What "Follow Your Dreams" Misses | Harvey Mudd Commencement Speech 2024

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  • Опубліковано 9 чер 2024
  • I had the pleasure of being invited to give Harvey Mudd's commencement speech this year.
    Reposted here with permission from the University
    Timestamps:
    0:00 - End of Harriet Nembhard's introduction
    0:45 - The cliché
    2:28 - The shifting goal
    5:57 - Action precedes motivation
    7:02 - Timing
    10:47 - Know your influence
    12:05 - Anticipate change
    ------------------
    3blue1brown is a channel about animating math, in all senses of the word animate. If you're reading the bottom of a video description, I'm guessing you're more interested than the average viewer in lessons here. It would mean a lot to me if you chose to stay up to date on new ones, either by subscribing here on UA-cam or otherwise following on whichever platform below you check most regularly.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @user-go5ri2yg5f
    @user-go5ri2yg5f 22 дні тому +5745

    Wow, the animation in this one was crazy realistic!

    • @A3Kr0n
      @A3Kr0n 20 днів тому +82

      Grant is an A.I. bot programmed in Python.

    • @manojkaware
      @manojkaware 20 днів тому +9

      Yes

    • @ihmejakki2731
      @ihmejakki2731 20 днів тому +25

      The latest Manim library update

    • @orcishhorde
      @orcishhorde 19 днів тому +11

      Especially the tassel physics

    • @goldnutter412
      @goldnutter412 19 днів тому +3

      lmao well played, you win a chocolate cookie !

  • @jimmytaco6738
    @jimmytaco6738 22 дні тому +7955

    Maybe it's just me, but after hearing Grant's voice without seeing his face for so long, I find it super weird that that guy at the podium has the exact same voice as 3Blue1Brown.

    • @jordanwait7264
      @jordanwait7264 22 дні тому +210

      I think you might be onto something

    • @eh8164
      @eh8164 22 дні тому

      That's just the android they use to allow non-corporeals to hold speeches.

    • @dollarsign777
      @dollarsign777 22 дні тому +53

      He is onto Tacos

    • @neotoico5846
      @neotoico5846 22 дні тому +24

      his hair is hidden (and I don't like that)

    • @atulmathur84
      @atulmathur84 22 дні тому +96

      I am still waiting for an animated graph

  • @iamthirdyt
    @iamthirdyt 22 дні тому +2565

    FINALLY someone who acknowledges survivorship bias of their success and recognize the luck of their timing in addition to their hard work.

    • @pianoplaynight
      @pianoplaynight 21 день тому +55

      Bo Burnham did it too on Conan. Really had an impact on me at a crosspoint between a career in computer science and one in music.

    • @brandall101
      @brandall101 20 днів тому +11

      The 12 year old book "Too Good They Can't Ignore You" is largely based on this idea.

    • @luisfilipe2023
      @luisfilipe2023 20 днів тому +37

      I think the only danger with this survivorship bias thing is making you believe you can’t achieve something which becomes a self fulfilling prophecy

    • @uberpaht
      @uberpaht 19 днів тому +8

      Dave Grohl raises the same point numerous times in his autobiography.

    • @arunkarthikma3121
      @arunkarthikma3121 18 днів тому +19

      ​@@luisfilipe2023 That's not what survivorship bias means

  • @MattsPS
    @MattsPS 22 дні тому +1652

    His "video narrator" voice is so clear and relaxing, but after watching this speech... IS THAT JUST HIS REGULAR VOICE?!

    • @drako3659
      @drako3659 21 день тому +35

      Maybe it wasn't and it is now?

    • @cassiek6531
      @cassiek6531 21 день тому +105

      It sounds a lot like my "giving a speech" voice - presentations and lessons get the same one, casual conversation sounds very different. (Like when you hear someone drop into customer service voice!) Definitely I would use the same voice to give a commencement speech and to do a video lesson.

    • @nikhilchouhan1802
      @nikhilchouhan1802 20 днів тому +18

      @@cassiek6531 tbh his voice sounded the same in the lex fridman podcast as well.

    • @roylim1169
      @roylim1169 20 днів тому +7

      Now that's a assuming he didnt start teaching on youtube with his regular voice

    • @chriss3404
      @chriss3404 15 днів тому +5

      I maintain that 3b1b narrated over this guy's speech.

  • @davidtazartes2788
    @davidtazartes2788 22 дні тому +1995

    One of the best commencement speeches I've ever heard.

    • @joshuabrittain5919
      @joshuabrittain5919 22 дні тому +35

      By far the best I've ever heard.

    • @aktchungrabanio6467
      @aktchungrabanio6467 22 дні тому +10

      Not really, no.

    • @morbiusfan3176
      @morbiusfan3176 22 дні тому +19

      Y'all simp way too hard for this guy.

    • @mythbuster6126
      @mythbuster6126 22 дні тому +12

      ​@@joshuabrittain5919looks like this is the only speech you heard

    • @rapus007
      @rapus007 21 день тому +8

      have a look at the one from mark Rober. both shine in a way that they are grounded in their thoughts to be conveyed

  • @Sciencedoneright
    @Sciencedoneright 22 дні тому +2951

    I know that you get comments like this regularly, but I cannot state in words the importance you have played in my life in terms of math and the sciences. You were singlehandedly the only person who actually fueled that very passion you were talking about, and currently I am at a fork in the road of my life, confused on what I'll do in the future. This advice might actually help. Thank you yet again for all the wonderful things you've made and posted on this platform. You are deeply loved and appreciated by your community you have built here on UA-cam. ❤

    • @etz_RacingDog
      @etz_RacingDog 22 дні тому +38

      yus i love him so much ...never ever liked someone like this

    • @Sciencedoneright
      @Sciencedoneright 22 дні тому +32

      @@etz_RacingDog I hope your comment was made in a platonic sense

    • @nitecomet
      @nitecomet 22 дні тому +23

      @@SciencedonerightCapital P Platonic, like the solids.

