The English Channel The English Channel Volume 17 Issue 2 Spring 2017 | Page 26

Student Successes was trying to write about and so very helpfully he contributed a suggestion in the form of a pic- ture, captioned “I don’t always talk to English majors but when I do I ask for a grande Frap- puccino.” thinkers, and writers, and analysts. They are stu- dents that are great individuals as well as great citizens. In all fairness, I did subject this particular friend to a solid thirty minutes of very vocal self-pity but in all honesty, comments like that really are the last refuge of the creatively and the comically bankrupt. I realize that this is a rather uninspir- ing turn to take right now, and that it’s probably not the anecdote most would have chosen (I certainly would not have, had it not fallen into my lap so perfectly) but I think it’s an important one. I think—regardless of whether you’ve stud- ied Creative Writing, or English, or Cinema Studies—we have all had these comments at some time or another. So my message to all my fellow graduates is very simple, and it is this: do not let anyone make you feel small. If you are sitting in this room tonight you have so many reasons to be so incredibly proud. A lot of you I have met, and a lot of you I have not, but regardless of which category you fall into, I know the kind of students that this department produces because I’ve spent four years with them, and those students are amazing I have spent four years being amazed by many of you. There was not a single class period that I did not leave thinking about how intelligent, or gracious, or kind, someone was. We are not per- fect. Personally, I am bad at math and talking in front of large groups of people, and I can’t lift heavy things. As a group, I think we are often skilled procrastinators, for better or for worse (often worse.) Many of us have done terrible things with semi-colons as well as our caffeine intake, and you might even say that we put the fun in functionally chaotic. But we’re also a group of students with an amazing capacity for compassion, integrity, and growth, and when it comes down to it there is no other group of people that I would be more proud to stand in front of or as a part of. There is no other group of people that I have more faith in to constantly do more, to leave things better and more beauti- ful than how we found them, and to do it all with such incredible love and enthusiasm. Graduates, you have made it through years of sleep deprivation, of being so stressed that it feels like you’re behind in six classes even though you’re only taking four, and whether or not we have met I am so honored to say that I learned alongside you. I hope you feel that same pride. With that being said, I am going to close before I do that thing I promised I wouldn’t do where I get tearful and incoherent. So to the professors and to the graduates, both: wherever you are go- ing—whether you’re off to be a part of a new school, whether you’re hanging around for a lit- tle bit longer, or whether you’re not entirely sure what lies in front of you—thank you, congratu- lations, and it has been a privilege to be part of your team. 26