小优传媒

Opening Convocation

08/30/17

Bestselling author shares thoughts on integrity with Bluffton students

Sometimes it鈥檚 the little things we do in life in life that have the most impact. 鈥淣ew York Times鈥 bestselling author, Nathan Whitaker, shared this message with Bluffton鈥檚 new students during Opening Convocation on Tuesday, Aug. 29.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 easy for us to devalue what we do or say. That what we do isn鈥檛 going to impact anybody,鈥 explained Whitaker, co-author of 鈥淨uiet Strength鈥 the memoir of Super-Bowl winning coach Tony Dungy. The book also served as Bluffton鈥檚 summer reading selection for first-year students. 鈥淧robably 99 percent of the things I鈥檝e done in life fall into that category. Most of the time my actions have been the stones falling into the pond that nobody sees, but other times there is a ripple effect and our actions do carry on.鈥

Whitaker鈥檚 speech titled 鈥淲hen Integrity Meets Life,鈥 also introduced Bluffton鈥檚 2017-18 Civic Engagement Theme 鈥 Integrity, Truth, Virtue: Bluffton鈥檚 honor code in the world. 2018 will mark the 100th anniversary of the honor code at Bluffton through which students have been taught to uphold the community of respect in all of their campus interactions. Honor covenants signed by the incoming students were presented during the event.

The covenant begins with the following statement: 鈥淎s members of the 小优传媒 community, we commit to being honest, trustworthy and honorable in our actions and relationships with each other both in and out of the classroom.鈥 The document then describes the honor system. It ends with: 鈥淭his ideal environment of mutual trust and respect for one another in all aspects of our community life is central to our desire to be a community of respect.鈥 The signed covenants are displayed in Marbeck Center.

With this in mind, Whitaker shared three thoughts on integrity for the students to get the most of their college career.

First, 鈥淒o what we do.鈥 Whitaker explained that this is a favorite phrase of Dungy鈥檚. Whitaker met Dungy while both worked for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Dungy used the phrase to emphasize to his team that they must be true to their identity and priorities. Just the same, students must be true to themselves to move forward in life. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a saying 80 percent of success is just showing up,鈥 said Whitaker. 鈥淭ake care of the small things and do the little things along the way.鈥

Second, 鈥淣o Excuses, No Explanations.鈥 Whitaker encouraged students to own their decisions and remember the honor code. 鈥淵ou chose a community that puts relationships and virtue first,鈥 Whitaker said.

Third, 鈥淒efine Success.鈥 To underscore this point, Whitaker shared a lesson from Dungy鈥檚 mentor, Chuck Noll, head coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers for more than 20 years. 鈥淐oach Noll would rather his team play well and lose a game than play poorly and win,鈥 explained Whitaker.

It鈥檚 a definition of success many would have a hard time coming to terms with, but Noll was defining success for himself. 鈥淪o often we look to what the world defines as success, but those oftentimes are the temporary things in life, and really it's the relationships and the lives we build into and being significant in other people's lives that really matter," Whitaker said.

Whitaker also shared a story from his college days where he walked-on to the football and baseball teams and majored in English and political science.

During his time at Duke University, Whitaker joked that the 鈥渕ost eloquent鈥 writing he ever did was painting the words 鈥淒uke Loves Jesus鈥 on an overpass on campus. Students were encouraged to paint the area, and as a member of several Christian groups, Whitaker and his friends reluctantly chose the phrase after being unable to come up with a more clever or original saying.

Later, Whitaker attended a Campus Crusade for Christ meeting, a group he didn鈥檛 regularly attend because of his academic and athletic schedules. He was tired that night and not really paying attention until an international graduate student spoke about being homesick and the difficulty of taking classes in English. The student had planned to return to Taiwan, 鈥渂ut then he saw the words 鈥楧uke Loves Jesus,鈥 and he knew there were other students on campus he could relate to. He just needed to find them and connect with them,鈥 said Whitaker.

鈥淚t is impossible to determine which actions in life will make a ripple and which ones won鈥檛,鈥 Whitaker said. 鈥淏e mindful of that. Often we never know.鈥

-B-

Nathan Whitaker, New York Times bestselling author
I think it鈥檚 easy for us to devalue what we do or say. That what we do isn鈥檛 going to impact anybody. Probably 99 percent of the things I鈥檝e done in life fall into that category. Most of the time my actions have been the stones falling into the pond that nobody sees, but other times there is a ripple effect and our actions do carry on.
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