    • @3blue1brown
      @3blue1brown  22 дні тому +968

      I'm touched to hear it. Best of luck with whatever fork in the road you face. One of the aims of the talk was to get those passionate about something purely academic (like math) to not necessarily pursue a purely academic path. Don't be afraid to take some time trying something completely different than you otherwise might, as long as it centers on adding value to others.

    • @etz_RacingDog
      @etz_RacingDog 21 день тому +7

      @@Sciencedoneright in both ways.

  • @Yashodhan1917
    @Yashodhan1917 20 днів тому +334

    Grant is such an eloquent speaker. Never once did he need to use filler words like "erm, uh, like". His speech flowed so smoothly and he has a comforting voice.

    • @cameronschyuder9034
      @cameronschyuder9034 17 днів тому +12

      I don't want to deny this but also it seems he is reading from a script on the podium. It's commonplace nowadays and it's a long speech so I am not saying that as a negative, more to correct that it is much easier to read something without filler than to say on the spot or have it memorized even

    • @Yashodhan1917
      @Yashodhan1917 17 днів тому +32

      @@cameronschyuder9034 yes I know, but he's not reading it verbatim and it's still difficult not to fumble even if you are

    • @yun-z
      @yun-z 11 днів тому +3

      @@cameronschyuder9034 he wrote a fantastic script

    • @flamethrower883
      @flamethrower883 9 днів тому +1

      ​@@cameronschyuder9034 Indeed but he seldom looked at it. He was engaging.

  • @randominternetguy4357
    @randominternetguy4357 22 дні тому +902

    "Action precedes motivation"
    I feel like this quote is too good. Speaks volumes and resonated a lot with me (and I assume quite a few other people too). We were always meant to believe that we are sipposed to "dream big" and "become successful". However, that's setting too high expectations and aiming for "failure".

    • @rawmango1321
      @rawmango1321 22 дні тому +19

      Yea when I was a student I always found that getting better at the subject gave me even more motivation to do it

    • @SeamusHarper1234
      @SeamusHarper1234 22 дні тому +14

      That's not exactly true. If you have a clear vision on an impossible goal (and I absolutely stress impossible), you set your mind in a state where growth is accelerated. As an example from the business side, if you strive to double your sales, you can achieve it by simply adding more effort, maybe hiring someone to do the same you do. That's a common road to burnout. If you strive for 10x, you simply cannot do it by doing the same things that got you to where you are. You need to think about what NOT to do, drop maybe 80% of what you did and do something entirely different.
      The most important thing is, that you don't measure your success by your vision, which is unobtainable. You measure your success by looking behind, what you have accomplished and how you grew and changed.

    • @garrettmillard525
      @garrettmillard525 22 дні тому +23

      It's also quite literally how our neurobiology works. A task can seem daunting and insurmountable, or even just boring or painful until we start it. Once we do so, dopamine is released, and not only do we become confident in our capacity to finish it, laugh at anxiety we held prior, but often we can end up enjoying it. The dishes are a chore until I'm singing along to myself, getting that scrub a dub dub on, feeling satisfied with myself and my space.

    • @DAMfoxygrampa
      @DAMfoxygrampa 21 день тому +10

      It's kinda completely obvious when you think about it. How can you be passionate about something you haven't done before?

    • @realizbac4624
      @realizbac4624 6 днів тому

      If you like that I recommend reading “teaching the actuality of revolution” by Derek Ford

  • @tonyennis1787
    @tonyennis1787 22 дні тому +2262

    "Just because you have a passion for something doesn't mean you don't suck at it" - Mike Rowe on following your passion

    • @lvn5609
      @lvn5609 22 дні тому +184

      I firmly believe that those who follow their passion for something will inevitably get better at it, unless their passion is to suck at their craft and complain.

    • @CRMcGee2
      @CRMcGee2 22 дні тому +34

      How true, he ‘sucks at it’ with his political views, his choice of supporting the coup, and the liars.
      There’s an old saying about ‘thicker than pig shite’ that describes him, the former pig farmer.
      He became wealthy playing at other people's dirty jobs for a few days.
      The people who everyday have to get up and go work a dirty job who watch that show; how does it feel to help make him a multimillionaire?
      The guys work between 35 and $45 million a real average man of the people.

    • @0xDEAD_Inside
      @0xDEAD_Inside 22 дні тому +94

      ​@@CRMcGee2 Which new LLM AI is this?

    • @protone2012
      @protone2012 22 дні тому

      @@lvn5609 take example in online gaming. There are very "passionate" and emotional people on lower percentile ranks but they play for years in those places. The ranked system is a zero sum game; and I think the world is the same. Especially for passion the number of viable places is much smaller than a number of passionate people for it. In the end everything is solved by competition; and you end up in situation where passionate people competing with other passionate people and some or even most are inalienable to not succeed.

    • @CRMcGee2
      @CRMcGee2 22 дні тому

      @@0xDEAD_Inside
      So, if it's more than a few words, it can't be an actual person providing a real comment.
      I guess it has to be simple for the pig shite watchers.

  • @girri
    @girri 20 днів тому +317

    This is awesome. Some takeaways:
    - Following your passion is important, but it should be balanced with pragmatic concerns and a focus on adding value to others.
    - Success after college is more about making a difference and contributing to others than just personal growth and learning.
    - If you don't have a defining passion, seek opportunities where your skills intersect with adding value to others, and passion will follow.
    - Be aware of survivorship bias when considering advice to "follow your dreams," as success often depends on timing and external factors.
    - Recognize the influence you can have on shaping the dreams of those younger than you.
    - Expect and embrace change, both in the world around you and within yourself, and remain adaptable to new opportunities.
    - Treat passion as a fuel and a starting point, rather than a fixed destination, and be open to changing direction based on the forces around you.

