2022 Commencement Address by Russell Wilson

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鈥淟egacy isn鈥檛 just something you leave behind. It鈥檚 something you build.鈥

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Thank you very much for that introduction. Usually I just get introduced as 鈥淐iara鈥檚 husband,鈥 so that was cool. And let me start by answering the question that is on so many of your minds: Yes, she鈥檚 here too.

President Hanlon, members of the board of trustees, faculty, and honored guests鈥攖hank you for inviting me to join you today.

And most of all鈥ongratulations to the Class of 2022!

My father, Harry Wilson, 天美麻豆 Class of 1977, had a favorite poem. It鈥檚 by Langston Hughes. Mother to Son. Maybe some of you know it.

He memorized this poem. He would recite it all the time to my brother, my sister and me. And he would do the voice, because you gotta do the voice. He鈥檇 say鈥

Well, son, I鈥檒l tell you:

Life for me ain鈥檛 been no crystal stair.

It鈥檚 had tacks in it,

And splinters,

And boards torn up,

And places with no carpet on the floor鈥

叠补谤别鈥

On one hand, graduates, you don鈥檛 need me鈥攐r even Langston Hughes鈥攖o tell you life isn鈥檛 always easy or fair. Today, you鈥檙e graduating from an incredible school. But these four years probably weren鈥檛 the typical college experience you鈥檇 imagined. Shutting down when the pandemic hit. Missing your sophomore summer. Figuring out what the heck a Zoom call is.

And then coming back here, not just bringing this campus back to life, but making it better and stronger and fairer than ever. Every graduating class has an achievement to celebrate. But you, Class of 鈥22, you did something really special. You all should be so proud of that.

And you didn鈥檛 you reach this moment alone. You had people: parents, family members, faculty, coaches, staff, friends, mentors. People who loved you enough to push you harder and further than you ever thought you could go.

They鈥檙e celebrating with you. And they deserve a BIG round of applause.

This is their special day, too.

And I鈥檒l be honest. This is also a special day for me. Because in a very real way, 天美麻豆 made me the person I am today. I鈥檓 not a 天美麻豆 graduate myself, that鈥檚 for sure鈥攏obody鈥檚 perfect鈥攂ut three of my uncles are. Uncle John, Class of 1980. Uncle Richard, Class of 1985. And Uncle Ben, Class of 1973, who鈥檚 here today. Stand up, Uncle Ben.

Then there鈥檚 my dad. Harrison Benjamin Wilson III. 鈥淗arry.鈥 Aka, 鈥淗B Productions.鈥 Number 29. This year, along with his classmate, your president, Phil Hanlon, he would have celebrated his 45th reunion. And yet, I bet my dad鈥檚 天美麻豆 experience wasn鈥檛 so different from yours. He explored the White Mountains with the Outing Club. Shivered his way across the Green during those long New Hampshire winters. Ate Mile High Apple Pie at Lou鈥檚. (I鈥檝e had that apple pie, by the way. It鈥檚 pretty darn good!) My dad majored in history鈥攈e did his independent study on busing and school integration鈥攁nd spent late nights studying in Baker Library.

He never told me this DIRECTLY, but he also probably played a little pong. I bet he was good, too.

To say my dad was my role model would be an understatement. He played two sports in college, football and baseball, just like me. People thought he was too short to make an impact on the football field, so he walked onto the team and earned his spot. In fact, one of his teammates was your coach, Buddy Teevens, who I鈥檓 proud to call a mentor and a friend.

My dad loved to compete. He loved winning. Senior year, as a wide receiver, he set the single season record for yards and catches. He was All-Ivy and All-East, baby. A lot of what I do on Sundays looks like it comes naturally. But I learned it from my dad.

But what my dad taught me, the way his experience at 天美麻豆 transformed not just HIS life but MINE, goes way beyond the field.

Now, just to be clear, I鈥檓 not giving my dad all the credit. My mom, Tammy Wilson, she鈥檚 the best. She sacrificed daily鈥攍ate nights working at the hospital, tons of prayer鈥攕he helped me reach my dreams. But standing here at my father鈥檚 alma mater, looking out over this place that helped him become the man he was鈥t鈥檚 impossible not to think about his legacy.

And LIVING WITH LEGACY is what I want to talk about today.

Now, legacy might seem like a strange topic for a commencement speech. I mean, this is your BEGINNING. You鈥檙e just starting out.

But graduates, if there鈥檚 one thing I hope to accomplish today, it鈥檚 to challenge you not to wait to think about what your legacy will be. Because legacy isn鈥檛 just something you leave behind. It鈥檚 something you build. Something you add to, every day.

My dad鈥 he didn鈥檛 get as many days as he deserved. I miss him so much. But because he lived with legacy, he鈥檚 never really gone. I hear his voice all the time.

