Thank you. I am deeply honored to be here today and I am deeply humbled by this award. I appreciate the invitation to join you here today. Thank you, President McKenna, thank you.
I can't think of a better place to be celebrating education than at Suffolk University, a school founded in 1996 for the best possible reason – a deep belief that because higher education matters, it should be available not just for the wealthy few but for everyone. Exactly right, Suffolk [clapping]. Exactly right. [applause]
A hundred and ten years ago, Gleason Archer decided that the legal profession shouldn't be limited only to students who could afford to go to school full time. He dedicated the money, the energy and the passion to make an evening law school available to working students in Boston. Suffolk would grow in many ways that Mr. Archer could never have dreamed, becoming a world-class university and a cornerstone for the city of Boston. Now it is big and vibrant, but Suffolk has never strayed from its original vision of being an excellent school that sends smart, tough, capable, hard-working people out into the world to make a real difference. Congratulations to Suffolk. We cheer your success.
And now for the graduates. This is your day. After years of hard work and perseverance, your long wait is almost over. You've done it. You can now proudly take a zillion selfies wearing a cardboard hat. Styling. [laughter] But seriously. Class of 2016 – congratulations. You did it. You did it. Fabulous.
To the parents and grandparents, to the families and friends, to the teachers and advisors, to Talia Sanchez into her big brother, Ricardo, who works for me and dared me to embarrass her at this graduation – for all of you, this is a pretty amazing day. Without you this day would not have been possible, so congratulations to all of you.
Graduation speakers have a lot of important responsibilities, but the main one is to give advice – ideally based on personal experience – and if we all get lucky the advice will not be a big thumping cliché. That is actually a high bar and I just want you all to know, I did my homework on this – you can always tell the professor – I did my homework and I considered a lot of possibilities here. I started with "Don't live your life based on what other people think." Excellent advice. But Suffolk University runs one of the best public opinion polls in the country so it seemed off message. [laughter] By the way, President McKenna, how's this speech polling so far? Higher or lower than Donald Trump's unfavorable numbers with women? [laughter and applause]
Okay, okay – advice. Lots of people turn to Robert Frost, who spent much of his life in Massachusetts. "Take the road less traveled" – I always liked that advice. But Jerry Seinfeld once pointed out sometimes the road less traveled is less traveled for a reason. Hmm, good rebuttal. Okay, or how about, "When life gives you lemons, make lemonade." Important lesson on being resilient. But when it comes to lemonade, could I really add anything to Beyonce? [cheers]
Now seriously. I know that graduation speakers are supposed to inspire, to offer good life advice, but I'll be honest. My own journey here feels so unexpected, so full of mistakes and twists and turns. On the day of my graduation, I never imagined the most important things that were going to happen in my life. I never imagined I would be a law professor. I never imagined I would be a United States senator. I never imagined I would be a blonde. [laughter] But here I am. And I can tell you, it is life-changing to be a blonde. [laughter]
So my message to all the graduates this year is simple – get ready. Because even if you think you've got everything figured out, trust me – the most exciting parts of your life aren't even on your radar screen.
From the time I was in second grade I want to be a teacher, but that meant college. My family had no money for college. Besides, my mother didn't think I should go to college. I should just find a nice man to marry and let him take care of me. That's what she said. But I had a different plan. I was a high school debater. As was noted earlier, I got a full scholarship to college and off I went, and I knew at that moment my path was set for life.
And then I turned 19 – there were some details left out of the earlier story. I married the first boy I had ever dated who had parachuted back into my life and in the blink of an eye, I took my mother's advice. I said yes to the marriage proposal, gave up my scholarship, dropped out of school. I was really smart at nineteen. But the dream of being a teacher did not go away, so I found another school. I scraped together enough credits to graduate, and then I got the job of my dreams teaching special needs kids, and now I knew for sure that my path was set for life.
Except not exactly. Surprise, surprise – I was going to have a baby. And in those days there were actually some pretty harsh rules about pregnant teachers. So, goodbye beloved teaching job.
I was at home with a little baby. I did all the usual stuff and I watched a lot of television, and then I was inspired. All those lawyer shows. I figured, how hard could that be? Warren for the defense. So I decided to go to law school at a nearby public university, and then I was sure I was set on my path for life.
But surprise, surprise caught up with me again. I graduated from law school nine months pregnant – you will notice a pattern to this – and that we set a time when employers were pretty iffy on the idea of a woman lawyer and the idea of a pregnant-already-the-mother-of-a-toddler-woman lawyer was just plain old impossible. Nobody wanted me and I mean that literally – nobody would hire me.
But just as that plan went out the window, I got another call. Would I like to go back to teaching, this time teaching law? I started with night school, just like the original Suffolk Law, and I loved it, I truly loved it. In fact, I spent 30 years teaching at different law schools about bankruptcy and contracts and finance law. I studied why working families were going broke and how big banks were raking in gigantic profits by cheating people. I wrote books and gave speeches and headed up commissions and did everything I could to try to get the law changed to help hard-working people. And I knew that this was the work I wanted to do forever. Now, for sure, I was set on my path for life.
