Jennifer Coolidge shares 1 sincere message to graduates in the dramatic graduation speech
Jennifer Coolidge offered graduates a sincere reminder that sometimes the world underestimate exactly those that should not.
Coolidge, known for his humor and his eccentric charm, remained faithful to the form while pronouncing a graduation speech to the graduates of Emerson College on Sunday. Returning to his Alma Mater, just “40 miles along the way” from where he grew up, the actor reflected on the winding road that brought her back, complete with memories of being overlooked, doubted and deliciously strange.
“If you had told the children who grew up with that … One day I would have this opportunity like this, they would have laughed at your face,” he said.
Coolidge said he understood his disbelief; After all, remember to have been a “very strange girl.”

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The actor turned and approached the parental figures at the audience: “For all parents and audience caregivers who are worried that their children are successful, I just want to say: ‘Don’t do it.”
The “legally blonde” star shared a memory of childhood that described as “traumatizing.” She told time at the end of the first grade when she was disqualified from her school’s field. Technically ended first, but forgot a minor detail: complete the obstacle career that was part of the challenge.
“And then the teacher approached me and told me that I didn’t win the blue ribbon because I was disqualified,” he said. “And it turns out that I had jumped all the obstacles. I simply ran abroad.”

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The story landed somewhere between the comedy and the crusher, and, as the laughter softened, the lesson settled.
This false step of his youth became a metaphor of something bigger: the importance of drawing his own path, even if he does not follow the designated course. She admitted that for years she was persecuted by the perceptions of others, but now she sees that sensitivity not as a fault but as a fortress, a often shared by people who are “better in things.”
Then he addressed those who have been told that they are not enough: “Do not listen to people who ruin the real story you have.”
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She urged each graduate to be her “own champion”, concluding: “It really doesn’t matter what someone thinks or says. I mean, when it comes to the obstacle course of their life, you have to find your own path. And you cannot plan it perfectly from the beginning. And part of directing your life is simply to let it develop.”


