Unlikely graduates offer us some great lessons in resilience and achievement
5th floor lecture hall at Baruch College. Taken on the day of an Economics Final Examination. Photo courtesy Wikipedia.
Some of us groan about our SAT experience or having to wash dishes for spending money in the cafeteria, but for others, the typical middle-class college tribulations were non-issues because just getting accepted and managing to stay enrolled were the real challenges.
“Getting into and graduating from college is never easy, but there are factors that make it even harder: Growing up in poverty. Suffering neglect and abuse as a child. Having a child at an early age. Suffering mental illness…”
They’re all inspiring stories of not accepting our own excuses and avoiding the victimhood often bestowed upon us by society. And there’s a lesson, too, in understanding the human spirit and its ability to get us through adversity. Or, in the examples of the four students, multiple adversities, one after another.
“When Khaliyl Lane was a little boy, he liked to ride his bike down the road to visit his good friend, Mike Allison. ‘I’d take a peek at what a real family is supposed to look like,’ Lane said. ‘I was always envious of the fact that they had so much love for one another.’
“Though he was only age 6 or 7, Lane knew his life wasn’t normal. His mother didn’t pay much attention to him or his younger brother. He didn’t know the word neglect, but he knew his mother acted differently from other mothers.”
There’s an almost magically redemptive effect in wiping our slates clear of bad experiences, mistakes and squandered opportunities. Morgan’s story tells us of sheer self-discipline from knowing “deep down” it’s the only way to stay on course and of teachers with lessons on maintaining perspective and creating your own reality.
“Born to a 17-year-old mother who dropped out of high school, (Denise) Poventud, a graduate of Weaver High School, was determined ‘not to be a product of my circumstances. … To stop the cycle.’
“Her mother, Mayda Rodriguez, had run away from home and spent time homeless, sleeping in hallways when Poventud was a newborn. Rodriguez shared her daughter’s ambition. ‘She was not going to go down my route,’ Rodriguez said. ‘She was going to do better.’
Please take a few minutes to read it all!
The take-away for me is that we should prepare ourselves for “surmounting” as a daily routine. Even on the “peaks”—as Dr. Spencer Johnson describes—of easier times we know they are inevitably followed by the experience of climbing out of valleys.