm saying don't worry about reality.
Reality is something none of us can run away from anyway. It always
grabs hold of you around the age of 40. So run ahead of it for as
long as you can.
DON'T
LET REALITY BE A NEGATIVE VOICE IN YOUR HEAD.
If
I had listened to that negative voice, I wouldn't have pushed myself
through all the difficult and sometimes scary moments that led me
to the next step.
In
1997, I decided to run the New York Marathon. I had done a lot of
distance running my life, but the 'reality' was that
I was 36.
I was working eight shows a week on Broadway.
I hadn't done much running in a few years,
and my knees were already starting to bother me
because of all the running I had already done in my life.
During
the months of training, I discovered how loud that negative voice
of reality can be. As I ran, this nagging voice in my head would
say,
'Why
don't you stop?'
'You don't really want to do this.'
'You don't need to do this.'
'You can't possibly run 27 miles.'
'Why don't you run into that restaurant over there and have a hamburger
and a margarita!'
The
reality is
most people never run a marathon.
The
voice repeated those statistics every step of my training.
I ran the New York Marathon with my best friend. She likes to talk;
I like to listen. She talked nonstop for 27 miles loud enough to
drown out that negative voice. We ran in the pouring rain, and finishing
that race was one of the most satisfying moments of my life.
I
don't know that I could have done it alone.
FIND SOMEONE WHO SHARES YOUR DREAM.
Find a friend to help motivate you. Find a mentor to help guide
you. There are very few things in life that can be done alone so
find someone who shares your dream. No matter what it is. There
is someone else dreaming of that three legged chicken, so find them.
Don't
let reality be a negative voice in your head.
Don't let it get in the way of your dream.
DON'T
LET SOMEONE ELSE TELL YOU WHAT YOUR DREAM SHOULD BE.
I
recently spent some time with a young 17 year-old girl who wants
to do musical theater. This girl is tiny for her age, and there
is not really anything about her that says theater performer let
alone theater star. She didn't get a part in the school play this
semester; they have her doing props backstage, stage crew. But she
has a passion for theater that burns so hot that she can hardly
sit still, and it isn't up to me or anyone else to extinguish the
fire in her eyes.
You
can't be afraid to fail. If you're afraid to fail, then you can't
really succeed because you will always be playing it safe and the
best apples are always on the highest part of the tree. Up there
where that brass ring is hanging.
That
17 year-old girl will succeed. It may or may not be on the stage,
but because she is pursuing a passion, she is alive with a light
and an energy that is going to bring positive things into her life.
I'm
NOT always great at this next point, but I know how important it
is.
FINISH
WHAT YOU START.
Most
of the really successful people that I know are people who are finishers.
It is so easy to start things. (I start things all the time. I'm
an idea person.) It's much harder to finish them.
Everyone
knows the saying, 'The Journey Is Everything!'
That's because most of the fun is really the process of getting
there.
But you won't get anywhere in your journey unless you finish the
steps along the way.
Beginnings
get all the excitement.
Endings get all the glory.
It's the hard work in the middle that knocks a lot of us out of
the running. So finish what you start.
BE
AWARE OF THE PASSING OF TIME.
On my 9th birthday, my Mother said something to me that I will never
forget. She said, 'Well, you will never be 8 again.' She's probably
cringing right now, but she actually did me a favor. From that moment
on, I was always aware of the passing of time.
Time
flies
That's
a knowledge that older people are endlessly trying to make younger
people understand. Trying and failing. But think back to grade school
when summer vacation seemed to last a lifetime. The point is that
if you have a dream and a passion to make it come true, then don't
wait and don't waste too much time because dreams take work and
work takes time.
You
never know where you are going to hear something that stays with
you. A few years ago, I was taking a limo service to the airport
and I was chatting away with the driver (because I'm from Minnesota
and people from Minnesota are friendly), and at the end of the ride
he told me his secret to a happy life. He said the secret to a happy
life is three things:
SOMEONE
TO LOVE
SOMETHING TO DO
AND SOMETHING TO LOOK FORWARD TO.
It
seemed very simple, but the more I thought about it the more I realized
how right he was.
I
WISH ALL OF YOU A HAPPY LIFE.
FIND
YOUR PASSIONS.
LIVE
YOUR DREAMS.
FIND
SOMEONE TO SHARE YOUR PASSIONS AND DREAMS WITH.
BE
AWARE OF THE PASSING OF TIME
AND
HOW PRECIOUS YOUR LIFE TRULY IS."
(For
a limited time, click on any of the above images to watch a video
(.wmv) of Linda's speech!)
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