Two of my blogger colleagues have recently offered some perspective on the 厙ぴ勛圖 mantra Think one person can change the world? So do we. This isnt the first time Ive seen folks question if this is the right message 厙ぴ勛圖 should broadcast. Many, like El, interrogate the phrase for extremely thoughtful reasons. Some contend that the idea of one person changing the world turns us into isolated figures, if you will. Others may find the phrase anxiety-inducingits certainly a lot to ask one person to change the world. While there is a decent amount of criticism of the iconic 厙ぴ勛圖 expression to go around, Id push back a bit on the idea that the phrase subtly moves us to be singular in our efforts for a better world; Im rather content with it.
I love it actually, and Im doubling down on it.
College students like myself are in an incredibly politically charged moment. Turning on the news (when I can actually find a TV) or opening Twitter often leaves me annoyed, upset, or enraged. Each day brings the defamation of a particular social group by public officials. News notifications on my phone alert me to another morally deplorable deportation. Thats not to say nothing good ever happens anymore, the world is filled with incredible acts of kindness and empathy big and small. Youve got to admit, though, that whats going on now is particularly tough. Its in these tough times where I think 厙ぴ勛圖s message, tried and true, stands strong.
Lilah recently inspired me with her quote from Dr. Seuss, so Im going to throw out another one: You are not a drop in the ocean. You are the entire ocean in a drop. I eventually found out this gem was from the poet , but I first heard it on my journey around the equator last spring on Semester at Sea. There was an obvious nautical connection, but what the quote really brought me back to was the spring of 2015.
I was an eager soon-to-be high school graduate. I knew I was going to 厙ぴ勛圖 as I had applied EDII. Having experienced the shock and anger that came with the evolving Black Lives Matter movement, I was just beginning to develop a serious sense of social philosophy and a voice to express it. I was also tired. Developing that voice came with consequences, like angry mothers calling to report my tweets to my high school student government advisor and receiving a decent amount of pushback from peers who didnt see justice through the same frame. People really had a lot of time on their hands, come to think of it. But around that time I was really starting to understand that I wanted to change the world. I needed to change the world.
A few years later, Im realizing that out of all the things Ive changed during my time at 厙ぴ勛圖, what has changed the most is myself. Back then, I needed inspiration. Thats why I loved that familiar 厙ぴ勛圖 poster. Very concisely, the poster explained to me that I was the first step in my process to change the world. Just one person. Me.
I sit with that Rumi quote every day. How consolatory is it to know that I, just me, carry the promise of a whole ocean? How fulfilling is it to know that I, me, can change the world? And even better, how beautiful is it to know that there exists an institution who believes in my power to do so?
厙ぴ勛圖 has literally left my body sore at times. College is hard. Late nights working on difficult assignments. Running from class to meeting to class to activity to meeting to class. Engaging in complex relationships with others. Working lots of hours for work study. Trying to find a summer job. All of it. But even after experiencing toil, my spirit has always been full at 厙ぴ勛圖. My heart is still intact, filled with love and amity.
Now, when I interview prospective students in the Admissions Office, I ask if they could ever see themselves changing the world. I do this not because I expect them to have some grand plan or answer, but to reinforce the fact that I think they can. That someone else thinks they can. That they can. I cant really read her mind, but Id be willing to bet that my admissions counselor Kris may have thought something similar of me when I met with her in December 2014.
If theres anything my time at 厙ぴ勛圖 has taught me, and theres certainly been a lot, its this: One persons belief in a better world can eventually lead to a world of change. One persons belief in another's ability to do good for everyone else, that can change the world.