speeches · May 16, 2014
Regional President Speech
Richard W. Fisher · President
‘Never Let Your Brains Go to Your Head’
(With Reference to the Sages of the Ages, Diana Sorensen,
John Paul Jones and ‘Babe’ Fisher)
Address for the 151st Commencement,
Bryant University
Richard W. Fisher
President and CEO
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Smithfield, R.I.
May 17, 2014
The views expressed are my own and do not necessarily reflect official positions of the Federal Reserve System.
‘Never Let Your Brains Go to Your Head’
(With Reference to the Sages of the Ages, Diana Sorensen,
John Paul Jones and ‘Babe’ Fisher)
Richard W. Fisher
Before I begin my formal remarks, I want the candidates for degrees to think about the fact that
over 5,000 people are here today to celebrate your success. These are your parents and
grandparents, cousins, uncles and aunts; your brothers and sisters; your friends; your teachers
and coaches and counselors. They have been by your side through joyful moments and less-
joyful ones. They have encouraged you. They have believed in you. And they have occasionally
badgered and hectored you and … driven you nuts. All to good effect. They are here with glad
and happy hearts to celebrate your admission to the society of educated men and women. You
will be applauded by them many times today. But I want you, the graduating class, to turn the
table on them and give them a round of applause. So stand up, turn around, put your hands
together and give them a cheer. Thank them for loving you.
Now, please be seated.
I also want to salute the outgoing chairman of the Bryant University board of trustees, Michael
Edward Fisher, ’67. I want to thank him not only for his six years as chairman and for his total
devotion to Bryant, but also for doing his family proud—especially his little brother … me.
Blessed to Be Americans
Mike Fisher and I grew up in what can most charitably be described as “unusual circumstances.”
Our father started out his life in conditions right out of Charles Dickens: At the age of 5 years
and 2 months, he was arrested for begging for food and sentenced to seven years in Australia’s
harshest prison, a God-awful place called Westbrook Reformatory.1 He was spared the destiny of
most inmates there—he was released quickly and lived to see better days—but to say he grew up
rough is an understatement. Our mother, born in a small South African outpost where
Norwegians, Swedes and Danes carved a life out of the “bush,” lost her father at the age of 4 and
was raised by a single mom who cooked for a boarding house. Neither of our parents had a
formal education. But both were smart and ambitious for a better life. What did they do? They
came to America. It was here that their family flourished.
If you are ever tempted to doubt what hardworking immigrants bring to our shores and the power
and moral imperative of a free economy or American-style democracy, think twice. Only in
America could two sons of a once-homeless beggar and the daughter of a boarding-house cook
become what you see here on this stage today: One the distinguished chairman of the board of
trustees of Bryant University, and the other a policymaker for the most important central bank in
the world who is somehow deemed worthy of receiving an honorary doctorate and being chosen
as speaker for the 151st commencement of this fine university. We are blessed to be Americans.
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The Sages of the Ages
Now, the only thing that stands between you and receiving your Bryant degree is … me. I will
speak quickly and take up just a few moments of your time before you celebrate your
accomplishments.
By now, you have taken enough writing courses to know the tongue-in-cheek definition of a
good essay: It is a collection of other people’s thoughts disguised as your own!2 Most graduation
speeches are no different. The standard routine for a commencement speaker is to dig through
Bartlett’s or the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations or resort to Google and Wikiquote to find
something said by some sage that will grace a graduation ceremony with a lesson students can
take with them as they go off into this mysterious and challenging world.
To find something profound that I might pinch for your amusement today, I pored over the
sayings of the great minds through time: Plato, Socrates, Mencius, Muhammad, St. Paul and St.
Augustine, Voltaire, Martin Luther, Mother Teresa … Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber.
The maxims put forward by the sages of the ages are inspiring, but you already know them or
you would not be where you are today: Be disciplined; be prepared; be loyal and thrifty and
brave; always question conventional wisdom; take risks; push the envelope; be true to yourself;
never promise more than you can deliver; never compromise your integrity; don’t waste your
talents; never forget that you have been given those talents in order to do good; never, ever, ever,
ever give up the pursuit of excellence.
These are all wise maxims. But, truth be told, it would save time and expedite many a graduation
ceremony if organizers would forgo a commencement speaker and simply remind the graduating
class to read and, throughout life, reread the Old and New Testament or the Quran or Confucius
or Shakespeare—the ultimate sources of almost every graduation speech I have ever read or
listened to.
For example, it would tax the capacity of the most powerful search engine to pull up the
countless commencement speakers who have lifted and adapted variations of Shakespeare’s lines
in King Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene VII that “ignorance is the curse of God, [k]nowledge the
wing wherewith we fly to heaven.”
