A couple of weeks ago, I flew to Providence, Rhode Island, to witness my niece — my sister’s daughter — graduate from Brown University. Julia, and I say this without any hyperbole whatsoever, is brilliant. She double-majored in astrophysics and archeology, and now, she’s off to Johns Hopkins University to pursue her PhD in astrophysics. What I’m saying is, if there’s life in outer space, I have no doubt that Julia will find it.
So away I went, joining my sister and her family for all the Brown University festivities. Julia was very excited to show us around campus, and we soaked up everything she shared. We met her classmates, graduate students, and even professors, all of whom said lovely things about our sweet Julia, of course, but who also shared their joy about their own futures after graduation, or their roles in stewarding young minds in their chosen careers.
Finally, Sunday arrived, the day of the true pomp and circumstance. It turns out Brown University is big on tradition, and the seven-hour celebration included processions through the streets of graduate students, professors, and alumni from each previous graduating class. (The oldest of the alumni was from the class of 1950 — 75 years ago — and he walked alone. It was a melancholy, noble moment.) Finally, the professors, alumni, and graduate students lined the streets as this year’s undergraduates jubilantly paraded among them. It was absolutely jubilant.

I’ve been to graduation ceremonies before, of course, including a couple of my own. But in the past, I’m not sure I saw them as much more than a celebration of accomplishment, the culmination of hard work. But this felt different. It felt so hopeful. It felt so joyful. And I haven’t stopped thinking about the people I met in the four days I was there: from the Trinidadian physicist and professor who gushed to Julia’s proud parents about their daughter, to the young trans activist who spent so much of his time connecting with me and showing me such kindness, to the student leaders who took various stages and microphones during the day and spoke to their fellow graduates with obvious and genuine affection. And in this year, when the acts of governments against their own citizens feel so regressive, when there have been unspeakable acts of terroristic bigotry and hate, when genocides are playing out around the world, when billionaires seem to care about nothing more than earning more billions while their fellow citizens suffer, and when technological advancements seem to be more focused on the isolation rather than the connection of humankind, it was lovely to see instead a community of young people celebrating each other and being celebrated by their mentors. Of course, who knows what the goals of these young people are, but for those few days that weekend, it felt like connected joy and the promise of a better, more positive, more optimistic future.
So congrats to you, class of 2025, no matter what diploma or degree you earned, no matter what school or technical college or university or trade school you attended, or whether you just scraped by or graduated magna cum laude. May you use your newly minted credentials to make the world better, and may you never lose your sense of wonder at the possibility of an interconnected world.
one more thing …
I’m entering a quiet speaking season, which means that I have space for a few openings for one-on-one coaching sessions right now. If you’re looking to begin a new career that gives you meaning and purpose, or you’re wanting to reconnect to the soul of your current career and create a values-led life, I’d love to work with you. In our one-on-one sessions, we’ll sit down together and explore and clarify your hopes and dreams for the next stage of your life and/or career, and establish appropriate coaching goals. Then, together we’ll explore all of your strengths and resources, and delve into how they might be able to get you to where you want to go. And finally, we’ll develop and implement a plan to get you to where you dream of being.
You can learn more about my coaching offerings here. I hope we get to work together!
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A very uplifting read - you really captured the jubilant feeling! Wishing Julia, and all her fellow graduates, lots of goodness in the years to come!
Big congrats to Julia - and her family - what an accomplishment! And thank you for sharing this joy. <3