And then in 2008, a huge financial crash rocked this country. And one day, truly out of the blue, I'm in my kitchen and the phone rings and it's Senator Harry Reid, the Democratic leader of the Senate, and he calls and he says that Congress is putting together a panel about how the Treasury Department was handling the Wall Street bailout and he asked if I'd come to Washington to try to bring some accountability to it.
Now, I was still a professor and I really had no idea why Senator Reid had called me and why he thought I was right person for this job. But our country was in trouble. I went to Washington and I just did my best. The big problem at the heart of the crash was that Wall Street had made zillions of dollars in profits by ripping people off, and there was no one with the power and the backbone to stop them. So I put together an idea for a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau whose only job would be to protect consumers from tricks and traps on credit cards and mortgages and student loans.
Now, no surprise – the big banks and the credit cards hated this idea. Can we underline hated? Put like little fiery things around and it little zaps coming out from it? They hated it. They spent more than a million dollars a day fighting against these financial reforms. They did that for over a year. And what did we have on our side? We didn't have any money on our side, but we scrambled and we scratched and we fought back. It was truly David taking on Goliath, twenty-first century style.
But, here's the thing about it. We won. That little Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is now the law. It is the law.
Before you go home and say to yourself, "Good grief, I just clapped for a government agency at my graduation. Maybe graduating from college means I'm turning into a nerd," let me just point out to you, that little consumer agency has been up and running for nearly five years and it has already forced the biggest financial institutions in this country to return more than eleven billion dollars directly to the people they cheated. Now that's government that works for the people. That's what I like. [applause]
A few years later, my world turned upside down again. Running for office had not been on my bucket list, my shopping list or any other list, but there I was in 2012 busting my tail to be the first woman to be elected senator from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Now, I know that's all a long story and today truly is all about you, but there is a point to that story. Actually, like most graduation speeches, there are three points to that story.
First, all the planning in the world can't prepare you for the twists that are coming your way. You can't predict it all. People will tell you plan, to focus. They will tell you that if you want to succeed, you must stubbornly stay on your path, no matter what. And they will be right. But they will also be wrong.
So there's my first point. I never planned to get married when I did and I sure didn't plan to get divorced. I never planned to become a lawyer or a law professor. No amount of focus when I was 20 would have envisioned me as a United States senator standing on this stage. So there's my first piece of advice for you – don't be so focused in your plans that you are unwilling to consider the unexpected.
My second piece of advice is that you have to figure out who you are. I grew up in a family that was barely hanging on to the ragged edge of the middle class and that experience shaped who I am, not just on the surface but deep down, down in my gut. It made me passionate about helping working families, families that were a lot like mine, families whose kids may have all the potential in the world but don't really have much of a chance to build a future, families that have the system rigged against them. I figured out what I'm fighting for and no matter where I've gone and what I've done, it has helped guide my life.
And you have to do the same. You have to figure out who you are. And who you are isn't about what job you have or what kind of car you drive. You have to think hard about what really matters to you. What makes your heart flutter and your stomach clench. What makes you wake up ready to go and what makes you grind your teeth.
I'm not saying it's easy. One of the hardest things to do in a world of Twitter and Facebook and Snapchat is to carve out time for yourself. And not just the time you carve out following Selena Gomez on Instagram. I mean making it a priority to know yourself – to know what defines you, totally separate from what anybody else thinks. But here's the thing – if you figure that out, nothing will be more valuable. Because knowing who you are is the compass that will help guide you to unexpected opportunity. Or when a setback blows your way, knowing who you are is the center board that will help steady you when you're afraid you may capsize.
And knowing who you are is also helpful for another reason, and this is my third piece of advice. You have to be willing to fight for what you believe in. You have to be willing to fight for what you want. It is a tough world out there and you're going to encounter roadblocks and setbacks and even people who want you to fail.
I couldn't get a job when I graduated from law school. There were almost no women law professors when I started out. When I proposed a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, people told me I shouldn't even try, that I should lower my sights. And now that I'm in the Senate, I can tell you that Washington is full of people who say no, no, no and who are saying it in nastier and nastier and nastier ways.
But knowing who you are will help you when it's time to fight – fight for the job you want, fight for the people who mean the most to you and fight for the kind of world you want to live in. It will help when people say, "That's impossible," or "You can't do that."
Look – if you take the unexpected opportunities when they come up, if you know yourself and if you fight for what you believe in, I can promise that you will live a life that is rich with meaning. You'll be on the road less traveled. You won't care what the polling says and you'll find that lemonade is terrific. And besides, if you don't like drinking lemonade, you can always listen to Beyonce.
It has been a great honor to share this celebration with you. Congratulations again on a job well done. Now get ready for a lifetime of unexpected adventures.
Neither the Catt Center nor Iowa State University is affiliated with any individual in the Archives or any political party. Inclusion in the Archives is not an endorsement by the center or the university.