Oprah Winfrey 2013 Harvard Commencement speech

精选段落时段8’18’’-9’48’’ ;
10’33’’-11’18’’; 23’42’’-24’47’’

这篇文章是奥普拉在2013年哈佛大学毕业典礼上的演讲。奥普拉在演讲中谈到了自身经历——奥普拉.温弗瑞电视网,天使网络,名人采访,穿插了一些公共话题,告诉刚刚毕业的学生们如何进入人生的下一个阶段,激励大家做真实的自己。
谈到自身的失败(电视网困难)——困难只是暂时的。我遇到的麻烦同样会有结束的一天。然后我想,我会将这一页翻过去,我会好起来的;谈到对失败的看法——世间并不存在“失败”,那不过是生活想让我们换条道走走罢了;谈职业生涯访谈的共性——人人都希望自己被认可、被理解;谈成功和快乐的关键——人生确实只有一个目标,那就是:最大程度地、最真实地展现自己。

[1] Oh my goodness! I’m at Harvard! Wow! To President Faust, my fellow honorands, Harvard faculty. All of you alumni, with a special bow to the Class of ’88, your hundred fifteen million dollars. And to you, members of the Harvard class of 2013! Hello!
honorand /'ɔnərənd/ n. 荣获名誉学位之人
faculty /ˈfækəltɪ/ n. 全体教员
alumni /əˈlʌmnaɪ / n. 校友
我的天啊!我在哈...佛!真的!尊敬的Faust校长、和我一起获得荣誉学位的各位,哈佛的教职工们,谢谢你们!感谢所有的哈佛校友,特别要感谢88届的毕业生,你们为哈佛捐出一亿一千五百万美元。所有2013届的各位毕业生们!大家好!

[2] I thank you for allowing me to be a part of the conclusion of this chapter of your lives and the commencement of your next chapter. I consider today a defining milestone in a very long and a blessed journey. My one hope today is that I can be a source of some inspiration. I’m going to address my remarks to anybody who has ever felt inferior or felt disadvantaged, felt screwed by life, this is a speech for the Quad.
commencement /kəˈmɛnsmənt/ n. 开始
All applicants should be at least 16 years of age at the commencement of this course. 所有申请人在本课程开始时应至少年满16岁。
milestone /ˈmaɪlˌstəʊn/ n. 里程碑
address /ə'dres/ vt. 对…发表演说
inferior /ɪnˈfɪərɪə/ adj. 低等的,次要的
quad /kwɒd/ n. 〔周围有建筑物的〕方形中庭,四方院子〔尤见于学校〕
感谢你们让我能够见证你们人生学业篇章的结束以及新篇章的开始。我认为今天是漫长并被祝福的人生旅途中的一个里程碑。我希望今天能为你们带来一些启发。我的演讲是为那些曾在人生中感到自卑或觉得自己没有优势,甚至觉得生活一团糟的人,这些话只在这说。

[4] The “Oprah Winfrey Show” was number one in our time slot for 21 years and I have to tell you I became pretty comfortable with that level of success. But a few years ago I decided, as you will at some point, that it was time to recalculate, find new territory, break new ground. So I ended the show and launched OWN, the Oprah Winfrey Network. The initials just worked out for me. So one year later after launching OWN, nearly every media outlet had proclaimed that my new venture was a flop. Not just a flop, but a big bold flop they call it. I can still remember the day I opened up USA Today and read the headline “Oprah, not quite standing on her OWN.” I mean really, USA Today? Now that’s the nice newspaper! It really was this time last year the worst period in my professional life. I was stressed and I was frustrated and quite frankly I was actually I was embarrassed.
time slot (电视或广播电台的)播放时段
territory /ˈtɛrɪtərɪ/ n. 领域
break new ground 开辟新天地, 有新的突破
worked out 有效果;健身锻炼
flop /flɒp/ n. 惨败
“奥普拉秀”在同一时间段的电视节目中连续21年排名第一,我必须说我对于这个成功非常的满足。但是几年前,我觉得,在人生的某一时刻,你必须重新来过,找到新的领域,实现新的突破。所以我停掉了“奥普拉秀”,推出了“OWN(自己的)”——“奥普拉·温福瑞电视网”,我很喜欢这个缩写。在奥普拉·温福瑞电视网推出一年后,几乎所有的媒体都认为我的新项目是失败的。不仅仅是失败,他们称之为一个大写的惨败。我还记得有一天我打开《今日美国报》时看到头条新闻说“ 奥普拉,自事难成。”不是吧,今日美国哎?这是份好报纸啊!这正是去年我职业生涯最低谷的时刻。我压力超大近乎崩溃,老实说,我感到羞愧。

