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  • [ Silence ]

  • >> President Hamlin, faculty, staff, honored guests, parents, students, family, and friends,

  • good morning and congratulations to the Dartmouth graduating class of 2014.

  • [ Applause ]

  • So, this is weird, me giving a speech.

  • In general I do not like giving speeches, giving a speech requires standing in front

  • of large groups of people while they look at you and it also requires talking.

  • I can do the standing part okay, but the you looking and the me talking, I am not a fan.

  • I get this overwhelming feeling of fear, terror really.

  • Dry mouth, heart beats super fast, everything gets a little bit in slow motion,

  • like I might pass out or die or poop my pants or something.

  • I mean don't worry, I'm not going to pass out or die or poop my pants, mainly because just

  • by telling you that it could happen I have somehow neutralized it as an option.

  • Like as if saying it out loud casts some kind of spell where now it cannot possibly happen.

  • Vomit, I could vomit.

  • See, vomiting is now also off the table, neutralized it, we're good.

  • Anyway, the point is, I do not like to give speeches.

  • I'm a writer, I'm a TV writer, I like to write stuff for other people to say.

  • I actually contemplated bringing Ellen Pompeo or Carrie Washington here to say my speech for me,

  • but my lawyer pointed out that when you drag someone across state lines

  • against their will the FBI comes looking for you [laughter].

  • So, I don't like giving speeches in general because of the fear and terror, but this speech,

  • this speech I really did not want to give.

  • A Dartmouth commencement speech, dry mouth, heart beats so, so fast,

  • everything in slow motion, pass out, die, poop.

  • Like it would be fine if this were 20 years ago,

  • if it were back in the day when I graduated from Dartmouth.

  • Twenty-three years ago I was sitting right where you are now, and I was listening

  • to Elizabeth Dole speak and she was great, she was calm

  • and she was confident and it was just different.

  • It felt like she was just talking to a group of people, like a fireside chat with friends,

  • just [inaudible] and like 9000 of her closest friends, because it was 20 years ago

  • and she was just talking to a group of people.

  • Now, 20 years later, this is no fireside chat.

  • It's not just you and me, this speech is filmed and streamed and tweeted and uploaded and PR has

  • like a whole site dedicated to commencement speeches,

  • a whole site just about commencement speeches.

  • There are sites that rate them and mock them and dissect them.

  • It's weird and stressful and kind of vicious if you're a [inaudible] perfectionist writer

  • who [inaudible] public in the first place [laughter].

  • When President Hamlin called me --

  • and by the way I would like to thank President Hamlin calling me way back in January,

  • thus giving me a full six months of terror and panic to enjoy.

  • When he called me I almost said no, almost.

  • Dry mouth, heart beats so, so fast, everything in slow motion, pass out, die, poop.

  • But I'm here, I'm going to do it, I'm doing it.

  • You know why, because I like a challenge, and because this year I made myself a promise

  • that I was going to do the stuff that terrifies me and because 20 plus years ago

  • when I was trudging uphill from the river cluster through all that snow to get

  • to the [inaudible] for play rehearsal, I never imagined that I would one day be standing here,

  • at the old pine lector, staring out at all of you about to throw down on some wisdom

  • in the Dartmouth commencement address [cheering].

  • So, you know, yeah, moments.

  • Also, I'm here because I really, really wanted some EBA's.

  • Okay, I want to say right now that every single time someone asked me what I was going to talk

  • about in this speech I would boldly and confidently tell them

  • that I had all kinds of wisdom to share.

  • I was lying.

  • I feel wildly unqualified to give you advice.

  • There is no wisdom here.

  • So, all I can do is talk about some stuff that could maybe be useful to you

  • from one Dartmouth grad to another.

  • Some stuff that would never show

  • up in a [inaudible] voice over or a [inaudible] monologue.

  • Some stuff that I probably shouldn't be telling you here now, because of the uploading

  • and the streaming and the tweeting.

  • But I'm going to pretend that it is 20 years ago, that it's just you and me,

  • that we're having a fireside chat.

  • Screw the outside world and what they think, I've already said poop like five times anyway,

  • things are getting real up in here [laughter].

