[Offbeat Graduation Speech Gets Standing Ovation: 2012's Baccalaureate speaker at the University of Pennsylvania was an  unconventional choice for an Ivy League school. To address their  newly-minted graduates, aspiring to dazzling careers, they picked a man  who has never in his adult life, applied for a job. A man who hasn't  worked for pay in nearly a decade, and whose self-stated mission is  simply "to bring smiles to the world and stillness to my heart". This  off-the-radar speaker launched his address with a startling piece of  advice. Following up with four key insights gleaned from a radical 1000  km walking pilgrimage through the villages of India. As he closed his  one-of-a-kind Graduation Day speech, the sea of cap and gowned students  rose to their feet for a standing ovation. What follows is the full  transcript of the talk by Nipun Mehta. --DailyGood Editors]
Thank you to my distinguished friends, President Amy Gutmann, Provost Vincent Price and Rev. Charles Howard for inviting me to share a few  reflections on this joyous occasion.  It is an honor and privilege to  congratulate you -- UPenn’s class of 2012. 
Right now each one of you is sitting on the runway of life primed for  takeoff. You are some of the world's most gifted, elite, and driven  college graduates – and you are undeniably ready to fly.  So what I’m  about to say next may sound a bit crazy.  I want to urge you, not to  fly, but to – walk.   Four years ago, you walked into this marvelous laboratory of higher  learning. Today, heads held high, you walk to receive your diplomas.   Tomorrow, you will walk into a world of infinite possibilities. 
But walking, in our high-speed world, has unfortunately fallen out of  favor.  The word “pedestrian” itself is used to describe something  ordinary and commonplace.  Yet, walking with intention has deep roots.   Australia's aboriginal youth go on walkabouts as a rite of passage;  Native American tribes conduct vision quests in the wilderness; in  Europe, for centuries, people have walked the Camino de Santiago, which  spans the breadth of Spain.  Such pilgrims place one foot firmly in  front of the other, to fall in step with the rhythms of the universe and the cadence of their own hearts. 
Back in 2005, six months into our marriage, my wife and I decided to “step  it up” ourselves and go on a walking pilgrimage.  At the peak of our  efforts with ServiceSpace, we wondered if we had the capacity to put  aside our worldly success and seek higher truths.  Have you ever   thought of something and then just known that it had to happen? It was one of those things.  So we sold all our major  belongings, and bought a one-way ticket to India.  Our plan was to head  to Mahatma Gandhi’s ashram, since he had always been an inspiration to  us, and then walk South.  Between the two of us, we budgeted a dollar a  day, mostly for incidentals -- which meant that for our survival we had  to depend utterly on the kindness of strangers.  We ate whatever food  was offered and slept wherever place was offered.  
Now, I do have to say, such ideas come with a warning: do not try this at home, because your partner might not exactly welcome this kind of honeymoon. :-)
For us, this walk was a pilgrimage -- and our goal was simply to be in a  space larger than our egos, and to allow that compassion to guide us in  unscripted acts of service along the way.  Stripped entirely of our  comfort zone and accustomed identities, could we still “keep it real”?   That was our challenge.
We ended up walking 1000 kilometers over three months. In that period, we  encountered the very best and the very worst of human nature -- not just in others, but also within ourselves.
Soon after we ended the pilgrimage, my uncle casually popped the million  dollar question at the dinner table: "So, Nipun, what did you learn from this walk?"  I didn't know where to begin.  But quite spontaneously, an acronym --W-A-L-K -- came to mind, which encompassed the  key lessons we had learned, and continue to relearn, even to this day.   As you start the next phase of your journey, I want to share those  nuggets with the hope that it might illuminate your path in some small  way too.
 
