speeches · June 17, 2020
Regional President Speech
Mary C. Daly · President
FINAL
“Ambassadors of Hope”
Mary C. Daly, President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
The Preuss School Graduation
Virtual Presentation
June 18, 2020
4:00PM PT
Remarks as prepared for delivery.
Hi everyone. I’m honored to be your graduation speaker today. It’s truly
a gift to me.
Now typically, graduation speeches have a certain rhythm to them.
There’s a little humor, some advice, lots of celebration, big congratulations.
And almost always, there’s a central theme tied around encouragement,
aspiration, or maybe perspective.
But today, I’ve decided to depart from the usual rhythm and go straight
to what we all need most right now: HOPE. Hope for ourselves, hope for our
world, hope for a brighter future.
I know I’m not alone in needing hope. I saw it in your words that you
sent in last month – on how you felt about graduating during a global
pandemic.
In the midst of the expected emotions at graduation, the ones I’ve seen
and felt myself – things like accomplished, motivated, excited – there were
others that reflect the times we’re in. Words like, anxious, disappointed… one
person said robbed.
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FINAL
And these were your feelings when we were only dealing with COVID-
19. Before the pain, the tensions, and the unrest surrounding the deaths of
George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, and Breonna Taylor. Deaths that underscore
and spotlight the systemic racism, inequality, and injustice that plague our
society.
I’m guessing that if I asked you today, you might not even have the
words to fully describe how you feel anymore. And that’s okay. I’ve been
trying to figure out my own feelings, and find my own right words, for weeks.
It’s understandable. Our world is in a hard place right now. And we have
no clear sense of when and how better days will emerge.
But to better days we must go. Not by accident. But with purpose and
conviction. As agents of change. As ambassadors of hope.
Why hope? What makes hope the foundational element for change? It’s
stubborn
actually very simple: hope is the stubborn – and I mean double-underlined
– belief that whatever is happening today does not have to
determine tomorrow. Hope is what allows you to set an intention for change
and know that change is possible. So at its heart, hope is agency.
You start off with loads of hope when you’re young. I know I did. Just
think of all the things you’ve done with complete abandon, knowing in your
heart that they would work out in the end.
Then the disappointments come, and the frustrations. You learn that
change can be slow, and that maybe goals aren’t as easy to reach as you
expected. And these experiences leave little dents… maybe a bruise. And they
can chip away at your hope.
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But here’s the thing I came to tell you. Hope is not a rock or some other
inanimate object that erodes or diminishes over time, outside of our control.
Hope is a living thing. And we must choose to nurture it. It takes care and
intention to thrive.
So how do you do it? How do you maintain hope? How do you make it
grow, and get bigger and stronger over time?
You keep a box of diamonds.
You might remember my box of diamonds. I talked to you about it when
I visited Preuss in October. They’re the memories from my life, big and small,
that make me feel joyous, filled up, boundless. They remind me of my
humanness, of my goodness, and of the kindness in the world. They remind
me that, no matter what’s going on, I belong.
Sometimes my diamonds are physical – like my grandfather’s pocket
knife, or the last $20 bill my grandma gave me for groceries before she passed
away. Sometimes they are small and fleeting moments, like the compassion of
a UPS driver who saw I was upset one day and stopped his truck to ask if I was
everywhere
okay. And sometimes they are grand, like the day I married my wife.
The best thing about diamonds is that they are . You just
have to remember to stop and collect them. You have to be intentional about
spotting them, and reflecting on them, and putting them in your real or virtual
memory box. All so they will be ready to take out when you need them – to
help you through frustration or anger, to fill you back up, to soothe your grief
when the world feels lost.
This is the practice of choosing hope.
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I’ve been taking out my box of diamonds a lot over the past few months.
Looking at each one. Recalling where I got them and how I felt when I found
them. All trying to feel strong in these challenging times.
So it’s fitting that I am here today to give your graduation speech.
Because last October, I had the enormous joy of meeting you. On that day, we
took a picture together. I rushed home and printed that picture, and it still
hangs on my wall. It was a day I won’t forget. It is one of my diamonds.
Today, more than anything, I want to say thank you. And I want you to
remember that you make a difference even when you don’t realize it. You give
others strength and fortitude just by being who you are. By graduating in a
pandemic. By being the first in your family to head for college. And for being
brave and vulnerable enough to allow yourselves to feel excited, anxious,
motivated, disappointed, and even robbed all on the same day.
But before I close and for just a moment, I want you to put every other
emotion aside except for one. I want you to only feel joy. Because today is your
day. It’s filled with love, and pride, and gratitude from your families, from your
friends, from your teachers, and from your community. You have
accomplished so much, and today is your day to celebrate.
The world will be here when you’re done – and it will need you to be
strong and ready. It will need you to show up, speak out, and fight for a better
future on whatever path you choose to take.
But that’s for tomorrow.
So take today. Hold on to it. Let it fill you up. And then, let’s join together
to be ambassadors of hope. The world needs us.
Thank you – and congratulations. I can’t wait to see what you do.
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Cite this document
APA
Mary C. Daly (2020, June 17). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200618_mary_c_daly
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20200618_mary_c_daly,
author = {Mary C. Daly},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2020},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20200618_mary_c_daly},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}