  • @jdcaporale
    @jdcaporale 21 день тому +360

    I just finished my PhD at over 30 years old and am a bit vectorless. This speech hit home and matches so much of my experience. Good luck class of 2024!!

    • @jon-williammurphy9780
      @jon-williammurphy9780 20 днів тому +54

      Find the flow of the vector field, try to anticipate the curl and divergence, you are a sentient particle, not everything is possible but your solution set is infinite

    • @baptistebeardwood
      @baptistebeardwood 19 днів тому

      @@jon-williammurphy9780 what he said

    • @supervaka9584
      @supervaka9584 18 днів тому

      ​@@jon-williammurphy9780beautiful!

    • @richardaversa7128
      @richardaversa7128 14 днів тому +13

      It's not vectorless, it's just the zero vector - pointing in all directions. May your magnitude grow large, my friend.

  • @HarveyMuddCollege
    @HarveyMuddCollege 20 днів тому +202

    Thank you, Grant, for inspiring our graduates!

    • @gordon.sarratt
      @gordon.sarratt 11 днів тому +2

      woah y'all just appeared in the comments damn

  • @kabutothe8578
    @kabutothe8578 22 дні тому +378

    This video will comeback in 11 year

    • @strawberry_cake1703
      @strawberry_cake1703 22 дні тому +19

      Hi future commentators

    • @user-iv1qq3vb9j
      @user-iv1qq3vb9j 22 дні тому +1

      Hi me from the future, did we make it? Was it worth it? I hope you still know how special and loved you are regardless of how society sees us.
      Do we have a good job? A place that feels like home?
      Do we live as who we really are? Are we finally free?
      In which country are we in?
      Do you still have our old things?
      I trust in you, and she believed in us, so you must be in a better place than I am. Be proud of that, bitch🖤
      I'm sure that this moment feels like lifetimes ago, and it literally is, but you were here, and now you're yourself, you survived somehow. You'll be through serious shit, but you've already been through enough shit to know you'll thrive❤

    • @user-iv1qq3vb9j
      @user-iv1qq3vb9j 22 дні тому +2

      B

    • @ahsansajjad9991
      @ahsansajjad9991 22 дні тому +7

      we are one of those who saw it when it happened.

    • @maymkn
      @maymkn 21 день тому +2

      In case you're seeing this in the future, I'm letting you know I was here!

  • @iainmackenzieUK
    @iainmackenzieUK 22 дні тому +176

    I am 64 this year. Still teaching Physics and still inspired by this speech.
    :)

  • @rhettorical_
    @rhettorical_ 22 дні тому +332

    Phenomenal speech. I've now spent a decade in corporate America - while success is not guaranteed proactively being useful, making others lives easier, helping the next up and anticipating change stacks the odds significantly in your favor and is the advice I provide new hires at our firm.

    • @andrewharrison8436
      @andrewharrison8436 22 дні тому +7

      Agree, perhaps I would add "learning from others" to your list and then point out from my several decades of experience it applies in the UK as well.

  • @diobrando8979
    @diobrando8979 20 днів тому +65

    I remember watching your commencement speech "Ego and Math" around a year ago when I was finishing my second year of undergraduate math and had clear ideas of getting into academia and continuing to study math, actually left a comment there talking about it. Funny enough, finishing my third year now and I'm thinking of doing a full 180º and doing something completely different once I finish my degree, and I think it's mainly because of the little voice in my head that's been there since I started college telling me that math isn't even close to being an optimal field to spend time on if I want to help others and advance the causes I believe in (which I think is what will bring me real joy). It's been difficult battling all of the inner convincing I did that academia was the only and best way for me, where I'd put best use of my skills, and that I would regret it otherwise. At the end, the feeling that won was that of wanting to make other people's lives better.
    I like that both speeches hover around the same topic. It means it's really something important for you or at least has been in the last year, and it just makes me more reassured in my current thoughts about it

    • @3blue1brown
      @3blue1brown  20 днів тому +43

      Well articulated! It probably has less to do with my own life in the last year than it does with reflections on where I was as a college student, given the target audience here.
      That speech at Stanford, and at least part of the one here, were both meant to encourage students, especially those who've achieved clear success in STEM fields in school, to step back to ask seriously what they'll feel best doing with those talents. Continuing with academia is a common default, and while there's clear value to basic research done well, it's a shame if clever students follow that path due to inertia if a little reflection could instead result in them landing elsewhere in the world where there's a greater vacuum in mathematical prowess.

  • @michaelmartin7790
    @michaelmartin7790 21 день тому +41

    What an incredible orator. Your voice and cadence are simply exquisite. The content of your speech is equally as impressive!

  • @SalmonSushi47
    @SalmonSushi47 22 дні тому +231

    Oh my god its the Pi man :D

  • @reisman33
    @reisman33 19 днів тому +21

    Incredibly profound. I encourage all recent grads to rewatch this video in 10 years to appreciate how spot-on Grant's advice is. His perspective is relevant to people at all stages of life.

  • @melvin6228
    @melvin6228 22 дні тому +102

    This speech is super therapeutic. This will change my life, thanks.
    Finally SOMEONE is making sense about this topic and giving some valuable advice that I had blindspots for.
    Things that stood out:
    * How can I add value to people their lives? That's the game you're playing in society. It goes hand in hand with growing, but now is the time to add value and grow to add more value.
    * Action precedes motivation
    * Find an upcoming wave and ride it
    * Gratitude + channel growth helped Grant to make more videos. Grant had passion for math but not for videos or for teaching. Grant was lucky with the timing. If he'd be born 10 years ago or 10 years later he'd have a lot less reach.
    * What is possible now that wasn't possible 10 years ago, which might get harder 10 years for now?
    * Encouragement is sometimes enough to find passion, so you could develop passion about anything as long as you get enough encouragement "you're really good at this, you should consider majoring at math."
    * You can shape the dreams of the people behind you (in age)

  • @e-dragon4691
    @e-dragon4691 21 день тому +31

    "Never underestimate just how much influence you can have on others"
    This is so true, just one simple action, advice or direction you give can change entire lifes and I've seen that happen so often by now.
    And what's more important, this applies not only to just a career, but also pretty much anything else in life.

