THANK YOU, Graduating Class of 2001, Fellow Honorary Degree
Recipients, Distinguished Administration and Faculty, Alumnae,
Parents, Family and Friends, thank you all so much
for inviting me to speak with you today. I graduated from Mount
Holyoke in 1985. Here I am 16 years later. The learned faculty
is seated there behind me, and so, before I get into the swing
of things, I want to state that any grammatical errors, historical
fabrications and inappropriate flights of fancy contained within
the following speech are the sole responsibility of the Commencement
Speaker and, if found objectionable, should in no way be viewed
as an example of the caliber of education one would receive at
Mount Holyoke College.
It is commencement and you all are commencingyou are beginning.
Today is yr birthday. Its a sort of birthday for me too: this
is my first honorary degree. Yr sitting there looking forward
into me and Im standing here looking forward into you. I'll be
yr mirror for a few minutes, if you'll be mine. All of us together,
we are commencing. It is the beginning of things, its also
the end of things and Ive brought along 16 SUGGESTIONS
which may be of useas you walk through the rest of yr lives.
Suggestions and Advice are funny things. In 1982 I took a creative
writing class with James Baldwin. He suggested to me that I try
playwrighting and I tried playwrighting and here I am today. That
was some good advice. But it wasnt the best advice I ever got.
The BEST advice I ever got was also the WORST advice any
one ever gave me. In high school I had a very stern English
teacher and one gloomy day she summoned me into her gloomy office.
She knew I loved English and that I wanted to study literature
and perhaps someday become a writer"Dont study English,"
she said, "you havent got the talent for it." What a horrible
thing to say. What an excellent suggestion. It was an excellent
suggestion because it forced me to think for myself. And thats
my first suggestion for you.
SUGGESTION #1: CULTIVATE THE ABILITY TO THINK FOR YRSELF. When
someone gives you advice, you lay their advice along side yr own
thoughts and feelings, and if what they suggest jives with what
youve got going on inside, then you follow their suggestion. ON
THE OTHER HANDthere are lots of people out there who will
suggest all kinds of stupid stuff for you to incorporate into
your life. There are lots of people who will encourage you to
stray from your hearts desire. Go ahead and let them speak their
piece, and you may even want to give them a little smile depending
on your mood, but if what they suggest does not jive with the
thoughts and feelings that are already alive and growing beautifully
inside you, then dont follow their suggestion. THINK for yrself,
LISTEN to yr heart, TUNE IN to yr gut. These are just the things
for which Mount Holyoke has educated you. Youve all received an
excellent education here and education, excellent education,
is just a kind of ear training. That's all it really isInner
Ear Training.
SUGGESTION #2: EMBRACE DISCIPLINE. Give yrself the opportunity
to discover that discipline is just an extension of the love you
have for yrselfdiscipline is not, as a lot of people think,
some horrid exacting torturous self flagellating activityDiscipline
is just an expression of Lovelike the Disciplesthey
didnt follow Christ because they HAD TO.
SUGGESTION #3: PRACTICE PATIENCE. Whether you sit around like
I do, working for that perfect word, or yr working toward a dream
job, or wishing for a dreamy sweetheart. Things will come to you
when yr ready to handle themnot before. Just keep walking
yr road.
SUGGESTION #4; And as you walk yr road, as you live yr life,
RELISH THE ROAD. And relish the fact that the road of yr life
will probably be a windy road. Something likethe yellow
brick road in the WIZARD OF OZ. You see the glory of OZ up aheadbut
there are lots of twists and turns along the waylots of
tin men, lots of green women.
SUGGESTION #5: DEVELOP THE ART OF MAKING A SILK PURSE FROM A
SOW'S EAR.
Cause, you know, it aint whatcha got, its how you work it.
SUGGESTION #6: For every 30 min of tv you watch, READ one poem
outloud. For every work of literature you read, spend at least
30min in the mall, or in a mall equivalent such as Wal-Mart. This
is cross-fertilizationa now-age form of crop rotationa
way to cross train yr spirit and keep interested in everything
and not get too stuck in yr ways.
Speaking of yr ways and yr way:
SUGGESTION #7: GET OUT OF YOUR WAY. You can spend yr life
tripping on yrself, you can also spend yr life tripping
yrself up. Get out of yr own way.
Yr young, brilliant, and today is yr birthday. Yve got yr whole
lives ahead of you and each of you will spend yr life doing some
thing, or maybe a host of things. Dont just spend your
life.
SPLURGE
SUGGESTION #8: SPLURGE YR LIFE BY DOING SOMETHING
YOU LOVE. My husband Paul is a musician. He says that the concept
of talent is overrated because "talent" is really the gift of
love. "Talent" happens when yr in love with something and you
devote yr life to it and its yr love of it that makes you want
to keep doing it, its yr love of it which helps you overcome the
obstacles along the way, and its yr love of it that begets
a talent for it.
SUGGESTIONS #9, 10, 11, 12, & 13: Eat Yr Vegetables, Floss Yr
Teeth, Try Meditation, Get Some Exercise, & SHARPEN YR 7 SENSES:
the basic 5 Senses + the 6th Sense: ESP & the 7th Sense which
is yr sense of HUMOR.
16 years ago I sat where one of you is sitting now. The class
of 1985 was graduating. And we were lucky as we had a great poet
speaking to us. She was a great writer and an MHC alum. She was
pretty and poised and she had such graceso much grace that
I sat there looking at her thinking that she looked more as if
she had gone to Smith. Anyway it was sunny and we were all in
black probably sweating a little and she spoke brilliantly and
eloquently and to this day I have absolutely no memory of what
she said. I dont remember one word of her brilliant commencement
address the address that launched the class of 1985. Not one word.
I want you to catch my drift. Im not saying our speaker was boring.
Im saying that I dont remember what she said. But I do remember
some words that went through my head at the very moment our speakers
words were passing by. It was a voice, coming from my gut, a voice
coming from my heart and the voice said: "Ah, Suzan-Lori Parks,
the next degree youre going to receive is an honorary degree from
MHC."
Yep I really said that to myself. And here I am today.
SUGGESTION #14: SAY "THANK YOU" at least once a week.
SUGGESTION #15: LOVE YRSELF. Why not.
16 years from now who will remember these words? Maybe no one.
But maybe someone will. Maybe, from back in 1985, there is a classmate
of mine who, to this day, remembers every word of our commencement
address and this classmate repeats those words and they lighthouse
her stormy days, maybe. Or if not a classmate remembering then
maybe an alum if not an alum maybe a family member, maybe a parent,
up there, gathered in the background having given so much, helping
you get to this special day. Whether my words today will be remembered
is not the issue because, you see, what Im saying to you right
now isnt as important as what you are saying, right now, to yrselves.
SUGGESTION #16: BE BOLD. ENVISION YRSELF LIVING A LIFE THAT
YOU LOVE. Believe, even if you can only muster yr faith for just
this moment, believe that the sort of life you wish to live is,
at this very moment, just waiting for you to summon it up. And
when you wish for it, you begin moving toward it, and it, in turn,
begins moving toward you.
As the great writer James Baldwin said: "Yr crown has been bought
and paid for. All you have to do is put it on yr head."
THANK YOU