So as you leave this campus and build your own legacies, I want to tell you a few things my dad said to me. Things he knew, would one day鈥 be part of his legacy. Things he still says to me, even now.

Let鈥檚 go back about 20 years. I鈥檓 in 10th grade, 14 or 15 years old, growing up in Richmond, Virginia. I鈥檝e been playing high school football, and I鈥檓 pretty good. I know I鈥檝e got skill. But having skill isn鈥檛 the same as having a dream.

Anyway, one week, my dad and I take a flight down to Peyton Manning Passing Academy, in Thibodaux, Louisiana. Real down south. Now, when we get there, we鈥檙e in this crummy, and I mean terrible, hotel. And the only room they have is right next to the laundry room, so you can hear the washing machines going all night. Smells kind of funky. Good times.

But my first day of camp, they pick twelve kids who get to work with the one and only Peyton Manning, and I get picked. Peyton tells me, [PEYTON VOICE] 鈥淵ou can really spin that ball for a little guy.鈥

That night, my dad takes me out to this hole-in-the-wall gumbo spot鈥擫ouisiana gumbo, it鈥檚 spicy鈥攁nd we stay there for a while, because we don鈥檛 want to go back to the hotel. We鈥檙e talking. And he says:

鈥淵ou know, you could play against the Manning brothers one day. You could play in the NFL.鈥 And I was a confident kid, but I must have given him a look like, 鈥淎re you sure?鈥 Because he looked right at me and said:

鈥淲hy not you?鈥

Class of 鈥22, I have a theory that we鈥檙e all born with gifts, with skills鈥 but we鈥檙e not ALWAYS born with dreams. We need someone to plant that seed, light that spark. And my dad鈥檚 way of lighting the spark was a simple, three-word question.

I wanted to play two sports at NC State. People said, 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way you can do that.鈥 But I could hear my dad鈥檚 voice in my head: 鈥淲hy not you?鈥 

Graduating in three years: Why not you?

Staying at quarterback instead of switching positions: Why not you?

Building businesses: Why not you?

Playing in the NFL. Winning a Super Bowl. Why not you?

Seeing this hot, long-legged singer named Ciara for the first time in a music video, her little smirk of a smile: 鈥淐鈥檓on, Russ. Why not you?鈥

Graduates, I鈥檓 not here to tell you every dream is going to come true for you. My dreams of being Like Mike, at my height, those didn鈥檛 come true. But I am here to tell you that every dream is going to come true for SOMEONE. And why shouldn鈥檛 that SOMEONE be you?

Asking yourself, 鈥淲hy not you?鈥 is part of what I mean by living with legacy. See, I鈥檝e been lucky enough to meet all kinds of people who are living the life they always wanted. They have different goals. They reached those goals in different ways. But there鈥檚 one big thing they have in common: they all believed鈥 it was possible.

Throughout your life, you鈥檙e going to have plenty of chances to give up on your dreams. I can鈥檛 tell you how many opportunities I鈥檝e had to quit. But if you鈥檝e got that voice in your head saying, 鈥淲hy not you?鈥 THAT helps keep you going.

AND it helps keep you WORKING. Because if you believe all things are POSSIBLE鈥 well, that still means you鈥檝e got to put in the work to make it happen. 鈥淲HY NOT YOU?鈥 is a WINNER鈥橲 mentality. It鈥檚 about dreaming and delivering. It鈥檚 a question that doesn鈥檛 just make you confident 鈥 it makes you try harder.

My dad was right. Eleven years after he asked me that question in a restaurant in Louisiana, I played my first game against Peyton Manning. And it鈥檚 funny how life comes full circle, because now that I鈥檓 in Denver, Peyton鈥檚 working with me again, helping me get better every day.

Because I still have dreams. I want to win more Super Bowls, build more businesses, own an NFL team one day. And as I go out and pursue my dreams, I鈥檒l keep hearing the same question over and over again.

Why鈥 not鈥 you?

Now as you can probably tell by this point, my dad was a pretty confident guy. But something I loved about him 鈥 something I know he worked hard to pass on to his children鈥攊s that he knew confidence and humility can go hand in hand.

I remember one time, my dad and I are driving back to Richmond from my grandfather鈥檚 house in Norfolk. It鈥檚 two A.M. I鈥檓 in the passenger鈥檚 seat, asleep. Knocked out cold. My mouth is hanging wide open, drool on the window. My dad wakes me up. Banging on my shoulder.

鈥淪on, what does this mean to you? 鈥楾here鈥檚 a king in every crowd.鈥欌

Now, I鈥檝e got to be honest, it took me a while to figure that one out. But it stuck with me. I have a wristband I wear every day. When I look down at it, I read those words my dad said to me. 鈥淎 king in every crowd.鈥

So let me tell you what that means to me now.

