| Steve Jobs 2005 stanford univ speach | [00:01]Steve Jobs'2005 Stanford [00:24]I am
 [00:29] honored to be with you today
 [00:30]at your commencement from one
 [00:31]of the finest universities
 [00:33]in the world.
 [00:36]To speech all
 [00:38]I never graduated
 [00:40]from college.
 [00:41]And ,
 [00:43]this is the closest
 [00:44] I've ever gotten
 [00:45]to a college graduation.
 [00:48]Today I want to tell you
 [00:50]three stories from my life.
 [00:51]That's it.
 [00:52]No big deal.
 [00:54]Just three stories.
 [00:56]The first story is
 [00:58]about connecting the dots.
 [01:01]I dropped out of Reed College
 [01:03]after the first 6 months,
 [01:04]but then stayed around as a
 [01:05]drop-in for another 18 months
 [01:07]or so before I really quit.
 [01:10]So why did I drop out?
 [01:12]It started before I was born.
 [01:13]My biological mother
 [01:16]was a young,
 [01:18]unwed college graduate
 [01:19]student,
 [01:20]and she decided to put me up
 [01:21]for adoption.
 [01:22]She felt very strongly that
 [01:24]I should be adopted
 [01:25] by college graduates,
 [01:26]so everything was all set
 [01:28]for me to be adopted at birth
 [01:29]by a lawyer and his wife.
 [01:32]Except that when I popped
 [01:34]out they decided at the last
 [01:35]minute that they really
 [01:36]wanted a girl.
 [01:38]So my parents,
 [01:39]who were on a waiting list,
 [01:40]got a call in the middle of
 [01:42]the night asking:
 [01:44]"We have an unexpected
 [01:48] baby boy; do you want him?"
 [01:51] They said:"Of course."
 [01:53] My biological mother later
 [01:54]found out that my mother had
 [01:55]never graduated from college
 [01:56]and that my father had never
 [01:57]graduated from high school.
 [01:59]She refused to sign the
 [02:01]final adoption papers.
 [02:04]She only relented
 [02:05] a few months later
 [02:06] when my parents promised
 [02:07] that I would someday go
 [02:09] to college.
 [02:10]And 17 years later
 [02:11] almost as to college.
 [02:17] But I naively chose a
 [02:19] college that was
 [02:20] almost as expensivex
 [02:22] almost as Stanford,
 [02:23] and all of my working-class
 [02:24]parents' savings were being
 [02:25]spent on my college tuition.
 [02:27]After six months,
 [02:28]I couldn't see
 [02:30] the value in it.
 [02:31]I had no idea what I wanted
 [02:32]to do with my life and no
 [02:34]idea how college was going to
 [02:35]help me figure it out.
 [02:36]And here I was spending all
 [02:37]of the money my parents had
 [02:40]saved their entire life.
 [02:43]So I decided to drop out and
 [02:44]trust that it would
 [02:46] all work out OK.
 [02:48]It was pretty scary
 [02:49] at the time,
 [02:50]but looking back it was one
 [02:51]of the best decisions
 [02:52] I ever made.
 [02:54]The minute I dropped out I
 [02:55]could stop taking the
 [02:57]required classes that didn't
 [02:58]interest me,
 [03:00]and begin dropping in on the
 [03:01]ones that looked interesting.
 [03:03]It wasn't all romantic.
 [03:05]I didn't have a dorm room,
 [03:08]so I slept on the floor in
 [03:09]friends' rooms,
 [03:11]I returned coke bottles for
 [03:12]the 5¢ deposits
 [03:13] to buy food with,
 [03:15]and I would walk the 7 miles
 [03:16]across town
 [03:17] every Sunday night
 [03:18] to get one
 [03:19] good meal a week
 [03:21] at the Hare Krishna temple.
 [03:22]I loved it.
 [03:24]And much of what I stumbled
 [03:25]into by following my
 [03:27]curiosity and intuition
 [03:28]turned out to be priceless
 [03:29]later on.
 [03:31]Let me give you one example:
 [03:32]Reed College at that time
 [03:35]offered perhaps the best
 [03:36]calligraphy instruction in
 [03:37]the country.
 [03:39]Throughout the campus every
 [03:40]poster,
 [03:41]every label on every drawer,
 [03:43]was beautifully hand
 [03:44]calligraphed.
 [03:45]Because I had dropped out
 [03:46]and didn't have to take the
 [03:48]normal classes,
 [03:50]I decided to take a
 [03:51]calligraphy class to learn
 [03:52]how to do this.
