Are You Ready to Graduate?
Tony Martignetti, MBA, PCC
Advisor to Outlier Leaders | Chief Inspiration Officer | Former Biotech Executive | 2X Best-Selling Author | TEDx Speaker (2M Views) | Podcast Host | Experience Designer | Artist, Coach, Curator, Connector, Explorer
It is time to celebrate a new generation of graduates filled with hopes and dreams to change the world! I am always optimistic about what can happen when we unleash new minds into the?workplace. Converging the new generation's energy, excitement, and fresh perspective with the existing generation's life lessons, experiences, and insights is what creates a lasting impact.?
To the class of 2022…?
After all that we have been through over the past year, we have all gone through some sort of rite of passage. As graduation season is upon us, we should approach this time as a new beginning, a fresh start, a rite of passage, even if it is more a mindset shift than anything else.?
When I think of graduation season, I think of the advice we pass on to the wide-eyed grads who are ready to take on the world. There are a few commencement speeches that immediately come to mind as absolute classics: Steve Jobs (Stanford, 2005), Michelle Obama (Tuskegee, 2015), David Foster Wallace (Kenyon, 2005), and Natalie Portman (Harvard, 2015). Sometimes they are funny, sometimes they are profound, sometimes they shake us up, and sometimes they combine all of these elements. What have been your favorite commencement speeches, and why? If you were to give a commencement address, what would you say??
I want to challenge you to write your own mini-commencement speech for an audience of one… that is you, of course. Yes, you read that correctly; write an "imperfect" message to yourself to commemorate this moment in time and share the lessons you have learned about life up to this point. What do you want to remind yourself in this very moment as you embark on your next bold step? There are no rules or proper structure to your commencement speech, but here are some questions to get the juices flowing:?
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I recently rediscovered?Steve Jobs' commencement address? to the Stanford University graduating class of 2005. It is inspiring for so many reasons. Steve was not for everyone, but this speech hit a chord with me. As I looked at it now, I uncovered a few themes: Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life (choose your own path). Don't be trapped by dogma which is living with the results of other people's thinking. Don't let the noise of other people's opinions drown out your own inner voice.?
And most importantly, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition; they somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary. The one line that really hits home is, "Remembering that I will be dead soon is the most important tool I have ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life. Because almost everything, all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment of failure, these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important."
Stay Hungry, Stay Foolish!!
And make sure to check out my podcast, The Virtual Campfire - here are some exciting past episodes below!
I was recently joined by Alain Hunkins , keynote speaker, facilitator, and coach, where he came to share how he helps people transition from high-achieving people to becoming high-achieving leaders. Listen in to our conversation here .
Professional burnout has been a hot topic lately. Is it inevitable, especially in the corporate world? I sat down to discuss this topic with transformational coach Georgie Dickins recently. Take a listen here as we discuss the issue of burnout in the workspace.
Bachelor of Commerce - BCom from Nizam College at Hyderabad Public School
2 年????
Tony Martignetti, great piece---hope you're doing wonderfully well!