Good morning, students. Let me start with a question that might surprise you. What would you do if life suddenly took something away from you—something important that helped you move forward? Would you stop? Would you slow down? Or would you find a new way to keep going? Imagine waking up one day and realizing that the path you thought you would walk has suddenly changed. Many people in that moment feel defeated. They feel stuck. But sometimes the most inspiring stories in the world begin exactly at that moment—the moment when life says no, and someone bravely answers, watch me try again. Today I want to tell you the story of an unlikely hero, a small creature with a big lesson for all of us: a tortoise named Gamera.
Gamera is a 12-year-old African tortoise. Like
many tortoises, Gamera moved slowly but steadily through life. But one day
something terrible happened. Gamera suffered a severe injury to its front left
leg. The injury was so serious that veterinarians had no choice but to amputate
the leg. Think about that for a moment. A tortoise already moves slowly,
carefully, and deliberately. Losing a leg could have meant the end of movement
altogether. For many animals—or even for many humans—that kind of loss might
feel like the end of the story. It might feel like life has placed a permanent
barrier in the way. But Gamera’s story did not end there.
When Gamera was brought to Washington State
University’s veterinary hospital, the doctors faced a challenge. How could they
help this tortoise move again? How could they give it another chance to
explore, to crawl, to live its life? After careful thinking, they came up with
an unusual solution. They attached a small wheel to Gamera’s shell using a
strong adhesive. A tiny wheel—simple, creative, and full of possibility. And
something amazing happened. Gamera adapted immediately. Instead of being stuck,
the tortoise began to move again. It crawled across flat surfaces. It rolled
over grassy lawns. And perhaps most impressively, it moved eagerly toward food.
In other words, Gamera didn’t give up. Gamera rolled forward.
Now why am I telling you this story today?
Because every single student sitting here will face moments when life feels
unfair. Maybe you will fail a test you studied hard for. Maybe you will lose a
competition. Maybe a friend will doubt you. Maybe you will try something new
and fall short. Those moments can feel heavy, like the world has taken one of
your “legs” away. And it is easy in those moments to stop trying. To say,
“Maybe I’m not good enough.” But Gamera the tortoise teaches us a powerful
truth: when one path closes, another path can open—if we are brave enough to
look for it.
This is the pivot moment in our thinking. The
real lesson is not that Gamera lost a leg. The real lesson is that Gamera refused to stop moving. The wheel
did not make the tortoise perfect. It did not erase the injury. But it gave
Gamera a new way forward. Life works the same way for us. Sometimes success is
not about having perfect conditions. Sometimes success is about creativity,
resilience, and the courage to adapt. It is about saying, “This challenge will
not define me. I will find another way.”
Let me share something many students
experience. Imagine you try out for your school’s sports team. You practice
hard, you give your best effort, but your name is not on the final list. That
moment hurts. It feels like rejection. But that moment is not the end. It is a
fork in the road. You can walk away feeling defeated, or you can look for your
“wheel.” Maybe you train harder next time. Maybe you discover a different sport
you love even more. Maybe you learn discipline, teamwork, and perseverance
along the way. Sometimes the setback itself becomes the tool that pushes you
forward.
So what practical lessons can we take from the
story of Gamera? First, never define
yourself by your setbacks. Losing a leg did not define Gamera’s
future. In the same way, one bad grade, one mistake, or one failure does not
define who you are. You are always bigger than your worst moment. Second, look for creative solutions instead of excuses.
The veterinarians did not say, “Nothing can be done.” They asked, “What else
can we try?” That mindset—asking what else is
possible—is the mindset of innovators, leaders, and problem-solvers.
Third, keep moving forward, even if the
movement is slow. A tortoise is not fast. But it is steady. Progress
does not have to be dramatic. Sometimes success is simply taking the next step…
or the next roll.
Students, the truth is this: courage is not
about never falling down. Courage is about getting back up, again and again.
The most successful people in the world are not the ones who never faced
obstacles. They are the ones who turned their obstacles into stepping stones.
They found their wheels.
And that brings me to the message I want you
to carry with you today. Somewhere in your life, you may be facing a challenge
right now. Maybe it is in school. Maybe it is in sports. Maybe it is in your
confidence. Whatever it is, do not let it stop you. Instead, ask yourself a
powerful question: What is my wheel?
What tool, what idea, what new effort could help you move forward again?
Because if a small tortoise named Gamera can
lose a leg and still roll across a lawn with determination, then imagine what
you—with your creativity, intelligence, and energy—are capable of achieving.
So
stand up in your life. Take the risk. Try again. If you stumble, adapt. If you
fall, rise. And when the world tells you that the race is over, smile, find
your wheel, and say with confidence: “Roll, tortoise, roll.”
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