  • @defSpidey
    @defSpidey 22 дні тому +338

    May the father of understanding guide us

    • @priestofgames
      @priestofgames 22 дні тому +7

      I think you're in the wrong video

    • @defSpidey
      @defSpidey 22 дні тому +56

      NOPE, 3blue1brown is our father of understanding

    • @CRMcGee2
      @CRMcGee2 22 дні тому +4

      May you someday know books other than those with ancient fairy tales.

    • @defSpidey
      @defSpidey 22 дні тому +5

      @CRMcGee2 Have you heard of Zee's Quantum Field Theory?

    • @morbiusfan3176
      @morbiusfan3176 22 дні тому +16

      ​@@CRMcGee2 He wasn't talking about the Bible, he was talking about 3b1b

  • @Nyltiac14
    @Nyltiac14 12 днів тому +5

    As a grad in the audience that day, your speech was incredibly powerful in person and with each re-watch! Thank you for sharing your words of wisdom and for marrying realism with optimism! Graduating from college and moving into the real world has its share of stressors, but your words brought a welcome reality check! It was also so lovely meeting you in person! Thank you for all you do!

  • @incianali
    @incianali 22 дні тому +77

    Hi! I'm a 2023 graduate, and I got to listen to you last year at the Moody lecture, which was as amazing as this talk! I'm so glad you came to HMC, and I'm so glad to have met you. Thank you for all the wonderful advice you've given! :)

  • @pendragon7600
    @pendragon7600 22 дні тому +66

    The single most eloquent speaker I've ever heard. I'm forever grateful for your wisdom. I know you're aware of the massive influence you've had on people's lives, but you would not believe. Quite literally, you have completely changed the entire course of many people's lives for the better, including my own. By the definition of success you outlined in this speech, you're among the most successful alive. And what a good definition that is.

  • @Megamain6
    @Megamain6 20 днів тому +25

    man this nearly made me cry. I graduated high school in 2020 but didn't go to college. I've been feeling very lost and hopeless. thank you, thank you, thank you

    • @ketz_165
      @ketz_165 17 днів тому +3

      There’s always time to make a difference buddy, get after it

  • @DeJay7
    @DeJay7 22 дні тому +22

    The legend, the man that used his, as he put it, fortunate situation to positively influence the lives of whoever he can, making the most he possibly can out of everything. It's undoubtedly very difficult to put in words how impressive what he has done is. Getting so so many people to appreciate mathematical ideas is a crazy achievement, and I am glad his community knows that very well.
    So, very simply, thank you Grant, for you granted me and a lot of other people the opportunity to be taught and to grow by a person this passionate about our growth, you.

  • @jcortese3300
    @jcortese3300 22 дні тому +149

    One of the things I needed to hear at that stage of life is NEVER brought up: How well do you like the other people who do this? If you do X for a living, but you don't much care for the people this will compel you to hang around with, for f*ck's sake, FIND SOMETHING ELSE TO DO. It wasn't until I got into grad school for physics that I realized that no matter how good I was at it nor how highly I placed in my quals, I would sooner get my gall bladder removed with an oyster fork than be locked in a building full of physicists for the next 40 years of my career. I got out and found out how to apply my gift in a direction (similar to Grant's) where few people applied it, and it's resulted in an excellent, lucrative career.
    Also, even if you are passionate about something, I can guarantee that there are nonetheless parts of the job that you won't like. There is some sh*t-shoveling involved in every single career or ambition. Expect that and don't be surprised by it. You may love teaching, but no one in their right mind loves grading. You may love music, but no sane person loves Hanon.

    • @IMaginatory7232
      @IMaginatory7232 22 дні тому +16

      Hey now, grading can be alright! It might be repetitive, sure, but depending on the nature of the assignment and the mistakes people make it can be a little like bug-fixing in computer science. Investigate what you have until you find out where the student went wrong, and think of the best feedback for the situation. Sadly the volume of work that grading often represents stops graders from getting to the interesting part...

    • @ichdu-fk6xc
      @ichdu-fk6xc 22 дні тому +4

      I love how: physicist are insufferable is a global truth

    • @Lonely_Wiz
      @Lonely_Wiz 22 дні тому +10

      @jcortese3300 can you enlighten me a little more? i live in a very poor place here in Brazil, and my biggest dream was always to become a physicist, more specifically applied physics.
      I've been for the past 7 or so years trying to get my life back on the rails just so i could apply for some college and leave this absurd place once and for all, and i really thought that following what i love the most would be good, no matter who i would be facing.
      Is it for nothing? should i really find something else to do now? i feel like I'm one of the most determined persons i know in person, and at the same time i feel like i dont have reason behind my goals, i feel kinda lost after reading so many comments and listening to videos like this one.
      I guess it's just a consequence of working to pay the bills and not having any savings ever, but I'm really tired of keeping moving on you know

    • @fischmann1746
      @fischmann1746 21 день тому +4

      ​@@Lonely_WizI can tell you, I studied physics and it was the best thing I could ever have done. I so fricking love my field. And honestly the people there were really nice, too.
      Of course there isn't a 100% chance, that you will like it, but just because one person made a bad experience with physics, doesn't mean you will too.

    • @alansmithee419
      @alansmithee419 21 день тому

      I had a similar thing with the field itself, rather than the people.
      Physics is great. Academia... eh...
      I'd rather use the skills I've learned for something else. Something with programming. Simulation, data handling, video games, whatever.