[5] It was right around that time that President Faust called and asked me to speak here and I thought you want me to speak to Harvard graduates? What could I possibly say to Harvard graduates, some of the most successful graduates in the world in the very moment when I had stopped succeeding? So I got off the phone with President Faust and I went to the shower. And as I was in the shower the words of an old hymn came to me. It’s “By and by, when the morning comes.” And I started thinking about when the morning might come because at the time I thought I was stuck in a hole. And the words came to me “Trouble don’t last always” from that hymn, “this too shall pass.” And I thought as I got out of the shower I am going to turn this thing around and I will be better for it. And when I do, I’m going to go to Harvard and I’m going to speak the truth of it! So I’m here today to tell you I have turned that network around!
turn around 扭转局势,(生意或经济) 好转
就在那个时候,Faust校长打电话邀请我到哈佛做毕业演讲。我心想:“你让我给哈佛的毕业生演讲?我能跟这些世界上最成功的毕业生说什么?而我已经不再成功。”我挂了Faust校长的电话后去洗了个澡。要么去吃奥利奥要么去洗澡,我选择了洗澡。那个澡我洗了很长时间,在洗澡的时候我突然想到某首古老赞美诗中的一句话,你可能没听过“耐心等待,曙光终将到来...”,之后我就开始思考我的曙光何时到来。因为那时我觉得我身陷窘境。我又想到那首古老赞美诗中的一句话:“困境不会长久,困难终将过去...”当我走出浴室时,我想:我遇到的麻烦同样会有结束的一天,我要扭转困境,我会变得更好,等我做到了,我就去哈佛,把这个真实的故事告诉大家!今天我来了,就是要想告诉大家,我已经把“奥普拉·温福瑞电视网”带上正轨了。

[6] And it was all because I wanted to do it by the time I got to speak to you all so thank you so much. You don’t know what motivation you were for me, thank you. I’m even prouder to share a fundamental truth that you might not have learned even as graduates of Harvard unless you studied the ancient Greek hero with Professor Nagy. Professor Nagy as we were coming in this morning said, “Please Ms. Winfrey, walk decisively.”
motivation /ˌməʊtɪˈveɪʃən/ n. 动力
fundamental /ˌfʌndəˈmɛntəl/ adj. 基本的,根本的,主要的
这一切都是因为我想在来哈佛之前把事情做好,所以非常感谢你们!你们不知道你们给了我多大的动力,谢谢!我甚至能更骄傲地来和各位分享一个基本的真理。作为哈佛的毕业生你也未必知道,除非你上过Nagy教授的课程知道古希腊英雄人物。在今天早上来的路上,Nagy教授说:“温福瑞女士,请坚决地向前走。”

[7] I shall walk decisively. 我会坚决地向前走。
decisively /dɪˈsaɪsɪvlɪ/ adv. 坚定地,果断地

[8] This is what I want to share. It doesn’t matter how far you might rise. At some point you are bound to stumble because if you’re constantly doing what we do, raising the bar. If you’re constantly pushing yourself higher, higher the law of averages not to mention the Myth of Icarus predicts that you will at some point fall. And when you do I want you to know this, remember this: there is no such thing as failure. Failure is just life trying to move us in another direction. Now when you’re down there in the hole, it looks like failure. So this past year I had to spoon-feed those words to myself. And when you’re down in the hole, when that moment comes, it’s really okay to feel bad for a little while. Give yourself time to mourn what you think you may have lost but then here’s the key, learn from every mistake because every experience, encounter, and particularly your mistakes are there to teach you and force you into being more who you are. And then figure out what is the next right move. And the key to life is to develop an internal moral, emotional G.P.S. that can tell you which way to go.
be bound to 必然,一定会
stumble /ˈstʌmbəl/ vi. 踉跄; 绊脚
spoon-feed 用匙喂;填鸭式教育,灌输
mourn /mɔːn/ v. 为 (失去) …而痛惜;哀悼
encounter /ɪnˈkaʊntə/ v. n. 遭遇,邂逅,特殊经历
这就是我想分享的。无论你已经达到怎样的成就,在某个节点,你必然会失意。因为如果你像我们这样,不断提升目标,如果你一直不断把你自己推向更高的目标,根据常规推测,不必提伊卡洛斯神话,你将在某一节点上失意。当你真的跌倒时我想让你知道,并请记住:“世间并不存在失败,那不过是生活想让我们换个方向罢了,当你在身处困境时,那只是看起来像是失败罢了。”在过去的一年里,我时刻提醒自己牢记这一点。当你身处困境,彼时彼刻,沮丧一段时间是正常的,给自己时间去哀叹你认为可能已经失去的一切,但关键在于:从每次失误中学习经验教训,因为所有的经验,尤其是你的错误,都会教会你并促使你成为真正的自己。然后在确定下一步该何去何从。生命的关键在于建立内在道德、情感的GPS,它能为你指明方向。

