 |
| It's about making good choices... |
|
|
Its all about choices! At Numina Group we focus on supporting healthy and kind choices...
“We are What We Choose”
Remarks by Jeff Bezos, CEO and Founder of Amazon.com to the Baccalaureate Class of 2010 at Princeton University
May 30, 2010
As a kid, I spent my summers
with my grandparents on their ranch in Texas. I helped fix windmills,
vaccinate cattle, and do other chores. We also watched soap operas
every afternoon, especially Days of our Lives. My grandparents belonged
to a Caravan Club, a group of Airstream trailer owners who travel
together around the U.S. and Canada. And every few summers, we’d join
the caravan. We’d hitch up the Airstream trailer to my grandfather’s
car, and off we’d go, in a line with 300 other Airstream adventurers. I
loved and worshipped my grandparents and I really looked forward to
these trips. On one particular trip, I was about 10 years old. I was
rolling around in the big bench seat in the back of the car. My
grandfather was driving. And my grandmother had the passenger seat. She
smoked throughout these trips, and I hated the smell.
At that age, I’d take any
excuse to make estimates and do minor arithmetic. I’d calculate our gas
mileage — figure out useless statistics on things like grocery
spending. I’d been hearing an ad campaign about smoking. I can’t
remember the details, but basically the ad said, every puff of a
cigarette takes some number of minutes off your life: I think it might
have been two minutes per puff. At any rate, I decided to do the math
for my grandmother. I estimated the number of cigarettes per days,
estimated the number of puffs per cigarette and so on. When I was
satisfied that I’d come up with a reasonable number, I poked my head
into the front of the car, tapped my grandmother on the shoulder, and
proudly proclaimed, “At two minutes per puff, you’ve taken nine years
off your life!”
Memorable Unkindness
I have a vivid memory of what
happened next, and it was not what I expected. I expected to be
applauded for my cleverness and arithmetic skills. “Jeff, you’re so
smart. You had to have made some tricky estimates, figure out the
number of minutes in a year and do some division.” That’s not what
happened. Instead, my grandmother burst into tears. I sat in the
backseat and did not know what to do. While my grandmother sat crying,
my grandfather, who had been driving in silence, pulled over onto the
shoulder of the highway. He got out of the car and came around and
opened my door and waited for me to follow. Was I in trouble? My
grandfather was a highly intelligent, quiet man. He had never said a
harsh word to me, and maybe this was to be the first time? Or maybe he
would ask that I get back in the car and apologize to my grandmother. I
had no experience in this realm with my grandparents and no way to
gauge what the consequences might be. We stopped beside the trailer. My
grandfather looked at me, and after a bit of silence, he gently and
calmly said, “Jeff, one day you’ll understand that it’s harder to be
kind than clever.”
Gifts and Choices
What I want to talk to you
about today is the difference between gifts and choices. Cleverness is
a gift, kindness is a choice. Gifts are easy — they’re given after all.
Choices can be hard. You can seduce yourself with your gifts if you’re
not careful, and if you do, it’ll probably be to the detriment of your
choices.
This is a group with many
gifts. I’m sure one of your gifts is the gift of a smart and capable
brain. I’m confident that’s the case because admission is competitive
and if there weren’t some signs that you’re clever, the dean of
admission wouldn’t have let you in.
Your smarts will come in handy
because you will travel in a land of marvels. We humans — plodding as
we are — will astonish ourselves. We’ll invent ways to generate clean
energy and a lot of it. Atom by atom, we’ll assemble tiny machines that
will enter cell walls and make repairs. This month comes the
extraordinary but also inevitable news that we’ve synthesized life. In
the coming years, we’ll not only synthesize it, but we’ll engineer it
to specifications. I believe you’ll even see us understand the human
brain. Jules Verne, Mark Twain, Galileo, Newton — all the curious from
the ages would have wanted to be alive most of all right now. As a
civilization, we will have so many gifts, just as you as individuals
have so many individual gifts as you sit before me.
How will you use these gifts? And will you take pride in your gifts or pride in your choices?
Pursing the Crazy Dream
I got the idea to start Amazon
16 years ago. I came across the fact that Web usage was growing at
2,300 percent per year. I’d never seen or heard of anything that grew
that fast, and the idea of building an online bookstore with millions
of titles — something that simply couldn’t exist in the physical world
— was very exciting to me. I had just turned 30 years old, and I’d been
married for a year. I told my wife MacKenzie that I wanted to quit my
job and go do this crazy thing that probably wouldn’t work since most
startups don’t, and I wasn’t sure what would happen after that.
MacKenzie (also a Princeton grad and sitting here in the second row)
told me I should go for it. As a young boy, I’d
been a garage inventor. I’d invented an automatic gate closer out of
cement-filled tires, a solar cooker that didn’t work very well out of
an umbrella and tinfoil, baking-pan alarms to entrap my siblings. I’d
always wanted to be an inventor, and she wanted me to follow my passion.
Trading Security for Passion
I was working at a financial
firm in New York City with a bunch of very smart people, and I had a
brilliant boss that I much admired. I went to my boss and told him I
wanted to start a company selling books on the Internet. He took me on
a long walk in Central Park, listened carefully to me, and finally
said, “That sounds like a really good idea, but it would be an even
better idea for someone who didn’t already have a good job.” That logic
made some sense to me, and he convinced me to think about it for 48
hours before making a final decision. Seen in that light, it really was
a difficult choice, but ultimately, I decided I had to give it a shot.
I didn’t think I’d regret trying and failing. And I suspected I would
always be haunted by a decision to not try at all. After much
consideration, I took the less safe path to follow my passion, and I’m
proud of that choice.
Tomorrow, in a very real sense, your life — the life you author from scratch on your own — begins.
How will you use your gifts? What choices will you make?
Will inertia be your guide, or will you follow your passions?
Will you follow dogma, or will you be original?
Will you choose a life of ease, or a life of service and adventure?
Will you wilt under criticism, or will you follow your convictions?
Will you bluff it out when you’re wrong, or will you apologize?
Will you guard your heart against rejection, or will you act when you fall in love?
Will you play it safe, or will you be a little bit swashbuckling?
When it’s tough, will you give up, or will you be relentless?
Will you be a cynic, or will you be a builder?
Will you be clever at the expense of others, or will you be kind?
I will hazard a prediction.
When you are 80 years old, and in a quiet moment of reflection
narrating for only yourself the most personal version of your life
story, the telling that will be most compact and meaningful will be the
series of choices you have made. In the end, we are our choices. Build
yourself a great story. Thank you and good luck!
|