 [03:53]I learned about serif and
 [03:54]san serif typefaces,
 [03:56]about varying the amount of
 [03:57]space between different
 [03:59]letter combinations,
 [04:00]about what makes great
 [04:01]typography great.
 [04:03]It was beautiful,
 [04:05]historical,
 [04:06]artistically subtle
 [04:07] in a way that science
 [04:08] can't capture,
 [04:09]and I found it fascinating.
 [04:10]None of this had even a hope
 [04:13]of any practical application
 [04:14]in my life.
 [04:15]But ten years later,
 [04:18]when we were designing the
 [04:19]first Macintosh computer,
 [04:21]it all came back to me.
 [04:23]And we designed it all
 [04:25] into the Mac.
 [04:26]It was the first computer
 [04:27]with beautiful typography.
 [04:29]If I had never dropped in on
 [04:30]that single course in college,
 [04:33]the Mac would have never had
 [04:34]multiple typefaces or
 [04:36]proportionally spaced fonts.
 [04:37]And since Windows
 [04:38] just copied the Mac,
 [04:40]it's likely that no personal
 [04:41]computer would have them.
 [04:50]If I had never dropped out,
 [04:52]I would have never dropped
 [04:53]in on this calligraphy class,
 [04:54]and personal computers might
 [04:55]not have the wonderful
 [04:57]typography that they do.
 [04:58]Of course it was impossible
 [05:00]to connect the dots looking
 [05:01]forward when I was in college.
 [05:03]But it was very,
 [05:04]very clear looking backwards
 [05:06]ten years later.
 [05:07] Again, you can't connect
 [05:08] the dots looking forward;
 [05:09] you can only
 [05:11]connect them looking
 [05:13]backwards.
 [05:14]So you have to trust that
 [05:15]the dots will somehow connect
 [05:16]in your future.
 [05:17]You have to trust in
 [05:18]something ?
 [05:19] your gut, destiny, life,
 [05:22] karma, whatever.
 [05:23]This approach has never let
 [05:24]me down,
 [05:25]and it has made all the
 [05:26]difference in my life.
 [05:39]My second story
 [05:40] is about love and loss.
 [05:41]I was lucky ? I found what I
 [05:44]loved to do early in life.
 [05:46]Woz and I started Apple in
 [05:49]my parents garage
 [05:51] when I was 20.
 [05:52]We worked hard,
 [05:53]and in 10 years Apple had
 [05:54]grown from just the two of us
 [05:55]in a garage into a $2 billion
 [05:57]company with over 4000
 [06:00]employees.
 [06:01]We had just released our
 [06:02]finest creation ? the
 [06:03]Macintosh ? a year earlier,
 [06:04]and I had just turned 30.
 [06:05]And then I got fired.
 [06:07]How can you get fired from a
 [06:09]company you started?
 [06:12] Well, as Apple grew we hired
 [06:14]someone who I thought
 [06:15]was very talented
 [06:17] to run the company with me,
 [06:19]and for the first year or so
 [06:20]things went well.
 [06:21]But then our visions of the
 [06:22]future began to diverge
 [06:23] and eventually
 [06:24] we had a falling out.
 [06:25]When we did,
 [06:26]our Board of Directors sided
 [06:28]with him.
 [06:29]So at 30 I was out.
 [06:30]And very publicly out.
 [06:31]What had been the focus of
 [06:34]my entire adult life was gone,
 [06:35]and it was devastating.
 [06:37]I really didn't know what to
 [06:39]do for a few months.
 [06:41]I felt that I had let the
 [06:42]previous generation of
 [06:43]entrepreneurs down - that I
 [06:45]had dropped the baton as it
 [06:46]was being passed to me.
 [06:47]I met with David Packard
 [06:50] and Bob Noyce
 [06:51] and tried to apologize
 [06:52] for screwing up so badly.
 [06:53]I was a very public failure,
 [06:54]and I even thought about
 [06:56]running away from the valley.
 [06:57]But something slowly began
 [06:59]to dawn on me ? I still loved
 [07:03]what I did.
 [07:05]The turn of events at Apple
 [07:06]had not changed that one bit.
 [07:08]I had been rejected,
 [07:09]but I was still in love.
 [07:11]And so I decided to start
 [07:12]over.
 [07:14]I didn't see it then,
 [07:15]but it turned out that
 [07:17]getting fired from Apple was
 [07:18]the best thing that could
 [07:20]have ever happened to me.
 [07:21]The heaviness of being
 [07:22]successful was replaced by
 [07:23]the lightness of being a
 [07:25]beginner again,
 [07:26]less sure about everything.
