Miyerkules, Marso 6, 2013

My Pet Peeve Speech


In 1982 Steven Callahan was crossing the Atlantic alone in his sailboat when it struck something and sank. He was out of the shipping lanes and floating in a life raft, alone. His supplies were few. His chances were small. Yet when three fishermen found him seventy-six days later (the longest anyone has survived a shipwreck on a life raft alone), he was alive -- much skinnier than he was when he started, but alive.

His account of how he survived is fascinating. His ingenuity -- how he managed to catch fish, how he fixed his solar still (evaporates sea water to make fresh) -- is very interesting.

But the thing that caught my eye was how he managed to keep himself going when all hope seemed lost, when there seemed no point in continuing the struggle, when he was suffering greatly, when his life raft was punctured and after more than a week struggling with his weak body to fix it, it was still leaking air and wearing him out to keep pumping it up. He was starved. He was desperately dehydrated. He was thoroughly exhausted. Giving up would have seemed the only sane option.

When people survive these kinds of circumstances, they do something with their minds that gives them the courage to keep going. Many people in similarly desperate circumstances give in or go mad. Something the survivors do with their thoughts helps them find the guts to carry on in spite of overwhelming odds.
"I tell myself I can handle it," wrote Callahan in his narrative. "Compared to what others have been through, I'm fortunate. I tell myself these things over and over, building up fortitude...."

So here, coming to us from the extreme edge of survival, are words that can give us strength. Whatever you're going through, tell yourself you can handle it. Compared to what others have been through, you're fortunate. Tell this to yourself over and over, and it will help you get through the rough spots with a little more fortitude.

My Farewel Speech

Together we all embarked on a journey, an experience that has left an indelible impact on our life. With rapidly beating hearts and nervous minds we entered the portals of LCC-B.

Like often a caterpillar in its cocoon evolves into a butterfly. LCC has been our cocoon. It has polished us into what we are today. But now, it’s time to spread our wings and fly… Fly for the real world awaits – where we carry on us, the LCC badge, the Honour of being a LCCian. We must at all times remember to uphold this honour and ensure that we maintain the dignity of the science, the institution and the profession that we belong to. We are not just Teachers, transforming the lives of others. We are LCC trained Teachers – formator and followers of God. With this renewed hope, enthusiasm – we graduate. The vast, blue skies are the limit. We all have our hopes, we all have our destinations. We all have our destiny. What was to be seen is where we go. Just the mere mention brings back so many memories, nostalgia that threatens to pour out in tears. All those grueling exam, viva and study sessions, those fun filled euphoric college weeks, the enthusiastic competitive sports spirit. Those blissful hours spent in the college corridors, the canteen or the library. Those private secret conversations we shared with our friends.
  
Wishing all of us the life that we desire. May God bless us with Happiness and Success…forever.