  • Okay, wait, before I talk to you, I want to talk to your parents, because the other thing

  • about it being 20 years later is that I'm a mother now,

  • so I know some things, some very different things.

  • I have three girls, I've been to the show.

  • You don't know what that means what your parents do.

  • You think this day is all about you, but your parents, the people who raised you,

  • the people who endured you, they potty trained you, they taught you to read,

  • they've survived you as a teenager, they have suffered 21 years

  • and not once did they kill you [laughter].

  • This day, you call it your graduation day, but this day is not about you.

  • This is their day, this is the day they take back their lives [applause].

  • This is the day they earn their freedom.

  • This day is their independence day.

  • So, parents I salute you and as I have an eight month old,

  • I hope to join your ranks of freedom in 20 years.

  • Okay, so here comes the real deal part of the speech or you might call it some random stuff --

  • some random [inaudible] things I should know before I graduate.

  • You ready?

  • When people give these kinds of speeches, they usually tell you all kinds of wise

  • and heartfelt things, they have wisdom to impart, they have lessons to share.

  • They tell you, follow your dreams, listen to your spirit, change the world, make your mark,

  • find your inner voice and make it sing, embrace failure, dream, dream and dream big,

  • as a matter of fact dream and don't stop dreaming until all of your dreams come true.

  • I think that's crap.

  • I think a lot of people dream, and while they are busy dreaming the really happy people,

  • the really successful people, the really interesting,

  • engaged, powerful people are busy doing.

  • The dreamers, they stare at the sky and they make plans, and they hope,

  • and they talk about it endlessly, and they start a lot of sentences with I want to be or I wish.

  • I want to be a writer, I wish I could travel around the world and they dream of it.

  • The button up ones meet for cocktails and they brag about their dreams

  • and the hippie ones have vision words and they meditate about their dreams and maybe you write

  • in journals about your dreams or discuss it endlessly with your best friend

  • or your girlfriend or your mother and it feels really good.

  • You're talking about it and you're planning it kind of, you are blue skying your life

  • and that is what everyone says you should be doing, right?

  • I mean that's what Oprah and Bill Gates did to get successful, right?

  • No. Dreams are lovely but they're just dreams fleeting, [inaudible], pretty.

  • But dreams do not come true just because you dream them,

  • its hard work that makes things happen, it's hard work that creates change.

  • So, lesson one I guess is ditch the dream and be a doer not a dreamer.

  • Maybe you know exactly what it is you dream of being or maybe you're paralyzed

  • because you have no idea what your passion is.

  • The truth is, it doesn't matter, you don't have to know, you just have to keep moving forward,

  • just to keep doing something, seizing the next opportunity,

  • staying open to trying something new.

  • It doesn't have to fit your vision of the perfect job or the perfect life.

  • Perfect is boring and dreams are not real, just do, So you think, I wish I could travel.

  • Great, sell your crappy car, buy a ticket to Bangkok and go, right now, I'm serious.

  • You want to be a writer?

  • [Inaudible] so start writing.

  • You don't have a job?

  • Get one, any job.

  • Don't sit at home waiting for the magical opportunity, who are you, Prince William?

  • No, get a job, go to work [laughter].

  • Do something until you can do something else.

  • I did not dream of being a TV writer, never, not once when I was here in the hallowed halls

  • of the Ivy League did I say to myself, self I want to write TV.

  • You know what I wanted to be?

  • I wanted to be Nobel prize winning author Tony Morrison, that was my dream.

  • I blue skied it like crazy, I dreamed and dreamed,

  • and while I was dreaming I was living in my sister's basement.

  • Dreamers often end up living in the basements of relatives, FYI.

  • Anyway, there I was in that basement and I was dreaming

  • of being Nobel Prize winning author Tony Morrison and guess what?

  • I couldn't be Nobel Prize winning author Tony Morrison, because Tony Morrison already had

  • that job and she wasn't interested in giving it up.

  • So, one day I was sitting in that basement and I read an article that said --

  • it was in the New York Times and it said it was harder to get into USC film school

  • than it was to get into Harvard Law School, and I thought I could dream

  • about being Tony Morrison or I could do.