  • @hankseda
    @hankseda 22 дні тому +66

    He's a good role model in more ways than one 👏

  • @Math_kru_earng
    @Math_kru_earng 9 днів тому +3

    -Following your dreams should be about more than just yourself. It should be about using your skills and passions to add value to others.
    -Action precedes motivation. Don't wait for the perfect opportunity to start pursuing your goals. Take action and the motivation will follow.
    -Be adaptable and open to change. The world is constantly evolving, so it's important to be prepared to change your plans as needed.
    -Don't treat passion as a destination, but as a fuel. Your passion can give you direction, but be open to changing course as needed.
    ps. AI did it for me

  • @mythtech
    @mythtech 22 дні тому +20

    Influence can play a great deal into life as a whole. A few words said can cause small decisions to change, that start a chain reaction, changing the path your life was going towards. Teachers have arguably one of, if not the most, important role in deciding the future of our world, as what they say and the way they teach can change immense things in this world. I can guarantee you, every single one of you reading this comment would have had a time in the past where you would have regretted something or done something as a coin-flip, but in the present day, you would be glad things progressed the way they did, as otherwise they could have altered major things in your life where you would not have that thing any other way.
    Like Steve Jobs said, "You can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future", and this is something I stand by, as despite my relatively young age, I have faced the same sort of chain reactions that have made my life the way it is today, and I am glad things happened the way they did.
    Great speech, Grant. I wish I get the chance to meet you in person someday.

  • @swiss_sailortv4740
    @swiss_sailortv4740 22 дні тому +34

    I remember watching your videos for the first time in 9th grade at the age of 14, and how mysterious and amazing I thought the results were. Fast forward 6 years, and I am now in the 4th semester of physics at the University of Heidelberg, with the opportunity to live out my passion and study interesting fields like differential geometry. It is safe to say that your videos have changed my life and had a lasting impact, as that’s how I truly discovered math and physics. You have a huge impact on the math community, and even here in Germany at uni, everybody knows your videos and loves you. Thank you so much.

    • @aayusharya6899
      @aayusharya6899 20 днів тому

      As someone who stumbled on Grant's KhanAcademy math lessons during high school, and is currently in 4th semester of master's at University of Mainz (not far from you): Hi there!
      I have a similar feeling about him too.

  • @masondaniels8675
    @masondaniels8675 22 дні тому +23

    Excellent speech. Adding value to other people's lives is the best thing any entrepreneur, phd student, or office worker could hear.

  • @Doomsdaymanx
    @Doomsdaymanx 22 дні тому +6

    I was so excited to get to see you speak in person and you didn't disappoint.
    Wonderful speech that really resonated with me as someone who found success and passion long after graduating from college. (Very much by following small interests until that action grew into motivation and eventually passion, and by focusing on the things I was good at that also helped others)

  • @winklerd
    @winklerd 22 дні тому +16

    This reminds me of part of Tim Minchin's commencement speech, he talked about the passionate pursuit of smaller, short-term goals rather than having a huge life goal. That advice has always stuck with me.

  • @AstroPatel
    @AstroPatel 21 день тому +17

    Your speech resonates with me, even though I am several years out of undergrad. I pursued physics as a passion derived from many positive feedback loops in my childhood, coupled with the delight of perceptions. I grew to enjoy the beauty and intricacy of the mathematics that underly our universe and my passion blossomed into a phd track at a big university. Then it all came... crashing down. I mastered out last year.
    Pragmatic concerns, as you put it, were something that I ignored and my ambitions were more self serving that I had cared to admit up until that point. I loved physics, I still do. I'm still good at it. But I could not give it the proper treatment and take a step back to realize that I really should not have gone straight into grad school. The self-serving nature of my ambitions made it difficult to speak to the masses, and I found myself in a position where I didn't add much benefit to others. I love teaching, I love science, and I love data. But I haven't been able to tie that into a profession. Now I am learning the hard way that I should have tried to do that all along, and it would not have detracted from my love for these things.
    Anyways, your speech was brilliant. It tore through the veil of platitudes and communicated essential truths with grace and humor. I appreciate the time and thought you put into this, more people deserve to hear it

    • @ourmuse
      @ourmuse 20 днів тому +1

      i did the same and you are not alone

    • @AstroPatel
      @AstroPatel 18 днів тому

      @@ourmuse appreciate that. What do you do now?

    • @ourmuse
      @ourmuse 17 днів тому

      @@AstroPatel i did physics during undergrad, now pursuing biomed engineering but still read and study physics every weekend lol. i could never leave my passion for physics. so i think you don't have to feel bad for doing that since your passion is still there, that's more important i think.

  • @Sulerhy
    @Sulerhy 19 днів тому +34

    This is much related to the Japanese methodology called "Ikigai". I took 2 years after graduation to try to get my dream job, but it turned out that I failed because no company wanted to do hardware design. After 3 years I quited my job as an software engineer, and soon I realized I love software than anything else just after I quited. I grow up and found out the success when I was doing software is the most valuable thing for me. I love doing it after many challenges with it. Truly thank you, for connecting my dots backward.

  • @davidestfanous9362
    @davidestfanous9362 20 днів тому +3

    speaking from experience is very honest, the tiny smiles on the profs' faces explain how deep and enjoyable the words are. you helped me so much during my journey thanks man and happy to see your face for the first time.

  • @AlexanderPeterson-cf9nd
    @AlexanderPeterson-cf9nd 22 дні тому +4

    Thank you, 3blue1brown! You were probably the one who sparked my curiosity for math.