First, I鈥檓 a Christian, so for me personally, a king or queen in every crowd means that whatever I do, God is watching. But no matter how or what you believe, that idea still matters. You should make EVERY decision, live EVERY moment, as though someone you care about is paying attention. My dad used to say, 鈥淵ou never know what scout or GM is watching.鈥

But then he鈥檇 say鈥 鈥淎ND you never know what little kid is watching, too.鈥 That鈥檚 the other part of a king or queen in every crowd. No matter where you go, no matter how big you get鈥 the most important person in the room ISN鈥橳 you. It鈥檚 the person who you can serve.

See, there鈥檚 nothing wrong with ambition. Ambition can be a good thing鈥攁nd I鈥檇 imagine, at a school like 天美麻豆, we鈥檝e got some ambitious people out here. But your ambition has to be in service of something. That鈥檚 what makes it worthwhile.

I think about this all the time. I want to win as many Super Bowls as possible. That鈥檚 important to me. But what matters even more鈥 is whether I鈥檓 able to reach the next group of kids sitting in the passenger seat next to their moms or dads, talking about their dreams. Did I inspire them enough? The kids sitting in the 300 section, all the way in the nosebleeds. Can I inspire them enough? Can I show them that they can do anything?

No matter what you do after you leave this campus, your life, your legacy, will be defined not by the accomplishments you list on your resum茅 or the goals you achieve, but by the impact you have. My dad always used to say, 鈥淪on, it鈥檚 not the day you鈥檙e born, or the day you die, it鈥檚 the hashmark in between. How are the people around you affected? What are they gonna say about you?鈥 More importantly, what do YOU want them to say about you.

That鈥檚 what living with legacy is all about.

Now, so far, the stories I鈥檝e shared about me and my dad have been car ride stories. The good times. Going to camps and games, jamming out to the 70s and 80s CDs we made. Elton John. Earth Wind and Fire. Teddy Pendergrass. Those moments of pure joy鈥攖hat鈥檚 part of legacy, for sure.

But this last story鈥檚 a little heavier.

It鈥檚 almost exactly twelve years ago. I go to visit my father in the hospital. As you know by now, my dad was a proud man. An athlete. A fighter. A dreamer. But now, after years of complications from diabetes, he doesn鈥檛 have much time left. He can barely speak.

He鈥檚 lying in that hospital bed. I sit next to him. Take his hand. And I start singing one of his favorite songs. Marvin Sapp. Never Would Have Made It.

Never would have made it
Never could have made it, without You
I would have lost it all
But now I see how You were there for me

And I can say.

I鈥檓 stronger.

Tears are coming down his face. Tears are coming down my face. And then he says to me鈥攖hrough all that pain, he says to me鈥 鈥淛ust remember. Your name carries weight.鈥

It鈥檚 one of the last things he ever told me. 鈥淵our name carries weight.鈥 And graduates, that鈥檚 the last piece of living with legacy that I want to talk about today.

Because what my dad was telling me in that moment was, 鈥淎ct as though you matter.鈥

To MATTER can be a scary thing. Sometimes, it鈥檚 easier to pretend we DON鈥橳 matter鈥攖o go through life as though our actions, and inactions, carry no weight.

But they do. What you do鈥攖he little stuff and the big stuff鈥攚ill have an impact. An impact that touches the people closest to you and ripples out further than you鈥檒l ever realize. And part of your job, as a person on this earth, is to never forget that your name carries weight. You don鈥檛 have to live your life knowing all the answers. But you DO have to live your life trying to answer the right questions.

How many people can you help?

Are you able to love amid storms?

Are you able to care for people when they have nothing?

Can you act out of a sense of servitude, without asking for anything?

If you can do that, then all good things will come.

A few weeks after I sang to my dad in that hospital room, I was back there with my mom. My dad couldn鈥檛 speak, but he could hear us.

At one point, I leave the room. My mom and I talk for about half an hour. Before I come back in, I can hear his EKG from the hallway. Beep. Beep. Beep. I take one step into his room. I say, 鈥淒ad, I鈥檓 here.鈥 And then all of a sudden鈥 beeeeeeep. The line goes flat.

It was one of the hardest moments of my life. But I knew, even then, that it was the beginning, not the end. And I think my dad knew it too鈥EGACY.

Class of 2022, life for you won鈥檛 be no crystal stair. There will be tacks in it, and splinters, and boards torn up, and places with no carpet on the floor. Bare. Your journey will be unpredictable.

But I KNOW it will be amazing.

And if you ask yourself, 鈥榃hy not me?鈥 If you remember the king and queen in every crowd. If you carry yourself as though your name carries weight. Then you鈥檒l live a life鈥攁nd build a legacy鈥攜ou can be proud of.

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Text as prepared for delivery.

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