[10] Also, the challenge of life I have found is to build a résumé that doesn’t simply tell a story about what you want to be but it’s a story about who you want to be. It’s a résumé that doesn’t just tell a story about what you want to accomplish but why, a story that’s not just a collection of titles and positions but a story that’s really about your purpose. Because when you inevitably stumble and find yourself stuck in a hole, that is the story that will get you out. What is your true calling? What is your dharma? What is your purpose?
inevitably /ɪnˈɛvɪtəblɪ/ adv. 不可避免地,必然发生地
然而我发现,来自生活的挑战并不是做个履历简单地告诉大家你想做什么事,而是你想成为什么样的人。这份履历不只是告诉大家你想成就一番怎样的事业,而是你为什么做这些?这份履历不仅仅是一个头衔和职位的罗列,而是做这些的因由目的。因为当你不可避免地跌倒,发现自己陷入困境时,它可以帮你走出困境。你内心的真正呼唤是什么?你的人生信仰是什么?你的目标是什么?

[12] And so what I did was I simply asked our viewers, “Do what you can wherever you are, from wherever you sit in life. Give me your time or your talent your money if you have it.” And they did. Extend yourself in kindness to other human beings wherever you can. And together we built 55 schools in 12 different countries and restored nearly 300 homes that were devastated by hurricanes Rita and Katrina. So the Angel Network — I have been on the air for a long time — but it was the Angel Network that actually focused my internal G.P.S. It helped me to decide that I wasn’t going to just be on TV every day but that the goal of my shows, my interviews, my business, my philanthropy all of it, whatever ventures I might pursue would be to make clear that what unites us is ultimately far more redeeming and compelling than anything that separates me. Because what had become clear to me, and I want you to know, it isn’t always clear in the beginning because as I said I had been on television since I was 19 years old. But around ’94 I got really clear. So don’t expect the clarity to come all at once, to know your purpose right away, but what became clear to me was that I was here on Earth to use television and not be used by it; to use television to illuminate the transcendent power of our better angels. So this Angel Network, it didn’t just change the lives of those who were helped, but the lives of those who also did the helping. It reminded us that no matter who we are or what we look like or what we may believe, it is both possible, and more importantly it becomes powerful to come together in common purpose and common effort.
devastate /ˈdɛvəˌsteɪt/ vt. 严重破坏; 彻底摧毁
philanthropy /fɪˈlænθrəpɪ/ n. 慈善; 博爱
ultimately /ˈʌltɪmɪtlɪ/ adv. 最终
redeeming /rɪˈdiːmɪŋ/ adj. 补偿的; 弥补缺陷的
compelling /kəmˈpɛlɪŋ/ adj. 令人信服的
illuminate /ɪˈluːmɪneɪt/ vt. 照亮,阐明
transcendent /trænˈsɛndənt/ adj. 超然的,卓越的,出类拔萃的
其实我做的只是简单的请求我们的观众:“无论你在哪里处于人生的哪个阶段,如果可以,请拿出你的时间、天赋以及金钱,做你力所能及的事。”他们这样做了。无论你在哪里,将你的仁慈带给他人。众人拾柴火焰高,我们一起在12个国家建了55所学校,重建了近300个被丽塔和卡特里娜飓风摧毁的家园。所以 “天使网络”聚集了我内在的定位系统。它能帮助我知道,我不是仅仅每天在电视上出现,还有我的采访目标,我的生意,我的慈善事业,所有的一切。无论我追求怎样的事业,我更清楚把我们凝聚在一起的力量比分离我们的力量更令人满足和不可抗拒。但我想让你们知道,任何事情的一开始对于我们未必明朗,正如我所说我 19岁就开始上电视,然而到了94年我才渐渐清楚,所以不要期待一下子就想清楚、并马上明白自己的使命。对我来说,我最终清楚,我要利用电视而不是被电视利用,利用电视来照亮我们内在天使的一面。这个“天使网络”,它不只是改变那些我们帮助过的人们的生活,同时也改变那些施与帮助的人们的生活。它提醒我们,无论是谁,外表如何,或者心存何种信念,都有可能实现。更重要的是,凭借共同的目标和共同努力,它会变得更为强大。

