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Village Craftsmen
170
Howard Street
PO Box
248
Ocracoke Island,
NC 27960
252-928-5541
info@villagecraftsmen.com
Ocracoke Newsletter
June 21, 2012
Molly Lovejoy's 2012 Valedictory Address
Ocracoke Graduating Class of 2012:
(Echo Bennink, William O'Neal, Molly Lovejoy, Cassandra Hagins, Virginia Downes, Ashley Salinas-Lopez, & Leslie Espinoza)
Molly Lovejoy:

Following is Molly's Valedictory Address at graduation ceremonies for the 2012 class of Ocracoke School:
Family,
community members, friends and fellow graduates,
I have written this speech no less than 16 different
times. Sometimes they were terrible, other times they were just ok, but as I
read through them I realized they all had one common factor that made me hate
them. They were all really cheesy. I didn’t want my time here to be melted down
into a sickly sweet blob of clichés and inside jokes. This school and community
have encouraged me to push boundaries time and time again over the past four
years and we are all up here because of the countless hours that you’ve
invested in us. And that is really something to celebrate and reflect on as the
class of 2012 moves on from Ocracoke School.
When
I joined this class, I was a ninth grader. I had been home-schooled up until
that point and, let’s be honest; I was probably the nerdiest person I knew. But
my classmates loved me then and they love me now, no matter how many Harry
Potter and Glee references I still drag into conversation. What I’m getting at
is that we should never forget that we come from a very special place, one
where our differences and quirks are accepted and included instead of
ridiculed. People have always said that our class is filled with big
personalities, and it’s true. Every one of us is so vastly different from the
other six, and I think that’s mostly due to the fact that this school and this
island embrace and celebrate differences.
I
couldn’t be more thankful to have grown up on Ocracoke because from music
lessons, to Teennight, to radio shows, this community has allowed me to
experiment with different interests and encouraged me to think outside the box.
The things I have learned from the men and women both in the classroom and the
community who have become teachers and mentors will stay with me forever and
I’m willing to bet that if you’re here now it means you’ve been one of those
people for me or my classmates. As we all move on to new places and adventures,
it’s wonderful to know that the people of Ocracoke will always have our back.
Graduation
is a time when we can reflect on the experiences and people that brought us
where we are today and there is no one more deserving of my thanks than my
parents. From a very young age, you’ve instilled in me a kind of wanderlust,
the German word meaning the overwhelming desire to travel. It’s what led me on
a spring break trip with Emma to Denmark
in 2010, then to an exchange year in Austria
a few months later, and now finally to Emerson and Boston. You’ve taught me how to think for
myself and be independent but also inspired me to be globally conscious and
dependable. Thank you for encouraging me in all, well, most of my crazy ideas.
I feel so lucky to be your daughter.
As
many of you already know, I have had some experience with living in a different
place, and without getting too preachy, I would like to offer my classmates one
word of advice. A motto of the United Kingdom Special Air Force is “those who
risk, win.” As we start this next chapter of our lives, don’t allow yourselves
to get caught up in monotony and mediocrity. I hope you try new things, and go
new places, and do what you love doing, and along the way, I hope you take some
risks.
Winston
Churchill once said, "This is not the end. It is not even the beginning
of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning." Today marks
the end of our beginning, and I can't wait to see where the rest takes
us.
Thank you!
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