This is a small book. I wasn't aware it was geared toward those graduating or just graduated. It didn't need to be. All of life is opportunity for learning, as Michael J. Fox demonstrates. Despite the graduation bit being currently irrelevant to me, I appreciated much of it and I'm inspired to read his other books.
A small book loaded with highlights:
"What constitutes an education?"
Fox dropped out of high school to pursue acting. He received his GED at the age of 32, a husband and father, 15 years after leaving high school. "In the intervening decade-and-a-half, I had been alternately fortunate and unfortunate enough to receive an amazingly comprehensive education, albeit unstructured, and often unbidden. Life 101."
"I have remained a humble and grateful student of the University of the Universal. I didn't pick my courses; they picked me. And just as there was no formal matriculation [enrollment], neither was there any graduation. There were of course, plenty of tests."
"Just to reassure you, I'm not one of those swaggering jerks who, having achieved success after dropping out of school, promotes the fiction that a higher education is a complete waste of time. All the same, I sometime employ my lack of academic standing as a subtle goad to those who would make character judgments based solely on one's alma mater or post-graduate degree."
He goes on to credit some of the world's biggest successes and greatest minds for their success without ever having graduated high school. Thomas Edison, Albert Einstein, Benjamin Franklin. Andrew Carnegie, Henry Ford, John D. Rockefeller.
"One's education is never complete."
On Geography:
"I always take the time to appreciate where I am for what it is.
I'm not trying to lose myself, or even find myself, for that matter. My goal is just to enjoy myself, learn something, and gain an appreciation for the amazing complexity of this planet and the people who live on it."
On Acceptance:
"Acceptance, as I've come to understand it, simply means acknowledging the reality of a situation, that its truth is absolute."
"My happiness grows in direct proportion to my acceptance, and in inverse proportion to my expectation."
On Bhutan:
"In a world where most nations would seemingly go to any lengths to increase their Gross National Product, the Bhutanese believe that economic development should never come at the cost of their people's happiness. Culture is valued more than cash."
More good words:
"Don't spend a lot of time imagining the worst-case scenario. It rarely goes down as you imagine it will, and if by some fluke it does, you will have lived it twice."
"I think I benefited from being equally ambitious and curious. And of the two, curiosity has served me best."
"I've never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
"Things turn out best for the people who make the best of the way things turn out." - John Wooden
"Michael will do more with his life than you can ever imagine." - Michael J. Fox's Nana