 [07:28]It freed me to enter one of
 [07:29]the most creative periods of
 [07:30]my life.
 [07:31]During the next five years,
 [07:32]I started a company named
 [07:33]NeXT,
 [07:34]another company named Pixar,
 [07:35]and fell in love with an
 [07:37]amazing woman who would
 [07:38]become my wife.
 [07:40]Pixar went on to create the
 [07:41]worlds first computer
 [07:42]animated feature film,
 [07:43]Toy Story,
 [07:44]and is now the most
 [07:45]successful animation studio
 [07:46]in the world.
 [07:50]In a remarkable turn of
 [07:51]events,
 [07:52]Apple bought NeXT,
 [07:54]I returned to Apple,
 [07:55]and the technology we
 [07:56]developed at NeXT is at the
 [07:57]heart of Apple's current
 [07:58]renaissance.
 [08:00]And Laurene
 [08:01] and I have
 [08:02] a wonderful family together.
 [08:03]I'm pretty sure none of this
 [08:04]would have happened if I
 [08:06]hadn't been fired from Apple.
 [08:08]It was awful tasting
 [08:09]medicine,
 [08:10]but I guess the patient
 [08:11]needed it.
 [08:12]Sometimes life hits you in
 [08:13]the head with a brick.
 [08:14]Don't lose faith.
 [08:18]I'm convinced that the only
 [08:19]thing that kept me going was
 [08:20]that I loved what I did.
 [08:22]You've got to find what you
 [08:23]love.
 [08:25]And that is as true for your
 [08:26]work as it is for your lovers.
 [08:28]Your work is going to fill a
 [08:29]large part of your life,
 [08:30]and the only way to be truly
 [08:32]satisfied is to do what you
 [08:34]believe is great work.
 [08:35]And the only way to do great
 [08:36]work is to love what you do.
 [08:38]If you haven't found it yet,
 [08:40]keep looking.
 [08:41]Don't settle.
 [08:42]As with all matters of the
 [08:44]heart,
 [08:45]you'll know when you find it.
 [08:46]And,
 [08:47]like any great relationship,
 [08:48]it just gets better and
 [08:50]better as the years roll on.
 [08:51]So keep looking until you
 [08:52]find it.
 [08:54]Don't settle.
 [09:05]My third story is about death.
 [09:09]When I was 17,
 [09:10]I read a quote that went
 [09:12]something like:
 [09:13]"If you live each day
 [09:15] as if it was your last,
 [09:16]someday you'll most
 [09:21]certainly be right.
 [09:26]" It made an impression on me,
 [09:28]and since then,
 [09:30]for the past 33 years,
 [09:33]I have looked in the mirror
 [09:34]every morning and asked
 [09:35]myself:
 [09:36]"If today were the last day
 [09:37]of my life,
 [09:38]would I want to do
 [09:39] what I am about to do today?"
 [09:40] And whenever
 [09:41]the answer has been
 [09:42]"No" for too many days
 [09:43] in a row,
 [09:44]I know I need to change
 [09:45]something.
 [09:46]Remembering
 [09:47]that I'll be dead soon
 [09:48]is the most important
 [09:49]tool I've ever encountered to
 [09:50]help me make the big choices
 [09:51]in life.
 [09:52]Because almost everything ?
 [09:53]all external expectations,
 [09:54]all pride,
 [09:55]all fear of embarrassment or
 [09:56]failure -
 [09:57] these things just fall away
 [09:58] in the face of death,
 [09:59]leaving only what is truly
 [10:00]important.
 [10:01]Remembering that you are
 [10:02]going to die is the best way
 [10:03]I know to avoid the trap of
 [10:05]thinking you have something
 [10:06]to lose.
 [10:08]You are already naked.
 [10:09]There is no reason not to
 [10:10]follow your heart.
 [10:12]About a year ago I was
 [10:14]diagnosed with cancer.
 [10:16]I had a scan at 7:
 [10:18]30 in the morning,
 [10:20]and it clearly showed a
 [10:21]tumor on my pancreas.
 [10:23]I didn't even know what a
 [10:24]pancreas was.
 [10:26]The doctors told me this was
 [10:27]almost certainly a type of
 [10:29]cancer that is incurable,
 [10:30]and that I should expect to
 [10:32]live no longer than three to
 [10:33]six months.
 [10:35]My doctor advised me to go
 [10:37]home and get my affairs in
 [10:38]order,
 [10:40]which is doctor's code for
 [10:41]prepare to die.
