
A Graduation Speech on Human Faces and Relationships
Till that word can be dug out of us, why should they hear the babble that we think we mean? How can they meet us face to face till we have faces?
These lines appear near the end of a novel that I recently reread by C.S. Lewis called, Till We Have Faces. It’s a creative retelling of an ancient Greek myth involving Cupid and Psyche. These lines are spoken by Orual, the main protagonist and narrator of the story, shortly after she’s had a mysterious encounter with the gods. The “they” to which she refers – “why should they hear… how can they meet us…” – are the gods. If you know this book and you know C.S. Lewis, you know that he’s working on a theological theme with these lines. But in rereading the story recently, I was struck by the significance of the face. Lewis is drawing on the sense that our face is where our true selfhood is expressed and it’s where we see the unique personhood of others.

A Graduation Speech in the Year of Ted Lasso & ChatGPT
Two key phenomena marked the 2022-23 school-year in my mind: one, the release of ChatGPT and two, season three of Ted Lasso, a show beloved by a lot of teachers. So it is that as the ISK Class of 2023 walked across the graduation stage, and I was honored to give the graduation speech, I thought it fitting to address these two phenomena in the words that I delivered below.

A Graduation Speech
I was privilege to be selected by the graduating class of 2021 as their speaker for their graduation ceremony. I was selected in part because I too was closing out my time at the International Community School of Addis Ababa. I've been doing a lot reading this semester related to the field of positive psychology for a PE class I've been teaching called "Personal Well-Being". This reading, together with my own experience of life-transition, mixed all together with the reflections that come from a year of a global pandemic, contributed to the below speech: Reflections on the Disney Pixar Movie, Soul.