Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Graduation from a Different View

The month of May represents the season of graduation when TRiO students everywhere walk across stages to receive commencement honors of completing their course of study.  They wear caps and gowns while taking pictures to capture the jubilant feelings of completion. This fitting attire dates back to the Catholic Church during the 12th century when priests adorned themselves during special occasions. Regardless of where you live, graduation caps and gowns, along with tassels, hoods, stoles and diploma covers signify the common apparel whenever you graduate.

Although the meaning of graduation indicates the completion of ones’ studying, I prefer to see it as a gateway toward a new beginning.  The honors you received at graduation will increase your chances of advancing your status whether to improve your ability to earn money or to open doors of opportunities. Yet, this gateway of opportunities can easily provide you an opportune to serve. Just think…if each TRiO graduate’s presumption veers toward service instead of advancing themselves what other doors will open for them. Usually, I see graduates reaching for employment to promote themselves instead of seeking opportunities for service. If you think about your chosen field of study as a service opportunity instead of a job selection toward richness, the rewards will become intangible instead of tangible. For instance, people change jobs 10 to 14 times in a career before they really find the right job. Dissatisfaction of ones’ job comes from the lacking of intangibles since the majority of work only multiplies the tangibles like money. So the tangibles must allow you to experience the intangibles to gain the truly fulfillment from your job. The intangibles keep work from becoming mundane and routine. When you experience the same routine repeatedly, you become dissatisfied which causes constant job changing.

Therefore, as TRiO graduates, you have a higher purpose based on a different perspective. As Luke Graham states in his song 7 Years “that once I was seven years old, and mama said, ‘go make you some friends or you will be lonely.’”  As you listen to this song, think about the intangibles that you must experience to fulfill that certificate, diploma, or degree of which money cannot purchase. For this reason alone, I encourage you, TRiO graduates, to view your accomplishment as a gateway to explore opportunities to gain these intangibles. The TRiO staff experience these intangibles seeing you walk across that stage “to get the tassel.” Likewise, you must seek the same intangibles after graduation while fulfilling your purpose in life.

When you have a chance listen to the lyrics of 7 Years by Luke Graham who I think magnifies this story of purpose from years 7, 11, 20, 30, and 60.  What do you think?


 #TRiOWorks


Dr. Quintavius Rover, 
Graduate of College of Osteopathic Medicine
 
Maria, a HS graduate, bound for Troy.