  • At film school I'd start an entirely new way of telling stories, a way that suited me,

  • a way that brought me joy, a way that flipped the switch in my brain

  • and changed the way I saw the world.

  • Years later I had dinner with Tony Morrison and all she wanted to talk

  • about was Grey's Anatomy [laughter].

  • That never would've happened if I hadn't stopped dreaming

  • of becoming her and gotten busy becoming myself.

  • Lesson two --

  • [ Applause ]

  • -- lesson two is that tomorrow is going to be the worst day ever for you.

  • When I graduated from Dartmouth that day in 1991, when I was sitting right where you are

  • and I was staring up at Elizabeth Dole speaking,

  • I will admit that I have no idea what she was saying, couldn't even listen to her.

  • Not because I was overwhelmed or emotional or any of that,

  • but because I had a serious hangover [laughter], like an epic, painful hangover.

  • And here is where I might want to apologize to President Hamlin because I know

  • that you are trying to build a better and more responsible Dartmouth and I applaud you

  • and I admire you and it is very necessary,

  • but I was really freaking drunk the night before [laughter].

  • And the reason I'd been so drunk the night before, the reason I'd done upside

  • down margarita shots at Bones Gate, was because I knew that after graduation I was going

  • to take off my cap and gown and my parents were going to pack my stuff in the car

  • and I was going to go home and probably never come back to Hanover again.

  • And even if I did come back it wouldn't matter because it wouldn't be the same

  • because I didn't live here anymore.

  • On my graduation day I was grieving.

  • My friends were celebrating, they were partying, they were excited, so happy, no more school,

  • no more books, no more teachers, dirty looks.

  • And I was like, are you freaking kidding me?

  • You get all the froyo you want here, the gym is free, the apartments in Manhattan are smaller

  • than my suite in North Mass., who cared if there was no place to get my hair done.

  • All my friends are here, I have a theatre company here, I was grieving.

  • I knew enough about how the world works, enough about how adulthood plays out to be grieving.

  • Here's where I'm going to embarrass myself

  • and make you all feel maybe a little bit better about yourselves.

  • I literally laid down on the floor of my dorm room

  • and cried while my mother packed up my room [laughter].

  • I refused to help her like, hell no, I won't go, I non-violent protested leaving here,

  • like a protestor only without the chanting, it was really pathetic.

  • If none of you lay down on a dirty hardwood floor and cry today while your mommy packs

  • up your room, you are already starting your careers out ahead of me [laughter].

  • You are winning.

  • The thing I really felt like I knew was that the real world sucks and it is scary.

  • College is awesome, you're special here, you're in the Ivy League, you are at the pinnacle

  • of your life's goals at this point.

  • Your entire life up until now has been about getting into some great college

  • and then graduating from that college and now today you have done it.

  • The moment you get out of college you think you're going to take the world by storm.

  • All doors will be open to you, it's going to be laughter

  • and diamonds and [inaudible] left and right.

  • What really happens is that to the rest of the world you are now at the bottom of the heap.

  • Maybe you're an intern, possibly a low paid assistant, and it is awful.

  • The real world, it sucked so badly for me, I felt like a loser all of the time

  • and more than a loser I felt lost.

  • Which brings me to clarify lesson number two, tomorrow is going to be the worst day ever

  • for you, but don't be an asshole [laughter].

  • Here's the thing, yes, it is hard out there, but hard is relative.

  • I come from a middle class family, my parents are academics,

  • I was born after the Civil Rights Movement, I was a toddler during the Women's Movement,

  • I live in the United States of America, all of which means I'm allowed to own my freedom,

  • my rights, my voice and my uterus and I went to Dartmouth and I earned an Ivy League degree.

  • The lint in my naval that accumulated while I gazed at it, as I suffered from feeling lost

  • about how hard it was to not feel special after graduation,

  • that naval lint was embarrassed for me [laughter].

  • Elsewhere in the world girls are harmed, simply because they want to get an education,

  • slavery still exists, children still die from malnutrition.