[17] I have to say that the single most important lesson I learned in 25 years talking every single day to people, was that there is a common denominator in our human experience. Most of us, I tell you we don’t want to be divided. What we want, the common denominator that I found in every single interview, is we want to be validated. We want to be understood. I have done over 35,000 interviews in my career and as soon as that camera shuts off everyone always turns to me and inevitably in their own way asks this question “Was that okay?” I’ve heard it from heroes and from housewives. I’ve heard it from victims and perpetrators of crimes. I even heard it from Beyonce and all of her Beyonceness. She finishes performing, hands me the microphone and says, “Was that okay?”
denominator /dɪˈnɒmɪˌneɪtə/ n. 共同特性
validate /ˈvælɪˌdeɪt/ vt. 证实…有价值
perpetrator /'pɜːpɪtreɪtə/ n. 作恶者;犯罪者
在我25年的访谈历程中,我所学到的最重要一课,是我们的人生经历中都有一个公分母(共性成分)。可以说,我们中的大多数人,并不愿意被整除(分割)。我们想要的,也就是那个我在每次访谈中发现的“公分母”,是我们想要被证实、被认可。我们渴望被理解。我的职业生涯中容纳了大约35000个访谈,每每在摄像机的镜头关闭后,几乎所有人都不可避免地转向我,用他们各自的方式,询问着同一个问题“刚才那样可以吗?”布什总统这样问,奥巴马总统这样问,我在英雄的口中听到过这个疑问,同样也在家庭主妇的口中听说过这句话。我听受害者这样问,也听过那些有罪行的人们这样问,我甚至听过碧昂斯和她的粉丝们这样问。碧昂斯结束表演之后,把麦克风递到我手中,问道:“刚才那样可以吗?”

[18] Friends and family, yours, enemies, strangers, in every argument in every encounter, every exchange I will tell you, they all want to know one thing: was that okay? Did you hear me? Do you see me? Did what I say mean anything to you? And even though this is a college where Facebook was born my hope is that you would try to go out and have more face-to-face conversations with people you may disagree with,that you’ll have the courage to look them in the eye and hear their point of view and help make sure that the speed and distance and anonymity of our world doesn’t cause us to lose our ability to stand in somebody else’s shoes and recognize all that we share as a people. This is imperative, for you as an individual, and for our success as a nation.
anonymity /ˌænəˈnɪmɪti/ n. 匿名;匿名者
stand in one's shoes 设身处地为某人着想
imperative /ɪmˈpɛrətɪv/ adj. 至关重要的, 紧急的
不论是朋友,家人,敌人还是陌生人,在每次争论后,在每次的邂逅或交流时,我都可以笃定地告诉你们,他们都想知道一件事儿 ——“刚才那样可以吗?你听到我说话了吗?你关注到我了吗?我之所言是否对你有些许意义?”尽管这里是Facebook诞生的大学,我还是希望你们能够脱离虚拟,和那些与你意见相左的人尽可能多的进行一些面对面的交流。希望你们有勇气去直视他们的双眼,去聆听他们的观点,并且确保这世界的高速、距离、匿名不会让我们失去站在他人的角度思考问题的能力,以及认清我们作为人类的共同点。这无论是对于一个独立的个体,还是对于国家的兴盛,都是至关重要的。

[20] I know that you all might have a little anxiety now and hesitation about leaving the comfort of college and putting those Harvard credentials to the test. But no matter what challenges or setbacks or disappointments you may encounter along the way, you will find true success and happiness if you have only one goal, th ere really is only one, and that is this: to fulfill the highest most truthful expression of yourself as a human being. You want to max out your humanity by using your energy to lift yourself up, your family and the people around you. Theologian Howard Thurman said it best. He said, “Don’t ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive and then go do that, because what the world needs is people who have come alive.” I have faith that no matter what, Class of 2013, you will be okay and you will make sure our country is okay.
hesitation /ˌhɛzɪˈteɪʃən/ n. 犹豫,迟疑
credentials /krɪˈdɛnʃəlz/ n. (身份或资格的) 证明文件
fulfill /fʊlˈfɪl/ vt. 履行,实现
lift up 激励,鼓舞,使振奋
我非常理解在你们即将离开大学象牙塔一样舒适的生活,把你们在哈佛所学拿出去实践的时候,或多或少会有些焦虑与犹豫不决。但是无论你一路上经历到怎样的挑战、挫折、险衅、绝望,如果你自始至终都只有一个目标,真的只有一个目标,你就会找到真正的成功和幸福。这个目标就是:作为一个人,去实现你最真挚、最坦诚的自我表达,去追逐生命的最大化,尽己所能,去激励你自己,家人,和你周围的人,(让他们的人生也因你而不同)。

