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  • - The wisest person I ever met in my life,

  • a third grade dropout.

  • Wisest and dropout in the same sentence

  • is rather oxymoronic

  • like jumbo shrimp.

  • (audience laughing)

  • Mhmm.

  • (audience laughing)

  • Like fun run.

  • Ain't nothing fun about it.

  • (audience laughing)

  • Like Microsoft Works, y'all don't hear me.

  • (audience laughing)

  • I used to say I like country music

  • but I've lived in Texas so long

  • I love country music now.

  • (audience cheering)

  • Yeah.

  • I hunt, I fish, I have cowboy boots, and cowboy,

  • y'all, I'm a black neck redneck.

  • Do you hear what I'm saying to you?

  • (audience laughing)

  • No longer oxymoronic for me to say country music.

  • And it's not oxymoronic for me to say

  • third grade and dropout.

  • That third grade dropout,

  • the wisest person I ever met in my life

  • who taught me to combine knowledge and wisdom

  • to make an impact,

  • was my father.

  • A simple cook.

  • Wisest man I ever met in my life.

  • Just a simple cook.

  • Left school in the third grade

  • to help out on the family farm

  • but just because he left school

  • doesn't mean education stopped.

  • Mark Twain once said,

  • "I've never allowed my schooling

  • "to get in the way of my education."

  • My father taught himself how to read,

  • taught himself how to write.

  • Decided in the midst of Jim Crowism,

  • as America was breathing the last gasp of the Civil War,

  • my father decided he was gonna stand and be a man,

  • not a black man,

  • not a brown man, not a white man,

  • but a man.

  • He literally challenged himself to be the best that he could

  • all the days of his life.

  • I have four degrees,

  • my brother is a judge.

  • We're not the smartest ones in our family.

  • It's a third grade dropout daddy,

  • a third grade dropout daddy

  • who was quoting Michelangelo, saying to us,

  • "Boys, I won't have a problem if you aim high and miss

  • "but I'm gonna have a real issue

  • "if you aim low and hit."

  • A country mother quoting Henry Ford, saying,

  • "If you think you can or if you think you can't,

  • "you're right."

  • I learned that from a third grade drop, simple lessons.

  • Lessons like these.

  • "Son, you'd rather be an hour early

  • "than a minute late."

  • We never knew what time it was at my house

  • 'cause the clocks were always ahead.

  • My mother said for nearly 30 years,

  • my father left the house at 3:45 in the morning.

  • One day she asked him, "Why, Daddy?"

  • He said, "Maybe one of my boys

  • "will catch me in the act of excellence."

  • I wanna share two things with you.

  • Aristotle said you are what you repeatedly do,

  • therefore excellence ought to be a habit not an act.

  • Don't ever forget that.

  • I know you're tough but always remember to be kind.

  • Always.

  • Don't ever forget that.

  • Never embarrass momma.

  • Mhmm.

  • (audience laughing)

  • Yeah, if momma ain't happy, ain't nobody happy.

  • If daddy ain't happy, don't nobody care but you know--

  • (audience laughing)

  • I tell you.

  • Next lesson,

  • lesson from a cook over there in the galley.

  • Son, make sure your servant's towel

  • is bigger than your ego.

  • Ego is the anesthesia that deadens the pain of stupidity.

  • Y'all might have a relative in mind

  • you wanna send that to.

  • Let me say it again.

  • (audience laughing)

  • Ego is the anesthesia that deadens the pain of stupidity.

  • Pride is the burden of a foolish person.

  • John Wooden coached basketball in UCLA for a living

  • but his calling was to impact people.

  • And with all those national championships,

  • guess what he was found doing in the middle of the week?

  • Going into the cupboard,

  • grabbing a broom and sweeping his own gym floor.

  • You wanna make an impact?

  • Find your broom.

  • Every day of your life,

  • you find your broom.

  • You grow your influence that way.

  • That way you're attracting people

  • so that you can impact them.

  • Final lesson.

  • "Son,

  • "you're gonna do a job,

  • "do it right."

  • I've always been told

  • how average I can be.

  • Always been criticized about being average

  • but I wanna tell you something.

  • I stand here before you,

  • before all of these people

  • not listening to those words

  • but telling myself every single day

  • to shoot for the stars,

  • to be the best that I can be.

  • Good enough isn't good enough

  • if it can be better.

  • And better isn't good enough

  • if it can be best.

  • Let me close with a very personal story

  • that I think will bring all this into focus.

  • Wisdom will come to you in the unlikeliest of sources.

  • A lot of times through failure.

  • When you hit rock bottom remember this,

  • while you're struggling,

  • rock bottom can also be a great foundation

  • on which to build

  • and on which to grow.

  • I'm not worried that you'll be successful.

  • I'm worried that you won't fail from time to time.

  • A person that gets up off the canvas and keeps growing,

  • that's the person

  • that will continue to grow their influence.

  • Back in the '70s,

  • to help me make this point,

  • let me introduce you to someone.