  • In this country we lose more people to handgun violence than any other nation in the world,

  • sexual assault against women in America is pervasive and disturbing

  • and continues at an alarming rate.

  • So, yes, tomorrow may suck for you, as it did for me, but as you stare at the lint

  • in your naval have some perspective, we are incredibly lucky.

  • We have been given a gift.

  • An incredible education has been placed before us.

  • We ate all the froyo we could get our hands on, we skiid, we had EBA's at 1:00 a.m.,

  • we built bonfires and got frostbite, and had all the free treadmills,

  • we beer ponged our asses off.

  • Now it's time to pay it forward.

  • Find a cause you love, it's okay to pick just one, you're going to need to spend a lot of time

  • out in the real world trying to figure out how to stop feeling

  • like a lost loser, so, one cause is good.

  • Devote some time every week to it.

  • Oh, and while we are discussing this, let me say a thing.

  • A hashtag is not helping, hashtag yesallwomen, hashtag takebackthenight, hashtag notallmen,

  • hashtag bringbackourgirls,

  • hashtag stoppretending hashtags arethesame asdoing something.

  • Hashtags are very pretty on Twitter, I love them, I will hashtag myself

  • into next week, but a hashtag is not a movement.

  • Hashtag does not make you Dr. King, hashtag does not change anything, it's a hashtag.

  • It's you sitting on your butt, typing on your computer and then going back to bed

  • and watching your favorite show, I do it all the time, for me its Game of Thrones [laughter].

  • Volunteer some hours, focus on something outside yourself,

  • devote a slice of your energies towards making the world suck less every week.

  • Some people suggest doing this to increase your sense of wellbeing.

  • Some say it's good karma.

  • I say that it will allow you to remember that whether you are a legacy or the first

  • in your family to go to college the air you are breathing right now is rare air,

  • appreciate it, don't be an asshole.

  • Lesson number three.

  • [ Applause ]

  • So, you're out there and you're giving back and you're doing, and it's working and life is good,

  • you are making it, you are a success and its exciting and its great,

  • at least it is for me, I love my life.

  • I have three TV shows at work and I have three daughters at home

  • and it's all amazing and I am truly happy.

  • And people are constantly asking me, how do you do it?

  • And usually they have this sort of admiring and amazed tone, Shonda, how do you do it all?

  • Like I'm full of magical magic and special wisdomness or something, how do you do it all?

  • And I usually just smile and say, like, I'm really organized,

  • or if I'm feeling slightly [inaudible] I say I have a lot of help,

  • and those things are true, but they also are not true.

  • And this is the thing I really want to say to all of you, not just to the women out there,

  • although this will matter to you women a great deal as you enter the workforce,

  • and try to figure out how to juggle the work and family, but it will also matter to the men

  • who I think increasingly are also trying to figure out how to juggle work and family,

  • and frankly, if you aren't trying to figure it out men of Dartmouth, you should be.

  • Fatherhood is being redefined at a lighting fast rate and you do not want to be a dinosaur.

  • So, women and men of Dartmouth, as you try to figure out the impossible task of juggling work

  • and family and you hear over and over and over again that you just need a lot of help,

  • you just need to be organized, you just need to try a little bit harder.

  • As a very successful woman, a single mother of three,

  • who constantly gets asked the question, how do you do it all?

  • For once I'm going to answer that question with 100% honesty here for you now,

  • because it's just us, because it's our fireside chat,

  • because somebody has to tell you the truth.

  • Shonda, how do you do it all?

  • The answer is this, I don't.

  • Whenever you see me somewhere succeeding in one area of my life,

  • that almost certainly means I am failing in another area of my life.

  • If I am killing it on a scandal script for work,

  • I am probably missing bath and story time at home.

  • If I am at home sewing my kid's Halloween costumes,

  • I am probably blowing off a re-write I was supposed to turn in.

  • If I am accepting a prestigious award, I am missing my baby's first swim lesson.

  • If I'm at my daughter's debut in her school musical,

  • I am missing Sandra O's last scene ever being filmed at Grey's Anatomy .