[22] We might not always know it. We might not always see it, or hear it on the news or even feel it in our daily lives, but I have faith that no matter what, Class of 2013, you will be okay and you will make sure our country is okay. I have faith because of that 9-year-old girl who went out and collected the change. I have faith because of David and Francine Wheeler, I have faith because of Michael and Harris Stolzenberg, and I have faith because of you, the network of angels sitting here today. One of them Khadijah Williams, who came to Harvard four years ago. Khadijah had attended 12 schools in 12 years, living out of garbage bags amongst pimps and prostitutes and drug dealers; homeless, going in to department stores, Wal-Mart in the morning to bathe herself so that she wouldn’t smell in front of her classmates, and today she graduates as a member of the Harvard Class of 2013.
我们可能对这种事所知甚少,这些事情并不常见,在电视里也鲜听闻,我们的日常生活中也不能有所获知。但是我对你们有信心,不管发生什么,2013届的毕业生们,请相信,柳暗花明又一村。同时,你们也要确保我们的国家的安康。我有信心,因为那个9岁小女孩会出去收集零钱;我有信心,因为David和 Wheeler;我有信心,因为迈克尔和哈里斯。我有信心是你们让我充满信心,因为你,因为“天使网络”现在就在这里。这其中就有四年前来到哈佛的 Khadijah Williams。Khadijah在过去的12年中上了12个不同的学校,身处在皮条客、妓女、毒品贩子和流浪儿之间的垃圾袋子里,她为了不让同学们闻到他身上的异味,他每天清晨会去百货大楼、沃尔玛超市洗澡,今天他成为2013届哈佛毕业生的一员。

[23] From time to time you may stumble, fall. You will for sure, count on this, no doubt. You will have questions and you will have doubts about your path. But I know this, if you’re willing to listen to, be guided by, that still small voice that is the G.P.S. within yourself, to find out what makes you come alive, you will be more than okay. You will be happy, you will be successful, and you will make a difference in the world. Congratulations Class of 2013. Congratulations to your family and friends. Good luck, and thank you for listening.
人生难免有踌躇失意,陷入困境之时。毫无疑问,这些都是难得的财富。对于未来之路,你会心存疑虑,会彷徨,会无所适从。但是我知道:只要你肯听从你内心深处那个轻微声音——心中的GPS的指引,来找回你人生的本真,你会活的更加夺目。你一定会快乐,一定会成功,你一定可以让世界因你而不同。祝贺你们,2013届哈佛的毕业生们。把祝贺同样送给你们的亲朋好友们。祝你们的命运永远备受眷顾,感谢聆听。

[24] Was that okay? 刚才那样可以吗?

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来源: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMWFieBGR7c

建议各位同学先把视频多看几遍,我会重点挑选7-8,10,17-18,20,22-24进行讲解。我们13号见!

[1] Oh my goodness! I’m at Harvard! Wow! To President Faust, my fellow honorans, Carl [Muller] that was so beautiful, thank you so much, and James Rothenberg, Stephanie Wilson, Harvard faculty, with a special bow to my friend Dr. Henry Lewis Gates. All of you alumni, with a special bow to the Class of ’88, your hundred fifteen million dollars. And to you, members of the Harvard class of 2013! Hello!

[2] I thank you for allowing me to be a part of the conclusion of this chapter of your lives and the commencement of your next chapter. To say that I’m honored doesn’t even begin to quantify the depth of gratitude that really accompanies an honorary doctorate from Harvard. Not too many little girls from rural Mississippi have made it all the way here to Cambridge. And I can tell you that I consider today as I sat on the stage this morning getting teary for you all and then teary for myself, I consider today a defining milestone in a very long and a blessed journey. My one hope today is that I can be a source of some inspiration. I’m going to address my remarks to anybody who has ever felt inferior or felt disadvantaged, felt screwed by life, this is a speech for the Quad.

[3] Actually I was so honored I wanted to do something really special for you. I wanted to be able to have you look under your seats and there would be free master and doctor degrees but I see you got that covered already. I will be honest with you. I felt a lot of pressure over the past few weeks to come up with something that I could share with you that you hadn’t heard before because after all you all went to Harvard, I did not. But then I realized that you don’t have to necessarily go to Harvard to have a driven obsessive Type A personality. But it helps. And while I may not have graduated from here I admit that my personality is about as Harvard as they come. You know my television career began unexpectedly. As you heard this morning I was in the Miss Fire Prevention contest. That was when I was 16 years old in Nashville, Tennessee, and you had the requirement of having to have red hair in order to win up until the year that I entered. So they were doing the question and answer period because I knew I wasn’t going to win under the swimsuit competition. So during the question and answer period the question came “Why, young lady, what would you like to be when you grow up?” And by the time they got to me all the good answers were gone. So I had seen Barbara Walters on the “Today Show” that morning so I answered, “I would like to be a journalist. I would like to tell other people’s stories in a way that makes a difference in their lives and the world.” And as those words were coming out of my mouth I went whoa! This is pretty good! I would like to be a journalist. I want to make a difference. Well I was on television by the time I was 19 years old. And in 1986 I launched my own television show with a relentless determination to succeed at first. I was nervous about the competition and then I became my own competition raising the bar every year, pushing, pushing, pushing myself as hard as I knew. Sound familiar to anybody here? Eventually we did make it to the top and we stayed there for 25 years.

