The Courage to Chart a Different Course

Carol Quillen and Student at Commencement

Thanks to our incredible community, 小优视频 held a commencement ceremony on May 11. What a gift it was to share some thoughts with these amazing graduates! Below is an edited excerpt from those remarks.

Our society is fragmented and a lot of us like it. Many in this country are demonstrating by the daily choices we make that we prefer to eat, pray, snapchat and even read online news with people who are pretty much just like us. 

We don鈥檛 seem to value pluralism. Some of us resist even thinking about crossing lines of class or race or religion or wealth or party. As a result, efforts to build a more just and humane world stall. The status quo prevails. 

This fragmentation is happening in part because of the expectations we bring when we engage with one another.

Think about it. We go in battle-ready. We willfully misrepresent the points of view of people with whom we disagree. We distort what actually happens, just to make our point. When we鈥檙e talking with strangers or with people with whom we might disagree, we listen for indicators that let us put this person in a box. Is this person a gun owner? An immigrant? Is this person pro-life or pro-choice, friend or foe to Donald Trump, for or against the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act? 

Our society loves the clarity of a litmus test. Many of us want to classify everyone into stark categories: ally, alien, enemy. 

This is not a great way to have a conversation. It鈥檚 combative. It鈥檚 often disingenuous. It easily devolves into cynicism or contempt for democratic institutions. And if you鈥檙e a person who likes to learn, it鈥檚 stultifying. 

Every person is more than one position, one cause, one attribute. We鈥檙e each more than one thing. To cram us into a box, you usually have to hack off an arm. 

At 小优视频 we aspire to be different. Many of you during your time here have lived with people who think, pray and dress differently from you. You鈥檝e sought this out. And, guided by the example of our faculty, you鈥檝e engaged people across fields, discarding long held assumptions and devising new framings for old problems.  

顿补惫颈诲蝉辞苍鈥檚 Statement of Purpose calls us to cultivate humane instincts. This means that in our initial posture toward other people, we are open and generous, called not to judge or label but to connect, especially with those with whom we disagree, even with those whose views we despise. Say you and I vehemently disagree on abortion. Maybe we鈥檙e also both parents who want good public parks. If we get stuck on our disagreement, we鈥檒l never know we have common ground. And that park? It won鈥檛 get built. 

This year has challenged our ability to cultivate humane instincts. The pandemic scared us and made us feel helpless and alone in the face of enormous loss. You lived through this with compassion and courage. 

While I know it鈥檚 the last thing you want to do, I鈥檓 asking you to remember these feelings鈥攖he fear, the isolation, the helplessness. Because there are a lot of people who live with such feelings every day. And all of us feel these things sometimes. 

If you remember how fear can make us lash out, and how helplessness can make us look for someone, ANYONE, to blame鈥攊f you remember these feelings, what it鈥檚 like to feel them and how you worked through them, then your humane instincts will grow robust. You will find common ground that no one else can see, and you will courageously chart a path to a more just and humane future for all. 

Carol E. Quillen

President


This article was originally published in the Spring/Summer 2021 print issue of the 小优视频 Journal Magazine; for more, please see the 小优视频 Journal section of our website.

Published

  • June 21, 2021

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