  • @eikosato5297
    @eikosato5297 22 дні тому +5

    Excellent speech! I wish I had someone like you to give a commencement speech on my graduation day. Your advices are exactly what I would give to newly grads, but you articulated them so well. The cliche “follow your dreams” advice only works for someone with a predictable future (usually because of their inherited social status) in a predictable and stable world. I was very confused when I was given this kind of obsolete advice again and again back in college. Your previous speech on “math and ego” also resonated deeply with me. I think what makes your math videos stand out from others have a lot to do with your deep understanding into the correlations between math, ego, passion, and pursuing goals. Your channel remains my favorite after many years. Looking forward to being inspired by you yet again! ❤

  • @dylancam812
    @dylancam812 22 дні тому +4

    Thank you Grant this was an awesome speech. Couldn’t have asked for a better commencement speaker for my graduation. I don’t think there’s a single member of our graduating class that hasn’t been profoundly impacted by your videos. If there was, surely they would be by this wonderful speech

  • @cnh007
    @cnh007 20 днів тому +3

    This was so inspiring and beautiful to watch !
    So much wisdom, delivered with such grace ,elegance & simplicity !
    1. adding value to others
    2. action precedes motivation
    3. whats possible now that was not, 10 years ago
    4. remain adaptable to a changing world

  • @markusalonso3163
    @markusalonso3163 22 дні тому +9

    Hi, I love your channel and you make the things you teach seem so intuitive and make them make sense so much more then it does when I learn it in school thank you (:

  • @jjdawg9918
    @jjdawg9918 22 дні тому +6

    Such a magnificent speech. It took me the better part of my career to come the conclusion that fulfillment in life is finding "the balance between being useful and being used". And it holds for both careers and relationships. Being useful can be as simple as making someone smile and being used can be a simple as working a job that you have no interest in just to pay the bills. Throughout life you will inventively bounce between the two.

  • @mohammednajl5950
    @mohammednajl5950 22 дні тому +1

    A wonderful speech. I've told myself to go into a particular field for a long time, but you've made me appreciate how allowing change to your dreams and passions can be better than a steadfast will in what you want. Thank you Grant, for this and everything else.

  • @frendlyleaf6187
    @frendlyleaf6187 22 дні тому +31

    Man, it is weird how impactful 15 minutes can be.

  • @mattnaganidhi942
    @mattnaganidhi942 3 дні тому +1

    Find ways to view every internal and external experiences in ways you enjoy/love and then you'll love everything about life and you'll be living your dream regardless of what life puts you through

  • @oleksandrboiko9076
    @oleksandrboiko9076 22 дні тому +2

    It's great to finally see your face, to see the person behind all these unimaginably cool videos. Frankly, I thought that's a whole team behind the channel. Sometimes I can't even imagine the complexity of separate frames and transitions, let alone the complexity and variety of topics you mastered.

  • @ReDMooNTVV
    @ReDMooNTVV 22 дні тому +18

    so much wisdom in this speech, so much to learn and ponder on

  • @vari1535
    @vari1535 19 днів тому +8

    The well-rounded, thorough consideration and treatment of survivorship bias and various uncontrollable life factors stands out.

  • @hc6157
    @hc6157 20 днів тому +2

    I’m so glad you came to our commencement!! It was amazing to be in-person

  • @chemfunman
    @chemfunman 14 днів тому +1

    Your speech is a must-watch for anyone from age 8 to 88. I thank you for the genuine and inspiring sharing. Spot-on, candid, and motivational. Action precedes motivation. I teach chemistry in person and on UA-cam for a decade. I look back at my training at the university and what I did during the summer vacations, and how & what I am doing impact others around the globe, so thank you!

  • @shubhadrapatil3387
    @shubhadrapatil3387 21 день тому +3

    So much wisdom in this which actually made me realise many things and specifically it’s ok not have a goal which actually makes me think about myself as failure in times when people are so much sure about they want to do and being competitive about it . When I started my undergrad I was one of them (that’s what I thought) but until the end of my undergrad I became complete opposite of it by thinking am I really worthy doing it when I am so bad at it compared to everyone else . Hence lost a lot of focus and became lazy to work hard. But now I kind of got back the essence and madness I had back then. And now listening this gave me a lot more confidence and motivation to work harder with all due honesty and enjoy the process of it…

  • @senthilkumarm4063
    @senthilkumarm4063 22 дні тому +4

    Thanks Grant for this advice!
    Probably the best commencement speech that I have seen after the terrific "2005 Stanford commencement speech by Steve jobs"

  • @astronics
    @astronics 14 днів тому +2

    really needed this, thankyou

  • @kmym5709
    @kmym5709 17 днів тому +1

    As a class of 24 who graduated early only to realize I was following passion as a goal and only beginning to understand how to add to others (while working my first job...), this is exactly what i needed to hear. Beautiful speech, as educating as ever.

  • @simplyspice9991
    @simplyspice9991 22 дні тому +6

    That was such an amazing commencement speech (the best one I’ve heard). ❤👏🏾🙌🏾

  • @thtrausan1
    @thtrausan1 22 дні тому +90

    It took me 10 years to understand this, career and passion are separate by default. They do not always sinergize, they often have a very small intersection that leads you to compromise. Passions change and should change and also does pragmatism. I don.t expect momey from my passion and I also no longer expect to be passionate by what best lets me make a living. So don.t teach this cliche of passion to teenagers who are just discovering what they love about the world. Its an unrealistic expectation that puts pressure on both pragmatism and passion. Strive for freedom instead!

    • @idoshulman6379
      @idoshulman6379 22 дні тому +4

      what does "freedom" mean in this context?

    • @hunterbshindi2310
      @hunterbshindi2310 22 дні тому +3

      I hate to do it to you but....
      Synergize*

    • @samueld-bx6kv
      @samueld-bx6kv 22 дні тому

      @@idoshulman6379maybe financial freedom

    • @DeJay7
      @DeJay7 22 дні тому

      @@idoshulman6379 Presumably not being forced to pursue what you are passionate about, because that is just not going to work out on its own.

    • @jursamaj
      @jursamaj 22 дні тому +3

      @@DeJay7 As opposed to being force to do crappy work just so you have food?