  • I met the finest woman I'd ever met in my life.

  • Mhmm.

  • (audience laughing)

  • Back in my day, we'd have called her a brick house.

  • (audience laughing)

  • This woman was the finest woman I'd ever seen in my life.

  • There's just one little problem.

  • Back then ladies didn't like big old line men.

  • The Blindside hadn't come out yet.

  • (audience laughing)

  • They liked quarterbacks and running backs.

  • We're at this dance

  • and I find out her name is Trina Williams

  • from Lompoc, California

  • and we were all dancing

  • and we're just excited

  • and I decide in the middle of dancing with her

  • that I would ask her for her phone number.

  • She, Trina was the first one,

  • Trina was the only woman in college

  • who gave me her real telephone number.

  • (audience laughing)

  • The next day we walked to Baskin and Robbins

  • ice cream parlor.

  • My friends couldn't believe it.

  • This has been 40 years ago

  • and my friends still can't believe it.

  • (audience laughing)

  • We go on a second date

  • and a third date

  • and a fourth date.

  • Mhmm.

  • (audience laughing)

  • We drive from Chico to Vallejo

  • so that she could meet my parents.

  • My father meets her.

  • My daddy, my hero, he meets her,

  • pulls me to the side and says, "Is she psycho?"

  • But anyway--

  • (audience laughing)

  • We go together for a year, two years,

  • three years, four years

  • by now Trina's a senior in college.

  • I'm still a freshman

  • but I'm working some things out.

  • (audience laughing)

  • I'm so glad I graduated in four terms.

  • Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan.

  • (audience laughing)

  • So now it's time to propose.

  • So I talked to her girlfriends

  • and it's California, it's in the '70s.

  • So it has to be outside,

  • have to have a candle and you have to have,

  • some chocolate.

  • Listen, I'm from the hood.

  • I had a bottle of Boone's Farm wine.

  • That's what I had.

  • (audience laughing)

  • She said yes!

  • That was the key.

  • I married the most beautiful woman

  • I'd ever seen in my--

  • 'all ever been to a wedding

  • and even before the wedding starts you hear this.

  • "How in the world?"

  • (audience laughing)

  • And it was coming from my side of the family!

  • (audience laughing)

  • We get married, we have a few children.

  • Our lives are great.

  • One day Trina finds a lump in her left breast.

  • Breast cancer.

  • Six years after that diagnosis,

  • me and my two little boys walked up to mommy's casket

  • and for two years my heart didn't beat.

  • If it wasn't for my faith in God

  • I wouldn't be standing here today.

  • If it wasn't for those two little boys,

  • there'd have been no reason for which to go on.

  • I was completely lost.

  • That was rock bottom.

  • You know what sustained me?

  • The wisdom of a third grade dropout.

  • The wisdom of a simple cook.

  • We're at the casket.

  • I'd never seen my dad cry

  • but this time I saw my dad cry.

  • That was his daughter.

  • Trina was his daughter

  • not his daughter-in-law.

  • And I'm right behind my father

  • about to see her for the last time on this earth

  • and my father shared three words with me

  • that changed my life right there at the casket.

  • It would be the last lesson he would ever teach me.

  • He said, "Son,

  • "just stand.

  • "You keep standing.

  • "You keep standing.

  • "No matter how rough the sea, you keep standing.

  • "And I'm not talking about just water.

  • "You keep standing.

  • "No matter what, you don't give up."

  • And as clearly as I'm talking to you today,

  • these were some of her last words to me.

  • She looked me in the eye and she said,

  • "It doesn't matter to me any longer how long I live.

  • "What matters to me most

  • "is how I live."

  • I ask you all one question,

  • a question that I was asked all my life

  • by a third grade dropout.

  • "How you livin'?

  • "How you livin'?"

  • Everyday ask yourself that question.

  • How you livin'?

  • Here's, here's what a cook would suggest

  • you to live, this way.

  • That you would not judge,

  • that you would show up early,

  • that you'd be kind,

  • that you'd make sure that that servant's towel

  • is huge and used,

  • that if you're gonna do something,

  • you do it the right way.

  • That cook would tell you this,

  • that it's never wrong to do the right thing,

  • that how you do anything

  • is how you do everything.

  • And in that way you will grow your influence

  • to make an impact.

  • In that way you will honor all those

  • who have gone before you,

  • who have invested in you.

  • Look in those unlikeliest places for wisdom.

  • Enhance your life every day by seeking that wisdom

  • and asking yourself every night,

  • "How am I living?"

  • May God richly bless you all.

  • Thank you for having me.

  • (audience cheering and applauding)

  • (uplifting music)

- The wisest person I ever met in my life,

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最も感動的なスピーチ。小学3年生の中退者の知恵があなたの人生を変える|リック・リグスビー (The Most Inspiring Speech: The Wisdom of a Third Grade Dropout Will Change Your Life | Rick Rigsby)

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    ChiHung Liao に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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