 [10:43]It means to try to tell your
 [10:44]kids everything you thought
 [10:45]you'd have the next 10 years
 [10:48]to tell them
 [10:50] in just a few months.
 [10:52]It means to make sure
 [10:53]everything is buttoned up so
 [10:56]that it will be as easy as
 [10:57]possible for your family.
 [10:58]It means
 [10:59] to say your goodbyes.
 [11:01]I lived with that diagnosis
 [11:02]all day.
 [11:04]Later that evening I had a
 [11:05]biopsy,
 [11:06]where they stuck an
 [11:07]endoscope down my throat,
 [11:09]through my stomach and into
 [11:10]my intestines,
 [11:11]put a needle into my
 [11:12]pancreas and got a few cells
 [11:13]from the tumor.
 [11:15]I was sedated,
 [11:16]but my wife,
 [11:17]who was there,
 [11:18]told me that when they
 [11:19]viewed the cells under a
 [11:21]microscope the doctors
 [11:22]started crying because it
 [11:23]turned out to be a very rare
 [11:24]form of pancreatic cancer
 [11:26]that is curable with surgery.
 [11:28]I had the surgery and I'm
 [11:30]fine now.
 [11:40]This was the closest I've
 [11:41]been to facing death,
 [11:43]and I hope it's the closest
 [11:44]I get for a few more decades.
 [11:45]Having lived through it,
 [11:47]I can now say this to you
 [11:49]with a bit more certainty
 [11:50]than when death was a useful
 [11:52]but purely intellectual
 [11:53]concept:
 [11:55]No one wants to die.
 [11:58]Even people who want to go
 [11:59]to heaven don't want to die
 [12:01]to get there.
 [12:03]And yet death is the
 [12:04]destination we all share.
 [12:06]No one has ever escaped it.
 [12:08]And that is as it should be,
 [12:10]because Death is very likely
 [12:12]the single best invention of
 [12:13]Life.
 [12:15]It is Life's change agent.
 [12:16]It clears out the old
 [12:18] to make way for the new.
 [12:20]Right now the new is you,
 [12:21]but someday not too long
 [12:22]from now,
 [12:24]you will gradually become
 [12:25]the old and be cleared away.
 [12:26]Sorry to be so dramatic,
 [12:29]but it is quite true.
 [12:31]Your time is limited,
 [12:33]so don't waste it living
 [12:35]someone else's life.
 [12:36]Don't be trapped by dogma ?
 [12:39]which is living with the
 [12:40]results of other people's
 [12:41]thinking.
 [12:43]Don't let the noise of
 [12:44]others' opinions drown out
 [12:45]your own inner voice.
 [12:47]And most important,
 [12:48]have the courage to follow
 [12:49]your heart and intuition.
 [12:50]They somehow already know
 [12:52]what you truly want to become.
 [12:53]Everything else is secondary.
 [13:11]When I was young,
 [13:12]there was an amazing
 [13:13]publication called The Whole
 [13:14]Earth Catalog,
 [13:15]which was one of the bibles
 [13:16]of my generation.
 [13:18]It was created by a fellow
 [13:19]named Stewart Brand not far
 [13:20]from here in Menlo Park,
 [13:22]and he brought it to life
 [13:23]with his poetic touch.
 [13:26]This was in the late 1960's,
 [13:27]before personal computers
 [13:28]and desktop publishing,
 [13:30]so it was all made with
 [13:31]typewriters, scissors,
 [13:33]and polaroid cameras.
 [13:34]It was sort of like Google
 [13:35]in paperback form,
 [13:36]35 years
 [13:38] before Google came along:
 [13:40]it was idealistic,
 [13:41]and overflowing with neat
 [13:42]tools and great notions.
 [13:43]Stewart and his team put out
 [13:46]several issues of The Whole
 [13:47]Earth Catalog,
 [13:49]and then when it had run
 [13:50] its course,
 [13:51]they put out a final issue.
 [13:53]It was the mid-1970s,
 [13:54]and I was your age.
 [13:56]On the back cover
 [13:58]of their final
 [13:59]issue was a photograph
 [14:01]of an early morning country
 [14:03]road,
 [14:04]the kind you might find
 [14:05]yourself hitchhiking on if
 [14:06]you were so adventurous.
 [14:08]Beneath it were the words:
 [14:10]"Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish."
 [14:13]It was their farewell
 [14:14]message as they signed off.
 [14:16]Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish.
 [14:19]And I have always wished
 [14:21]that for myself.
 [14:23]And now, as you graduate
 [14:24]to begin anew,
 [14:27]I wish that for you.
 [14:28]Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish.
 [14:31]Thank you all very much.
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