  • @dramese
    @dramese 21 день тому +1

    I love this so much, this channel is my go to understand to understand math in deepest level.
    I am grateful, and so honor to see the person behind those videos.
    Thank you

  • @somebodyelse9130
    @somebodyelse9130 4 години тому

    This is a really good speech. I often have trouble listening to speeches because of my short attention span, but this had me following every word.

  • @flamingowrangler
    @flamingowrangler 22 дні тому +43

    You're a legend ❤

  • @knotwilg3596
    @knotwilg3596 16 днів тому +2

    When you asked for that final applause, you demonstrated it is not about yourself but about others. Masterful!

  • @christophecarbonel3839
    @christophecarbonel3839 21 день тому

    Thank you so much: I have recently retired and you are one of the influences that made me embark this year on a BSc in maths. The transformation you speak about, I have experienced in my professional life. Giving to others: such decency is most welcome in today’s world.

  • @goosedasheen
    @goosedasheen 15 днів тому +1

    Great speech! I hope this graduating class remembers it, or remembers to re-watch it on this channel!

  • @user-awrssadk
    @user-awrssadk 21 день тому +4

    احب سماع صوتك وشرحك للمسائل المعقدة ولم ارى صورة لك من قبل واليوم رأيتها وعرفتك من صوتك كم أنا سعيد برؤيتك وسماعك من جديد أيها الرائع، سر إلى الامام ❤

    • @kirbosomething
      @kirbosomething 19 днів тому +1

      I was shocked that he had the same eloquent voice in real life, i dont know why i thought that it would be different

  • @jrodartec
    @jrodartec 20 днів тому +8

    This speech makes it clear how one's reasoning can be improved by math and statical concepts. The way Grant brings up analytical concepts (such as biases, vectors, and ods) to assist in his thinking is phenomenal. Love the bit about "changing the optimization function" after leaving college, from growing towards generating value to others. That makes me fee truly grateful about my current job. Thanks!

  • @schemen974
    @schemen974 22 дні тому +1

    You are such a great communicator, be it math or a speech like this. It's amazing.

  • @faberisme
    @faberisme 22 дні тому +3

    This video couldn’t have found me at a better time, thanks Grant for mathematics and love

  • @generalSarbina
    @generalSarbina 16 днів тому

    Your comment about the goal changing from growing and learning to helping other people after graduation has really helped me realize what some of the missing pieces were for me in my pursuit of grad school. I've been so focused on what it is that I'm passionate about that I didn't realize it needed to fit into a much larger puzzle.

  • @thomasjames1067
    @thomasjames1067 21 день тому +2

    I needed to hear this today. Thank you so much.

  • @SurajRajan
    @SurajRajan 22 дні тому +18

    It's hard to marry stern pragmatism and cautious optimism. And none other than a mathematician to do that so artfully. Thanks Grant! Sharing this to friends and family!

  • @tonyennis1787
    @tonyennis1787 22 дні тому +102

    I think he should have hammered home the "survivorship bias" point.

    • @SeamusHarper1234
      @SeamusHarper1234 22 дні тому +8

      I think he did that, didn't he?

    • @Alceste_
      @Alceste_ 22 дні тому +20

      @@SeamusHarper1234 I think he did too, at least three mentions, including a pretty good derision example.

    • @neverbackdown1918
      @neverbackdown1918 22 дні тому +23

      He didn’t focus too much time on it, but he didn’t have to. These are smart students and his points about top athletes only being the ones to give advice was a subtle way or reinforcing this.

    • @minhuang8848
      @minhuang8848 22 дні тому +14

      I believe quoting arguably the most popular webcomic qualifies as "hammering home a point"

    • @skyak4493
      @skyak4493 22 дні тому +6

      Survivorship bias is technically not the right description. Attention bias is a better concept. The number of people that waste their lives in persuit of acting, or professional sports careers is astounding.

  • @anguszou3477
    @anguszou3477 16 днів тому +2

    This man really is breaking all the things at the surface down and showing us the truth about life, just like the way he does to the math.

  • @JoshuaMurangaBauer
    @JoshuaMurangaBauer 15 днів тому +1

    Great to finally see your face for the the first time ❤ I’m outside my university country and my graduation is next week this gives me the feeling of buying that plane ticket and be there 🎉 Either way, good luck for the next chapter to all of us 🎉

  • @LeVraiPoio
    @LeVraiPoio 22 дні тому +4

    This is sweet. To me this especially resonates as a call to everyone, but most of all to teachers and grownups :
    Never stop encouraging others.
    I wish someone given that mission to my father, maybe he wouldn't have crushed my willpower to dust. (If that rings a bell, seek help, talk, it helps. And finally, learn to do beautiful meaningful stuff with said dust.)

    • @emilysha418
      @emilysha418 День тому +1

      glad you're growing, healing, and encouraging others!

  • @jasonbentley439
    @jasonbentley439 18 днів тому +3

    first time I heard someone say "Don't follow your passion, follow opportunity. But, take your passion with you" is Mike Rowe several years ago on a youtube ad lol. Turns out it is great advice. I had/have a passion for physics, but took the opportunity of electrical engineering, and brought my passion with me. Now I am gainfully employed with a entry level salary higher than what I would have hoped to earn towards the end of my career in my previous field (culinary arts). I am now a complete advocate for that advice!!!!

  • @Guidoev2
    @Guidoev2 19 днів тому

    I never felt this combination of love, respect and gratitude towards someone I don't personally know. I wholeheartedly believe that you, along with other brilliant minds on this platform, are the best thing that's happening to the world right now ❤

  • @boringproductions
    @boringproductions 22 дні тому

    I used to watch alot of your videos while i was in high school, now i am more focused on arts. Even now, youre videos inspire me and help me along the journey. Thank you!

  • @johnchessant3012
    @johnchessant3012 22 дні тому +16

    This is the best commencement speech I've ever heard. Also, the audience reaction at 13:43 cracked me up.