[4] The “Oprah Winfrey Show” was number one in our time slot for 21 years and I have to tell you I became pretty comfortable with that level of success. But a few years ago I decided, as you will at some point, that it was time to recalculate, find new territory, break new ground. So I ended the show and launched OWN, the Oprah Winfrey Network. The initials just worked out for me. So one year later after launching OWN, nearly every media outlet had proclaimed that my new venture was a flop. Not just a flop, but a big bold flop they call it. I can still remember the day I opened up USA Todayand read the headline “Oprah, not quite standing on her OWN.” I mean really, USA Today? Now that’s the nice newspaper! It really was this time last year the worst period in my professional life. I was stressed and I was frustrated and quite frankly I was actually I was embarrassed.

[5] It was right around that time that President Faust called and asked me to speak here and I thought you want me to speak to Harvard graduates? What could I possibly say to Harvard graduates, some of the most successful graduates in the world in the very moment when I had stopped succeeding? So I got off the phone with President Faust and I went to the shower. It was either that or a bag of Oreos. So I chose the shower. And I was in the shower a long time and as I was in the shower the words of an old hymn came to me. You may not know it. It’s “By and by, when the morning comes.” And I started thinking about when the morning might come because at the time I thought I was stuck in a hole. And the words came to me “Trouble don’t last always” from that hymn, “this too shall pass.” And I thought as I got out of the shower I am going to turn this thing around and I will be better for it. And when I do, I’m going to go to Harvard and I’m going to speak the truth of it! So I’m here today to tell you I have turned that network around!

[6] And it was all because I wanted to do it by the time I got to speak to you all so thank you so much. You don’t know what motivation you were for me, thank you. I’m even prouder to share a fundamental truth that you might not have learned even as graduates of Harvard unless you studied the ancient Greek hero with Professor Nagy. Professor Nagy as we were coming in this morning said, “Please Ms. Winfrey, walk decisively.”

[7] I shall walk decisively.

[8] This is what I want to share. It doesn’t matter how far you might rise. At some point you are bound to stumble because if you’re constantly doing what we do, raising the bar. If you’re constantly pushing yourself higher, higher the law of averages not to mention the Myth of Icarus predicts that you will at some point fall. And when you do I want you to know this, remember this: there is no such thing as failure. Failure is just life trying to move us in another direction. Now when you’re down there in the hole, it looks like failure. So this past year I had to spoon feed those words to myself. And when you’re down in the hole, when that moment comes, it’s really okay to feel bad for a little while. Give yourself time to mourn what you think you may have lost but then here’s the key, learn from every mistake because every experience, encounter, and particularly your mistakes are there to teach you and force you into being more who you are. And then figure out what is the next right move. And the key to life is to develop an internal moral, emotional G.P.S. that can tell you which way to go.

[9] Because now and forever more when you Google yourself your search results will read “Harvard, 2013″. And in a very competitive world that really is a calling card because I can tell you as one who employs a lot of people when I see “Harvard” I sit up a little straighter and say, “Where is he or she? Bring them in.” It’s an impressive calling card that can lead to even more impressive bullets in the years ahead: lawyer, senator, C.E.O., scientist, physicist, winners of Nobel and Pulitzer Prizes or late night talk show host.

[10] But the challenge of life I have found is to build a résumé that doesn’t simply tell a story about what you want to be but it’s a story about who you want to be. It’s a résumé that doesn’t just tell a story about what you want to accomplish but why. A story that’s not just a collection of titles and positions but a story that’s really about your purpose. Because when you inevitably stumble and find yourself stuck in a hole that is the story that will get you out. What is your true calling? What is your dharma? What is your purpose?

[11] For me that discovery came in 1994 when I interviewed a little girl who had decided to collect pocket change in order to help other people in need. She raised a thousand dollars all by herself and I thought, well if that little 9-year-old girl with a bucket and big heart could do that, I wonder what I could do? So I asked for our viewers to take up their own change collection and in one month, just from pennies and nickels and dimes, we raised more than three million dollars that we used to send one student from every state in the United States to college. That was the beginning of the Angel Network.