Diana Sorensen’s Dictum
One of the most intriguing living thinkers, Diana Sorensen, the dean of arts and humanities at
Harvard University, defines a knowledgeable graduate taking wing as follows:
“He or she is competent in making discerning judgments with tools derived from science,
engineering, social science, the arts and humanities. He or she should be a persuasive speaker
who can articulate the reasons for his positions; who can write with clarity, elegance and
conceptual power; an innovator who will take risks but first makes sure the limb they go out on
is a sturdy one; a creative individual who has faced challenges posed by artistic production and
experimentation; a global citizen who can speak, read, write in at least a second language; and
who will learn what it takes to negotiate different world views emanating from different cultural
traditions, a tolerant yet rigorous thinker whose moral compass is guided by ethical reasoning.”3
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Class of 2014, I don’t want to put any pressure on you! But that pretty much summarizes the
skill set we all hope you have started to acquire at Bryant and will now go on to hone in life.
Babe Fisher and John Paul Jones
Preparing to speak to you today, I asked: How might I, a central banker whose musings are given
to the arcana of economic and monetary policy, possibly improve upon the wisdom of the
ultimate sources? Not easily. So I dug deep into my memory bank and called upon a source more
erudite than the lessons of the Bible or the Quran, Confucius or Shakespeare, and even more
insightful than Diana Sorensen—Mike’s and my mother, Magnhild Andersen Fisher, whom
everybody called “Babe.”
Babe Fisher never enjoyed the benefit of the type of education you have received. Yet she was a
wise woman. She was a kind of female Nordic Yogi Berra who dispensed exquisite pearls of
wisdom to her boys. One is especially germane for this ceremony. Our mother would say:
“Never let your brains go to your head.” The pun is horrific but the message is profound: To
achieve success, you will need to keep your superb education and your considerable talent in
perspective. Brains and the gift of talent are necessary, but they are insufficient for success in
life.
Time and again, in business and universities and government we see instances in which women
and men of towering intellect get far at first but ultimately snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
They do so because they have forgotten to develop their emotional quotient with the same
devotion they applied to developing their intelligence quotient. My heartfelt advice to you is to
work as hard on expanding your EQ as you have on harnessing your IQ.
You all have great futures ahead of you. You will get there just as fast, and enjoy it much more,
if you remember that a sound mind resides most comfortably in a sound, well-rounded person
and that a sound, well-rounded person has more than a superior education and brain. The whole
person is as important an achievement for those few who have been admitted to the “society of
educated men and women” as is the achievement of intellectual excellence.
As a former midshipman, I have always been inspired by the creed of the father of the Navy,
John Paul Jones, as written by his biographer Augustus Buell. “It is by no means enough that an
officer of the Navy should be a capable mariner. He must be that, of course, but also a great deal
more. He should be as well a gentleman of liberal education, refined manners, punctilious
courtesy, and the nicest sense of personal honor. He should be the soul of tact, patience, justice,
firmness, and charity. … Every commander should keep constantly before him the great truth,
that to be well obeyed, he must be perfectly esteemed.”
I would say that Jones (or Buell) nailed it. Take the naval reference and the gender bias out, and
you have the ultimate guide for all of you who depart Bryant today aspiring to lead: You must be
more than smart and have more than a mighty intellect; you must develop the whole woman, the
whole man to be a leader in whatever field you chose.
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A Smattering of Latin
Which brings me to the last requirement for most all commencement orations—a smattering of
Latin. Commencement speakers at great schools seem to delight in showing off their command
of an ancient tongue. Many a commencement speaker might have concluded this afternoon’s
remarks with labor omnia vincit—a stern reminder that labor conquers all things. It is true,
indeed, that you can’t rest on your laurels or your good family name or a Bryant education or just
plain good luck. You have to work hard and sweat to succeed. And in doing so, you have to
remember mens sana in corpore sano—a sound mind resides best in a sound body.
But that is way too ponderous. This is, after all, a festive day! So I will conclude with this:
“Bubbus, sed possum explicarle, non sed possum comprehendere.”
For those of you unschooled in the language of the ancient Romans, that is Texas-ized, distorted
Latin for “Bubba, I can explain it to you, but I can’t understand it for you.”
This afternoon I have done my best to explain to the Class of 2014 that success comes to those
who best put their talents in context and who connect their substantial intellectual achievement to
an equally developed emotional capacity. Those of us who lead cerebral lives must constantly
strive to elevate our people skills to a level equal to our intellectual skills. I can explain that to
you ad nauseam (aha! Another Latin phrase!). But you must come to understand it on your own.
And if you do—if you go through your promising lives remembering that the “whole person is
the best person”—my guess is that someday one of you in the Class of 2014 will be standing at
this very podium giving the commencement speech to some future generation of graduates and
their thousands of supporters and admirers. And having the greatest pleasure a speaker can have:
Quoting your very own mom.
Congratulations, God bless you and good luck!
Thank you.
Notes
1 Westbrook: Surviving Australia’s Most Sadistic Reformatory, by William Stokes, Sydney, Australia: Macmillan
by Pan Macmillan Australia, 2010.
2 If memory serves from my days at Oxford University, this observation was noted by Graham Chapman, one of the
stalwarts of Monty Python’s Flying Circus.
3 Dean Sorensen’s comments are summarized in “Coming Back, Looking Forward,” Harvard Gazette, Sept. 26,
2012.
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Cite this document
APA
Richard W. Fisher (2014, May 16). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140517_richard_w_fisher
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20140517_richard_w_fisher,
author = {Richard W. Fisher},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2014},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140517_richard_w_fisher},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}