School: Brentwood High School Phillips M. Cao Age: 17 Attending: Princeton University
School: Brentwood High School Phillips M. Cao Age: 17 Attending: Princeton University
School: Brentwood High School Phillips M. Cao Age: 17 Attending: Princeton University
Phillips M. Cao
**
Taylor Grogan
Age: 17
While our family and friends gave us the motivation, our teachers
guided us and kept us moving forward toward success. In fact, this
school and our experiences here would not have been the same
without the teachers who pushed us, sometimes beyond our normal
limits, who reminded us to enjoy senior year and not take life too
seriously, and even those who “enlightened” us through their
random rants and theories, ridiculous current events and who
opened our eyes to the fourth dimension. Our teachers amused and
inspired us with their quotes of the day, Chuck Norris facts and Billy
Joel lyrics on tests. However, the teachers we have come to know
and love have given us more than fun memories; our teachers have
given us the best education we could ask for and have provided us
with many of the life lessons we will need in order to succeed.
Without these teachers, I’m sure many of us would not have enjoyed
high school nearly as much as we did, nor would we have learned as
much as we have.
While our futures lie before us, waiting to unfold, one thing is
certain: high school is over and we have all come to our first true
milestone in our adult lives. We are no longer high school seniors,
we are now high school graduates, ready to move on and face the
world that exists beyond the teachers, cliques and class schedules
that have defined much of our lives. With that said, I would like to
congratulate the class of 2008 on achieving this milestone and wish
you all good luck in following your passions and fulfilling your
dreams.
**
Steven Zilg
Age: 18
Writing this speech was not easy for me. I am up here tonight
because I managed to end up with the highest G.P.A. in the class.
For some reason, that also means that I know more about life, and
that I should represent the class by imparting some final words of
wisdom on everyone, before running out the door waving a diploma
over my head and throwing my hat in the air with everyone else.
Unfortunately my store of life experience is not at all full, and verbal
inspiration has never been a specialty of mine. After trying for
countless hours to come up with something to say, I still did not
have any ideas. But, then I thought to myself, hey, the adults are
always telling me how much information I have available to me, why
don’t I try looking there? The Internet, I thought to myself. This
ingenious invention was going to save my life and create a beautiful
speech for me. I looked everywhere I could think of. I started with
the obvious, YouTube and “the Google” as our president calls it. But
when I did not find anything there I began to grow desperate. I
found myself typing random Web addresses such as
www.greatideasforstevezilgsvaledictorianspeech.com. Nothing
came up. I found everything that I was not looking for, and nothing
that I was willing to say up here in front of all of you. After trying
very hard to make my speech something special, I decided first that
I should cover the basic parts of a typical valedictorian speech: the
thank yous, and the congratulations.
If someone were to observe our world from the outside, they would
see some terrible sights, hear some terrible sounds, and probably
feel some terrible feelings. But even though those sights and sounds
make up most of what you read in the paper or see on the news, the
lesser publicized stories can be just as, if not more important. There
are some amazing people doing some amazing things in every field
all around this world, and it is our time to join them. I look at you
my peers, and I see enormous potential in every sense of the word. I
see movers and shakers, I see problem solvers, I see healers, I see
thinkers, and I see doers. I see courageous individuals who are all
ready to soar off, and change this world for the better in so many
ways. And as I stand before you I am both humbled and thankful;
humbled by the amount of talent I see in the class of 2008, and
thankful that I was able to be just a small part of it. But remember
this my fellow graduates. While the Internet may be able to help you,
it will never accomplish tasks for you. If we trust in each others
abilities, as well as our own, the unimaginable will become not only
imaginable, but attainable. Thank you and I wish us all a healthy
and happy future.
**
Age: 18
Learning from past generations and our past failures is the key to
improving our future. After all, school is for learning.
**
Age: 18
What I have come to realize is that the joy one gets from extrinsic
rewards is fleeting. It is not before long that the waves of
“congratulations” subside and one’s accomplishment becomes “old
news”. True success and happiness is attained when we utilize our
talents, abilities, and skills in a way that is both personally fulfilling,
and more importantly, has a positive impact on others, such as
friends, family, and the society at -large.
**
School: Lynbrook High School
Allie Greenberg
Age: 18
Well, all those weeks that began with dreaded Mondays and ended
with glorious Fridays have added up. Our wishes have come true —
the end is here. But let’s be honest: Now that we are confronted with
the little matter of “the rest of our lives,” that “What’s the rush?”
comment our parents always made when we’d say we couldn’t wait
to finish high school is making a lot more sense.
It seems like only yesterday that, petrified about our clothes and our
hair and everything else, we came to school on that first day of ninth
grade and began wandering the halls of the most confusing building
in America, like rats in a lab experiment. In a sense, these past four
years were a lab experiment for us. In the laboratory otherwise
known as Lynbrook High School, we each had our own personal
petrie dish in which our character and personality could emerge.
Ours was an experiment with many different instruments — athletic
fields and concert halls, classrooms and band rooms; auditoriums
and studios. We tutored kids and relayed for life. We wrote stories
for Horizon and Driftstone and we held blood drives and bake sales
and art exhibitions and did other things too numerous to mention
here. We grappled with tests and regents and submerged ourselves
in the alphabetical quagmire of A.P.s and SATS and ACTs. Somehow,
we emerged from that quagmire, undaunted if not unscathed. Not
least important, we learned our way around the confounding school
building!
And, it took us four years to do it, but we left our mark on one of
Lynbrook’s proudest and most enduring traditions when — before a
thoroughly disbelieving crowd whose primary nonbelievers were us
— we transformed ourselves from Classnight laughingstock into
Classnight champions!!
Along the way, each of us have created our own unique memories
that we will take away from here — mostly good ones, I hope, and
some not so good, but all now and forever a part of who we are and
what we will accomplish.
It is said that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Recently, I entered the school for our last day of classes and I was
gripped by emotions strangely similar to those I remember feeling
on that terrifying first day of ninth grade all those years ago. I felt
confused and scared, not knowing what to expect next. I realized, as
everything hit me, that although I have changed and grown so much
in the past four years here, I am still the same fearful little girl
wandering through the maze of hallways, overwhelmed, yet excited
by the opportunities awaiting me. Each of us have our own feelings
about the past four years and our own hopes and expectations for
the next four and thereafter. But to at least some degree, we all face
the same blank page, again, just as we did when we headed to LHS
from middle school.
I would like to close with a few words about the cornerstone of our
Lynbrook experience: friends. It is our friends who helped us greet
the uncertainties of that first day of ninth grade. And it is the unique
comfort that only friends share that helped us conquer our fears and
doubts every day thereafter. Our friends rejoiced in our triumphs
and softened the blow of our failures. Our friends are at the core of
our most invaluable experiences here, experiences that will soon
become treasured memories destined to remain in our hearts
forever.
**