[12] And so what I did was I simply asked our viewers, “Do what you can wherever you are, from wherever you sit in life. Give me your time or your talent your money if you have it.” And they did. Extend yourself in kindness to other human beings wherever you can. And together we built 55 schools in 12 different countries and restored nearly 300 homes that were devastated by hurricanes Rita and Katrina. So the Angel Network — I have been on the air for a long time — but it was the Angel Network that actually focused my internal G.P.S. It helped me to decide that I wasn’t going to just be on TV every day but that the goal of my shows, my interviews, my business, my philanthropy all of it, whatever ventures I might pursue would be to make clear that what unites us is ultimately far more redeeming and compelling than anything that separates me. Because what had become clear to me, and I want you to know, it isn’t always clear in the beginning because as I said I had been on television since I was 19 years old. But around ’94 I got really clear. So don’t expect the clarity to come all at once, to know your purpose right away, but what became clear to me was that I was here on Earth to use television and not be used by it; to use television to illuminate the transcendent power of our better angels. So this Angel Network, it didn’t just change the lives of those who were helped, but the lives of those who also did the helping. It reminded us that no matter who we are or what we look like or what we may believe, it is both possible and more importantly it becomes powerful to come together in common purpose and common effort.

[13] I saw something on the “Bill Moore Show” recently that so reminded me of this point. It was an interview with David and Francine Wheeler. They lost their 7-year-old son, Ben, in the Sandy Hook tragedy. And even though gun safety legislation to strengthen background checks had just been voted down in Congress at the time that they were doing this interview they talked about how they refused to be discouraged. Francine said this, she said, “Our hearts are broken but our spirits are not. I’m going to tell them what it’s like to find a conversation about change that is love, and I’m going to do that without fighting them.” And then her husband David added this, “You simply cannot demonize or vilify someone who doesn’t agree with you, because the minute you do that, your discussion is over. And we cannot do that any longer. The problem is too enormous. There has to be some way that this darkness can be banished with light.” In our political system and in the media we often see the reflection of a country that is polarized, that is paralyzed and is self-interested. And yet, I know you know the truth. We all know that we are better than the cynicism and the pessimism that is regurgitated throughout Washington and the 24-hour cable news cycle. Not my channel, by the way. We understand that the vast majority of people in this country believe in stronger background checks because they realize that we can uphold the Second Amendment and also reduce the violence that is robbing us of our children. They don’t have to be incompatible.

[14] And we understand that most Americans believe in a clear path to citizenship for the 12,000,000 undocumented immigrants who reside in this country because it’s possible to both enforce our laws and at the same time embrace the words on the Statue of Liberty that have welcomed generations of huddled masses to our shores. We can do both.

[15] And we understand. I know you do because you went to Harvard. There are people from both parties, and no party, [who] believe that indigent mothers and families should have access to healthy food and a roof over their heads and a strong public education because here in the richest nation on Earth, we can afford a basic level of security and opportunity. So the question is, what are we going to do about it? Really, what are you going to do about it? Maybe you agree with these beliefs. Maybe you don’t. Maybe you care about these issues and maybe there are other challenges that you, Class of 2013, are passionate about. Maybe you want to make a difference by serving in government. Maybe you want to launch your own television show. Or maybe you simply want to collect some change. Your parents would appreciate that about now. The point is your generation is charged with this task of breaking through what the body politic has thus far made impervious to change. Each of you has been blessed with this enormous opportunity of attending this prestigious school. You now have a chance to better your life, the lives of your neighbors and also the life of our country. When you do that let me tell you what I know for sure. That’s when your story gets really good.

[16] Maya Angelou always says, “When you learn, teach. When you get, give. That my friends is what gives your story purpose and meaning.” So you all have the power in your own way to develop your own Angel Network and in doing so, your class will be armed with more tools of influence and empowerment than any other generation in history. I did it in an analog world. I was blessed with a platform that at its height reached nearly 20,000,000 viewers a day. Now here in a world of Twitter and Facebook and YouTube and Tumbler, you can reach billions in just seconds. You’re the generation that rejected predictions about your detachment and your disengagement by showing up to vote in record numbers in 2008. And when the pundits said, they said they talked about you, they said you’d be too disappointed, you’d be too dejected to repeat that same kind of turnout in 2012 election and you proved them wrong by showing up in even greater numbers. That’s who you are.

