Stuff You Should Know - Josh Clark's Speech from Commencement: Speeches for the Class of 2020
Episode Date: May 22, 2020Hi listeners, in case you haven't heard already, iHeartRadio just released a brand new podcast called Commencement: Speeches for the Class of 2020, where we collected speeches from notable folks all o...ver and asked them to give their best advice, thoughts and words of wisdom to graduating seniors.In this episode of Commencement: Speeches for the Class of 2020, Josh Clark, co-host of the Stuff You Should Know podcast, divulges secrets to graduates that their parents and teachers may have neglected to tell them.If you'd like to hear the other speeches, including ones from John Legend, Bill & Melinda Gates, Tim Cook, Katie Couric, Ryan Seacrest, Abby Wambach, and more, just search "Commencement: Speeches for the Class of 2020" in your podcasting app of choice! Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Commencement, speeches for the class of 2020
is a production of iHeart Radio.
Class of 2020, parents, faculty, rising graduates,
welcome to commencement, you made it.
This year is a little different,
a difficult time to graduate
because the traditional graduation day has been put on hold.
So we're bringing it to you, wherever you are,
because this is still your day, your moment.
And now put your hands together, it's time to be inspired.
This year's commencement speaker,
the one and only Josh Clark.
Dear students, congratulations on reaching this point
in your life.
It's a big deal and you should be proud of yourself.
Now that you've gotten here,
I've come to fill you in on a little secret.
You've been told for practically your whole life now,
how special you are, how singularly important you are,
how packed with uniqueness you are.
And that is true, you are special and unique
and you are important.
But your parents and teachers
haven't been telling you the whole truth all of your life.
They've only been showing you a part of the bigger picture.
Surely you've noticed hints of this
throughout the time that you were in school,
like when you got older and suddenly the stories
in history class began to get a lot darker.
They told you all those same stories when you were younger.
They just arranged the picture without all of the pieces
to keep you from truly understanding.
And perhaps you resented it
when you realized the whole truth had been kept from you.
That's understandable.
Most of us do feel that way.
But don't waste your time stewing on this.
Each generation does it to the next.
They think it protects the young
when really it just keeps things as they are.
The important thing here is to learn from that experience
because people are going to continue
to do this to you your whole life.
People will try to lay out the pieces of the truth
that fit together to make the picture they want you to see.
It's a way to get people to do what you want them to.
And throughout your life,
you will get this from all sorts of people,
people you're friends with, people you love,
people on television, people on the internet,
people running your government,
people running other people's governments.
Your actions and your thoughts are powerful and influential
and people want to sway them.
This means that you will have to learn to think for yourself.
Do your own research.
Seek out people who are experts on the topic.
Talk to other people.
In this day and age,
it's not enough to trust your eyes or your ears.
You have to put in work to find the truth.
Don't be lazy.
Find the truth.
It's not necessarily what's on the news.
It's also not necessarily what's in some video
that says the news is lying.
Always remember this.
Whatever someone is showing you,
they're probably only showing you part of the picture.
It's up to you to fill in the rest of the pieces
that make up the whole truth.
And maybe you'll never find it.
That's okay.
It would be exhausting to spend your life
constantly searching for the truth,
constantly paranoid that every person you speak to
is manipulating you.
Don't do that.
That's not what life is about.
And people aren't that mean at their core.
Most people don't even realize they're showing you
an incomplete picture.
And usually they're not doing it
for nefarious purposes when they do.
Instead, the vast majority of people
are just passing along an incomplete picture
that someone else showed them.
This happens a lot.
It's a big problem.
So to keep from dying of exhaustion by age 30,
all haggard and paranoid and upset, do two things.
One, decide if something is important enough
to you or the world to search out the missing pieces
to find the truth of the matter.
Sometimes all it takes is an effective Google search
and taking the time to read a couple of reliable articles.
But remember that even if you do search high and low,
you may never find the truth
about whatever it is you're trying to understand.
So it better be important
if you're going to go looking for the truth of a matter.
And two, if it's not important, shrug it off.
You will never know everything.
You'll never know most things.
Some things will be important enough
for you to search for.
Most will not be.
But if you decide it's not that important,
then this is really important.
Don't pass along the incomplete picture to others.
When you do that,
you are shaping someone else's view of things.
They trust you.
They know you're a good person
with the good of the world at heart.
So why would you lie?
Throughout your life,
people will listen to what comes out of your mouth.
So be careful that you believe in what you say.
But back to what I was saying before
about your parents and teachers
giving you an incomplete picture.
I hope you understand a little better now
that they don't mean any harm by it.
They might think they were protecting you all these years
by keeping ugly truths from you.
But those ugly truths,
how hard as they can be to take,
are what allow us to grow as people.
If you see a beautiful flower,
you admire it and are glad that it's there.
If you see a weed growing though, you pull it.
But if the people around you are telling you
that the weed you're seeing is actually a flower,
it's hard to know otherwise.
And it's even harder to know that the weed should be pulled.
Remember that your parents and your teachers
weren't lying to you because they wanted to deceive you.
Their parents and their teachers
showed them pictures of weeds that grow in our world
and told them that they were flowers too.
And their parents' parents
and their teachers' teachers told them.
Some weeds have been called flowers for so long
that no matter what you say to some people,
they will fight you tooth and nail
that the weed is a flower.
That's their truth.
And people are deeply protective
of what they hold to be true,
even when it's not true at all.
Part of the reason they'll fight and argue with you
when you tell them a flower is actually a weed
is just simple laziness.
It takes a lot more effort to pull a weed
than it does to pretend it's a flower.
But the bigger reason they'll argue
is because they don't wanna believe
they've been wrong all this time.
The thing is, no matter how long
everyone's called a weed a flower,
there are some aspects to a weed that a flower doesn't have
that will always give a weed away, like hurting people.
If something that people you know say is a flower
harms other people, it's really a weed.
Weeds can hurt people in all kinds of ways.
Maybe they give rights to some people, but not to others.
Maybe they make it so some people have more wealth and power
than they could ever possibly use.
While other people have so little,
they can't barely scrape by.
Other weeds make it so that when some people
hurt other people or other life or the planet,
they don't get in trouble for it.
If you suspect a flower is really a weed
and you look at it closely enough,
you'll see that the people who say it's a flower
are the ones who get all the benefits from it.
And you'll also find there's a whole other group
of people out there who've been calling it a weed
all this time.
It's just that nobody's listened to them.
And sometimes it's even worse than that.
Sometimes those people are told
that their own flowers are weeds.
So what does all of this have to do
with you being special and unique?
Excellent question.
And actually, that's the whole point of everything.
It's not a lie that you are special and unique.
You are both of those things,
but not simply because you're you,
as you've been led to believe all these years.
That's an incomplete picture of the whole truth.
You are special and unique
because you were born a human being.
All human beings are special and unique,
not just as individuals, but the whole human race.
Every one of us is special.
Every one of us is unique.
And the same goes not just for human beings,
but for all living things.
Life is special.
And in this way, every single person
that you will ever meet in your entire life
is as valuable and worthwhile as you are.
Some of these other people you'll meet will disagree with you
and some of them may harm you.
Just because a person is unique and special
doesn't mean that they're good,
but as hard as it can be to remember sometimes.
Never forget that on the whole,
human beings are generally good.
They generally care about each other.
They generally want what's best and most just.
Don't forget that humanity is generally good.
It's just that sometimes other people
don't recognize a flower is really a weed.
You can find a collection of incredible commencement addresses
from all your favorite speakers
at the commencement podcast on iHeart Radio
or wherever you listen to podcasts.