Go Forth... And Do As Little Harm As Possible
I will not waste my breath today pleading with you
not to go forth. Instead I limit myself to a simple
plea: When you get out there in the world try not
to make it any worse than it already is. I thought
it might help to give you a list: 10 things to help
you avoid making the world worse than it already is.
One: Bend down once in a while and smell a flower.
Two: Don't go around in clothes that talk. There is
already too much talk in the world. We've got so many
talking people there's hardly anybody left to listen.
With radio and television and telephones we've got
talking furniture. With bumper stickers we've got
talking cars. Talking clothes just add to the uproar.
If you simply cannot resist being an incompetent klutz,
don't boast about it by wearing a tee shirt that says
'underachiever and proud of it.' Being dumb is not
the worst thing in the world, but letting your clothes
shout it out loud depresses the neighbors and embarrasses
your parents.
Point three follows from point two, and it's this:
Listen once in a while. It's amazing what you can
hear. On a hot summer day in the country you can hear
the corn growing, the crack of a tin roof buckling
under the power of the sun. In a real old-fashioned
parlor silence so deep you can hear the dust settling
on the velveteen settee, you might hear the footsteps
of something sinister gaining on you, or a heart-stoppingly
beautiful phrase from Mozart you haven't heard since
childhood, or the voice of somebody - now gone - whom
you loved. Or sometime when you're talking up a storm
so brilliant, so charming that you can hardly believe
how wonderful you are, pause just a moment and listen
to yourself. It's good for the soul to hear yourself
as others hear you, and next time maybe, just maybe,
you will not talk so much, so loudly, so brilliantly,
so charmingly, so utterly shamefully foolishly.
Point four: Sleep in the nude. In an age when people
don't even get dressed to go to the theater anymore,
it's silly getting dressed up to go to bed. What's
more, now that you can no longer smoke, drink gin
or eat bacon and eggs without somebody trying to make
you feel ashamed of yourself, sleeping in the nude
is one deliciously sinful pleasure you can commit
without being caught by the Puritan police squads
that patrol the nation.
Point five: Turn off the TV once or twice a month
and pick up a book. It will ease your blood pressure.
It might even wake up your mind, but if it puts you
to sleep you're still a winner. Better to sleep than
have to watch that endless parade of body bags the
local news channel marches through your parlor.
"Six: don't take your gun to town. Don't even
leave it home unless you lock all your bullets in
a safe deposit box in a faraway bank. The surest way
to get shot is not to drop by the nearest convenience
store for a bottle of milk at midnight, but to keep
a loaded pistol in you own house. What about your
constitutional right to bear arms, you say. I would
simply point out that you don't have to exercise a
constitutional right just because you have it. You
have the constitutional right to run for president
of the United States, abut most people have too much
sense to insist on exercising it.
"Seven: learn to fear the automobile. It is not
the trillion-dollar deficit that will finally destroy
America. It is the automobile. Congressional studies
of future highway needs are terrifying. A typical
projection shows that when your generation is middle-aged,
Interstate 95 between Miami and Fort Lauderdale will
have to be 22 lanes wide to avert total paralysis
of south Florida. Imagine an entire country covered
with asphalt. My grandfather's generation shot horses.
Yours had better learn to shoot automobiles.
Eight: Have some children. Children add texture to
your life. They will save you from turning into old
fogies before you're middle-aged. They will teach
you humility. When old age overtakes you, as it inevitably
will I'm sorry to say, having a few children will
provide you with people who will feel guilty when
they're accused of being ungrateful for all you've
done for them. It's almost impossible nowadays to
find anybody who will feel guilty about anything,
including mass murder. When you reach the golden years,
your best bet is children, the ingrates.
Nine: Get married. I know you don't want to hear this,
but getting married will give you a lot more satisfaction
in the long run than your BMW. It provides a standard
set of parent for your children and gives you that
second income you will need when it's time to send
those children to Connecticut College. What's more,
without marriage you will have practically no material
at all to work with when you decide to write a book
or hire a psychiatrist.
"When you get married, whatever you do, do not
ask a lawyer to draw up a marriage contract spelling
out how your lives will be divvied up when you get
divorced. It's hard enough making a marriage work
without having a blueprint for its destruction drawn
up before you go to the altar. Speaking of lawyers
brings me to point nine and a half, which is: Avoid
lawyers unless you have nothing to do with the rest
of your life but kill time.
And finally, point 10: smile. You're one of the luckiest
people in the world. You're living in America. Enjoy
it. I feel obliged to give you this banal advice because,
although I've lived through the Great Depression,
World War II, terrible wars in Korea and Vietnam,
and half a century of cold war, I have never seen
a time when there were so many Americans so angry
or so mean-spirited or so sour about the country as
there are today.
Anger has become the national habit. You see it on
the sullen faces of fashion models scowling out of
magazines. it pours out of the radio. Washington television
hams snarl and shout at each other on television.
Ordinary people abuse politicians and their wives
with shockingly coarse insults. Rudeness has become
an acceptable way of announcing you are sick and tired
of it all and are not going to take it anymore. Vile
speech is justified on the same ground and is inescapable.
My sermon is done.
Russell Baker
Commencement address
May 27, 1995