[17] This generation, your generation I know, has developed a finely honed radar for B.S. Can you say “B.S.” at Harvard? The spin and phoniness and artificial nastiness that saturates so much of our national debate. I know you all understand better than most that real progress requires authentic — an authentic way of being, honesty, and above all empathy. I have to say that the single most important lesson I learned in 25 years talking every single day to people, was that there is a common denominator in our human experience. Most of us, I tell you we don’t want to be divided. What we want, the common denominator that I found in every single interview, is we want to be validated. We want to be understood. I have done over 35,000 interviews in my career and as soon as that camera shuts off everyone always turns to me and inevitably in their own way asks this question “Was that okay?” I heard it from President Bush, I heard it from President Obama. I’ve heard it from heroes and from housewives. I’ve heard it from victims and perpetrators of crimes. I even heard it from Beyonce and all of her Beyonceness. She finishes performing, hands me the microphone and says, “Was that okay?”

[18] Friends and family, yours, enemies, strangers in every argument in every encounter, every exchange I will tell you, they all want to know one thing: was that okay? Did you hear me? Do you see me? Did what I say mean anything to you? And even though this is a college where Facebook was born, my hope is that you would try to go out and have more face-to-face conversations with people you may disagree with, that you’ll have the courage to look them in the eye and hear their point of view and help make sure that the speed and distance and anonymity of our world doesn’t cause us to lose our ability to stand in somebody else’s shoes and recognize all that we share as a people. This is imperative, for you as an individual, and for our success as a nation.

[19] “There has to be some way that this darkness can be banished with light,” says the man whose little boy was massacred on just an ordinary Friday in December. So whether you call it soul or spirit or higher self, intelligence, there is I know this, there is a light inside each of you, all of us, that illuminates your very human beingness if you let it. And as a young girl from rural Mississippi I learned long ago that being myself was much easier than pretending to be Barbara Walters. Although when I first started because I had Barbara in my head I would try to sit like Barbara, talk like Barbara, move like Barbara and then one night I was on the news reading the news and I called Canada “Can-a-da,” and that was the end of me being Barbara. I cracked myself up on TV. Couldn’t start laughing and my real personality came through and I figured out, oh gee, I can be a much better Oprah than I could be a pretend Barbara.

[20] I know that you all might have a little anxiety now and hesitation about leaving the comfort of college and putting those Harvard credentials to the test. But no matter what challenges or setbacks or disappointments you may encounter along the way, you will find true success and happiness if you have only one goal, there really is only one, and that is this: to fulfill the highest most truthful expression of yourself as a human being. You want to max out your humanity by using your energy to lift yourself up, your family and the people around you. Theologian Howard Thurman said it best. He said, “Don’t ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive and then go do that, because what the world needs is people who have come alive.”

[21] The world needs … People like Michael Stolzenberg from Fort Lauderdale. When Michael was just 8 years old Michael nearly died from a bacterial infection that cost him both of his hands and both of his feet. And in an instant, this vibrant little boy became a quadruple amputee and his life was changed forever. But in losing who he once was Michael discovered who he wanted to be. He refused to sit in that wheelchair all day and feel sorry for himself so with prosthetics he learned to walk and run and play again. He joined his middle school lacrosse team and last month when he learned that so many victims of the Boston Marathon bombing would become new amputees, Michael decided to banish that darkness with light. Michael and his brother, Harris, created Mikeysrun.com to raise $1 million for other amputees — by the time Harris runs the 2014 Boston Marathon. More than 1,000 miles away from here these two young brothers are bringing people together to support this Boston community the way their community came together to support Michael. And when this 13-year-old man was asked about his fellow amputees he said this, “First they will be sad. They’re losing something they will never get back and that’s scary. I was scared. But they’ll be okay. They just don’t know that yet.”

[22] We might not always know it. We might not always see it, or hear it on the news or even feel it in our daily lives, but I have faith that no matter what, Class of 2013, you will be okay and you will make sure our country is okay. I have faith because of that 9-year-old girl who went out and collected the change. I have faith because of David and Francine Wheeler, I have faith because of Michael and Harris Stolzenberg, and I have faith because of you, the network of angels sitting here today. One of them Khadijah Williams, who came to Harvard four years ago. Khadijah had attended 12 schools in 12 years, living out of garbage bags amongst pimps and prostitutes and drug dealers; homeless, going in to department stores, Wal-Mart in the morning to bathe herself so that she wouldn’t smell in front of her classmates, and today she graduates as a member of the Harvard Class of 2013.

[23] From time to time you may stumble, fall, you will for sure, count on this, no doubt, you will have questions and you will have doubts about your path. But I know this, if you’re willing to listen to, be guided by, that still small voice that is the G.P.S. within yourself, to find out what makes you come alive, you will be more than okay. You will be happy, you will be successful, and you will make a difference in the world. Congratulations Class of 2013. Congratulations to your family and friends. Good luck, and thank you for listening.

[24] Was that okay?

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