  • If I am succeeding at one I am inevitably failing at the other, that is the trade off.

  • That is the [inaudible] bargain one makes with the devil that comes

  • with being a powerful working woman who is also a powerful mother.

  • You never feel 100% okay, you never get your sea legs, you are always a little nauseous,

  • something is always lost, something is always missing.

  • And yet, I want my daughters to see me and know me as a woman who works,

  • I want that example set for them.

  • I like how proud they are when they come to my offices and know that they come to Shonda land.

  • There is a land and it is named after their mother [laughter],

  • in their world mothers run companies, in their world mothers own Thursday nights,

  • in their world mother's work and I am a better mother for it.

  • The woman I am because I get to run Shonda land, because I get to write all day,

  • because I get to spend my days making things up, that woman is a better person

  • and a better mother because that woman is happy, that woman is fulfilled, that woman is whole.

  • I wouldn't want them to know the me who didn't get to do this all day long.

  • I wouldn't want them to get to know the me who wasn't doing.

  • So, lesson number three is that anyone who tells you they're doing it all perfectly is a liar.

  • Okay.

  • [ Applause ]

  • I fear I've scared you or been a little bit bleak and that was not my intention.

  • It is my hope that you run out of here excited,

  • leaning forward into the wind ready to take the world by storm.

  • That would be so very fabulous, for you to do what everyone expects of you,

  • for you to just go be exactly the picture of hardcore Dartmouth awesome.

  • My point I think is that it is okay if you don't.

  • My point is that it can be scary to graduate, that you can lay on the hardwood floor

  • of your dorm room and cry while your mom packs up your stuff.

  • That you can have an impossible dream to be Tony Morrison that you have to let go of.

  • That every day you can feel like you might be failing at work or at your home life,

  • that the real world is hard and yet you can still wake up every single morning and go,

  • I have three amazing kids and I have created work I am proud of,

  • and I absolutely love my life and I would not trade it for anyone else's life ever.

  • You can still wake up one day and find yourself living a life you've never even imagined

  • dreaming of.

  • My dreams did not come true, but I worked really hard and I ended up building an empire

  • out of my imagination, so, my dreams can suck it [laughter].

  • You can wake up one day and find that you're interesting and powerful and engaged.

  • You can wake up one day and find that you are a doer.

  • You can be sitting right where you are now looking up at me probably,

  • hopefully I pray for you, hung over, and then 20 years from now you can wake up and find yourself

  • in the Hanover Inn full of fear and terror

  • because you are going to give the commencement speech.

  • Dry mouth, heart beats so, so fast, everything in slow motion, pass out, die, poop.

  • Which one of you will it be?

  • Which member of the 2014 class is going to find themselves standing up here?

  • Because, I checked, and it's pretty rare for an alum to speak here, pretty much just me

  • and Robert Frost and Mr. Rogers, which is crazy awesome [laughter].

  • So, which one of you is going to make it up here?

  • And I really hope that it's one of you, seriously.

  • When it happens, you'll know what this feels like; dry mouth, heart beats so,

  • so fast, everything moves in slow motion.

  • Graduates, every single one of you be proud

  • of your accomplishments, make good on your diplomas.

  • You are no longer students, you are no longer works in progress,

  • you are now citizens of the real world.

  • You have a responsibility to become a person worthy of joining and contributing to society

  • because who you are today that's who you are.

  • So, be brave, be amazing, be worthy, and every single time you get a chance stand up in front

  • of people, let them see you, speak, be heard, go ahead and have the dry mouth,

  • let your heart beat so, so fast, watch everything move in slow motion.

  • So what, you what, you pass out, you die, you poop?

  • No, and this is really the only lesson you'll ever need to know, you take it in,

  • you breathe this rare air, you feel alive, you be yourself,

  • you truly, finally always be yourself.

  • Thank You.

  • Good luck.

  • [ Applause ] ------------------------------c11a5f166b16--

[ Silence ]

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A2 初級 美國腔

Shonda Rhimes'91在達特茅斯大學畢業典禮上發表演講。 (Shonda Rhimes '91 Delivers Dartmouth's Commencement Speech)

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