Winds of Change.NET: Liberty. Discovery. Humanity. Victory.

Formal Affiliations
  • Anti-Idiotarian Manifesto
  • Euston Democratic Progressive Manifesto
  • Real Democracy for Iran!
  • Support Denamrk
  • Million Voices for Darfur
  • milblogs
Syndication
 Subscribe in a reader

TG Speaks!

| 7 Comments

My wife, Tenacious G, has worked for the same organization for 20 years (while I have never actually managed to work for more than 10 in one year...). This year, her boss of 17 years, and dear friend, the Executive Director is retiring which is pretty stressful to her.

So last night, they held a reception in his honor at Disney Hall downtown, and they had asked her to speak on behalf of the staff.

Speaking along with her were a Superior Court judge, an appellate court judge, and a few name partners at law firms. She wasn't happy about being asked to speak at all, and was terrified at speaking in that crowd.

"I'm a terrible speaker!" she wailed to me.

But she loves her boss and wanted to honor him, and so sat down and wrote a speech.

I read it, and it wasn't the speech I would have written - hers was direct and simple while (as you can tell from my writing here sometimes) I'm overfond of rhetorical flourishes. But when I read it and heard it in my head - in her imagined voice - it sounded good.

Little did I know...

There were about two hundred or so people there when the event began. I'd meant to change to a suit, but hadn't had time (and for my work presentation that morning I was specifically commanded to be in 'business casual').

I got her a glass of wine - she was too nervous to eat - and when they called her name, she sighed, shrugged her shoulders, handed me her purse and walked to the podium.

And she blew the room away.

After her first paragraph, the room was silent, and as I looked over the crowd, I could tell how fixed everyone's attention was on her. She spoke simply, honestly, and with a display of unfiltered affection and emotion. It was amazing; it was something I've rarely seen - and I've been to a lot of speeches. Four minutes of absolute attention and silence. The focus and energy of two hundred people entirely on her, her words, and the feelings she was conveying with them.

She got kind of teary at the end, wrapped up the speech, and came off the podium to hugs from the other speakers, and a powerful hug from her boss.

The she came over to me and I handed her a Kleenex, hugged her myself, and told her how proud I was of her.

And now I'm telling all of you as well.

7 Comments

Simply put: You rock.

Thanks for this great story!

Your wife did something that is extremely difficult, and extremely well, it sounds. Public speaking is a very difficult thing to do, and not many people are good at it. Kudos to her.

Never underestimate the power of unadorned sincerity in a speech.

So... no transcript?

I've been to many LA Philharmonic concerts at Disney Hall, and while the sound is superb for both instrumentalists and vocalists, for some reason there seems to be a lot of reverb whenever someone speaks into a mike. But for an audience of a few hundred, I imagine there was no problem with her speech. It's a glorious venue for a tribute.

What Joe said. Straight talk from the heart makes for powerful speaking. She should be proud. As should you.

Way to go, TG! the dear girl always underestimates herself! Love to you both
T.

Excellent job, TG! Though I'm not surprised . . .

Leave a comment

Here are some quick tips for adding simple Textile formatting to your comments, though you can also use proper HTML tags:

*This* puts text in bold.

_This_ puts text in italics.

bq. This "bq." at the beginning of a paragraph, flush with the left hand side and with a space after it, is the code to indent one paragraph of text as a block quote.

To add a live URL, "Text to display":http://windsofchange.net/ (no spaces between) will show up as Text to display. Always use this for links - otherwise you will screw up the columns on our main blog page.




Recent Comments
  • TM Lutas: Jobs' formula was simple enough. Passionately care about your users, read more
  • sabinesgreenp.myopenid.com: Just seeing the green community in action makes me confident read more
  • Glen Wishard: Jobs was on the losing end of competition many times, read more
  • Chris M: Thanks for the great post, Joe ... linked it on read more
  • Joe Katzman: Collect them all! Though the French would be upset about read more
  • Glen Wishard: Now all the Saudis need is a division's worth of read more
  • mark buehner: Its one thing to accept the Iranians as an ally read more
  • J Aguilar: Saudis were around here (Spain) a year ago trying the read more
  • Fred: Good point, brutality didn't work terribly well for the Russians read more
  • mark buehner: Certainly plausible but there are plenty of examples of that read more
  • Fred: They have no need to project power but have the read more
  • mark buehner: Good stuff here. The only caveat is that a nuclear read more
  • Ian C.: OK... Here's the problem. Perceived relevance. When it was 'Weapons read more
  • Marcus Vitruvius: Chris, If there were some way to do all these read more
  • Chris M: Marcus Vitruvius, I'm surprised by your comments. You're quite right, read more
The Winds Crew
Town Founder: Left-Hand Man: Other Winds Marshals
  • 'AMac', aka. Marshal Festus (AMac@...)
  • Robin "Straight Shooter" Burk
  • 'Cicero', aka. The Quiet Man (cicero@...)
  • David Blue (david.blue@...)
  • 'Lewy14', aka. Marshal Leroy (lewy14@...)
  • 'Nortius Maximus', aka. Big Tuna (nortius.maximus@...)
Other Regulars Semi-Active: Posting Affiliates Emeritus:
Winds Blogroll
Author Archives
Categories
Powered by Movable Type 4.23-en