  • @freedot1463
    @freedot1463 22 дні тому +6

    oh man, that was a really good speech

  • @rishavjain5087
    @rishavjain5087 16 днів тому +1

    loved the "passion should be fuel not a goal to achieve" ♥♥♥♥

  • @Joshua-hb7cs
    @Joshua-hb7cs 22 дні тому

    The speech was so good and I'm so glad you gave it to us! It was really what I needed at that moment and will be for my foreseeable intellectual future.

  • @greyshadow37
    @greyshadow37 22 дні тому +48

    In the end, the bottomline is still "follow your dreams", the thing is you don't know your dream while you're young. So it makes sense why most of those prodigies in TV are not going to be good in their field once they grow up. You find your true dream after you go into the real world. Also you find out your true niche once you make use of the opportunities of your time. Great message! Cheers.

    • @DanKaschel
      @DanKaschel 21 день тому +5

      This seems like a stubborn misinterpretation of his speech.
      He very explicitly said that the idea of their being one single future target dream is incorrect.
      And that is only the most obvious objection to your interpretation.

  • @northernlight1000
    @northernlight1000 22 дні тому +20

    I can’t reason why/believe so many of these people in the crowd look so depressed and bored, If Grant came to do this speech for me at my university it would be the greatest most exciting thing!

    • @stephanieparker1250
      @stephanieparker1250 22 дні тому +45

      It’s a very long day for anyone, especially for young people. They just get tired of sitting and listening to speeches lol

    • @slmnemo
      @slmnemo 22 дні тому +33

      i went to this commencement for two reasons, to see my friends graduate and to see 3blue1brown's speech. i guarantee you everyone i spoke with after commencement was really excited and happy with the speech, our school just burns us out really hard and the seniors have dealt with 4 years of hell.

    • @Benjy45RS
      @Benjy45RS 22 дні тому +9

      I remember a good few of my buddies were hungover at graduation😂 also it can be hot out in May!

    • @nuklearboysymbiote
      @nuklearboysymbiote 22 дні тому +3

      You're lucky that you don't understand why.💜

    • @arnelarboleda2870
      @arnelarboleda2870 21 день тому +1

      I'll bet none of them is suscribe to this channel except for that one faculty member that invites him. Lol

  • @zitank
    @zitank 20 днів тому +1

    Considering how much I love your math contents, I think this is hands down the best content ever on your channel.

  • @sarahmoses2752
    @sarahmoses2752 20 днів тому +1

    Such an amazing speech! Incredibly valuable points for anyone who's a student stepping out into the world! Thank you for this, I love your channel and this video has really helped me so much, you have no idea ❤ Definitely gonna come back and rewatch this anytime I need to be reminded of good advice about the future :)

  • @lalitsingh4107
    @lalitsingh4107 22 дні тому +4

    I love your content 🎉

  • @topherthe11th23
    @topherthe11th23 22 дні тому +7

    Well, in MY case, following my dreams worked PERFECTLY. I now own the largest stud-farm for flying purple unicorns in the world, and we are 100% effective in protecting the Power Crystal (which is actually the land underneath the old railroad trestle-bridge where I entertained many lovely young women) from attack by the battle-ship sized amphibious Komodo dragons that have mermaid's tails (who are really the elementary-school teachers who didn't like me). Just the other day we deflected a meteor (my horrible first year of college) that was burning with silvery flames like flowing mercury. It missed all land, crashing harmlessly (since it is my baby daughter) into the bowl of punch at my brother's wedding---which always causes the channel to change, because we have one of those unusual remote-controls made out of frozen helium that camouflages itself as the ice that fuels your lawn-mower/punch-bowl.

    • @zeltuva
      @zeltuva 22 дні тому +3

      i'm so proud of you dude.

  • @-beee-
    @-beee- 22 дні тому +1

    Love this. Exactly what I would hope we could pass on to others. Thank you for sharing your passion in service of others!

  • @syedmohammadabdullah
    @syedmohammadabdullah 19 днів тому

    i just want to thank you. you have played a huge role in guiding me towards math and me wanting to being a math major in college

  • @shivajoshi9068
    @shivajoshi9068 22 дні тому +4

    lets goo! the goat!

  • @Zardwark
    @Zardwark 22 дні тому +3

    A modest growth. 6.1M subscribers 😁

  • @CorrectHorseBatteryStaple472
    @CorrectHorseBatteryStaple472 22 дні тому +1

    I love Grant's humbleness and honesty. He's incredible at what he does but is very real about how that's still not enough to achieve the success he's had.

  • @gmendez
    @gmendez 17 днів тому

    I am quite happy to finally put a face to your voice! I also want to thank you for what you have done for us. You have made math easier to grasp and more fun to learn for those of us who often struggle with it. Thank you very much.

  • @hieu8276
    @hieu8276 22 дні тому +12

    Oh my gosh. The words in this speech are world-class.

  • @muradal-ahmad4048
    @muradal-ahmad4048 22 дні тому +6

    Amazing, Grant!!!!!
    Absolutely earned.
    Second XD.
    I feel so ridiculous XD

  • @mickeyberg1387
    @mickeyberg1387 21 день тому +2

    This video brought to tears.
    This is exactly the advice I need.
    Thanks

  • @teddybear7949
    @teddybear7949 21 день тому +1

    Each of your amazing vidéos contribute to my Dreams and help me to move forwards my everyday goal. Thanks for what you are doing, keep it on ❤

  • @FishSticker
    @FishSticker 22 дні тому +3

    Thank you grant for all the help you've been in explaining math, and for sparking my own personal love of the field

  • @miguelaphan58
    @miguelaphan58 22 дні тому +9

    ..congratularon..no idea You were so young,...from your videos..I expected a 45 PhD..on hard math...so we can expect ..an increíble revolución in math teaching!!!