Sunday, September 23, 2018

Motivational Speaker Tawan Perry Closes Motlow's ‘Weeks of Welcome’


(Special thanks to the Inside Motlow team for contributing to this article.)

         SMYRNA -- Motivational speaker Tawan Perry brought a series of high-energy information sessions to Motlow State Community College students on all four campuses recently to put an exclamation point on the “Weeks of Welcome” that opened the 2018-19 academic year.
         Perry, an internationally sought-out speaker and award-winning author, shared three distinct but related messages to Motlow students on the Smyrna, Fayetteville, McMinnville and Moore County campuses: “Community College: A Game-changer,” “Academic, Social and Emotional Wellness,” and “Success Starts with You.”
         “How do you eat an elephant?” he teased the crowd of students during his talk in the lobby of Motlow’s Mary Lou Apple Building in Smyrna. “One bite at a time.”
         Perry speaks from his own experience as a student who enrolled in a local community college and struggled academically. With hard work and persistence, he eventually graduated and was awarded a full academic scholarship. From that point forward, he has never looked back and has dedicated his life’s work to help students successfully navigate the rigors of college.

Tawan Perry (right) uses "The Three Little Pigs" exercise to point out the need for a strong foundation in life. (Photo by Charles Whiting)

         "High schools pass out diplomas to graduates, but no one passes out a standard blueprint that details a direct path leading to successful college graduation," said Perry. “I try to tell students the stuff that you won’t find in admission brochures, before they need to know it.”
         On the Smyrna campus, Perry opened his first session by asking members of the audience to hug each other, explaining that a study showed people need five hugs a day to succeed. 
         He used a variety of creative activities during his several hours on campus to help bring his life and career-changing message to life.
         Perry invited volunteers up for a brief reading of “The Three Little Pigs” tale. He used the exercise to point out the need for a strong foundation in life.
         “Everybody has big bad wolves in their life,” Perry said. “Maybe it’s a job that they are unhappy in, maybe it’s a bad boss or a bad family situation. I know a lot of people who are unhappy in their jobs because they didn’t follow their heart and their passion when they were your age. You are young, so choose a career that will make you happy.”

         He also had his audience make a list of five categories: what you are grateful for, what you want to achieve, the completion date for your goals, why those goals are important to you, and what your action steps are to achieve your goals.
         “Someday is not a day of the week,” Perry told the attentive crowd. “I’ve checked the calendar, and there are only seven days in a week, and someday is not one of them. Turn to the person beside you and tell them someday is not a day of the week. It is critical to have a time frame for your goals.”
         A group of students also was invited up to play a game of musical chairs. He used the game to emphasize his point that life is all about competition, and those that prepare for what is coming their way and know what they want are usually successful.
         Perry cautioned his audience that what happens at school is not usually what derails someone’s academic career, but rather it is what happens at night or on the weekend that creates issues with academics. He encouraged students to take care of themselves and look out for themselves.
         One of the sessions focused on general wellness, with attendees taking a short stress assessment test. Perry used a handout featuring boxes for each hour of a 24-hour day, asking students to fill in what they are doing each hour on their busiest day, to demonstrate how time management is critical to success. 
         “We make time for the things that we value in life,” Perry stressed. “Look at your 24-hour sheet and see what you are spending your time on. Those are the things you value.”
         Perry encouraged students to be prepared for obstacles in life because everybody has them. 
         “Finish what you start, and right now that means finish at Motlow State,” he added. “Break life’s big goals into little pieces and finish them one piece at a time. Before you know it, you look up and the big goal is complete. Then you move on to the next one.”
         He pointed out that people who write up a weekly to-do list have a much greater opportunity to get things done. Discouragement, being lazy, and a lack of knowledge can eventually lead to someone giving up.
         “Listen to things that are positive,” he noted. “Take control of your own thoughts. Surround yourself with positive people. This is a new beginning. You get to choose what your next chapter is going to be.”
         Perry’s appearance was sponsored by Motlow’s Access & Diversity committee, chaired by Dean of Students Kirsten Moss. Motlow annually awards Access & Diversity scholarships to selected students who are members of underrepresented populations, economically disadvantaged, and first-generation college students. For additional information about Access & Diversity, contact Moss at (931) 383-1691 or kmoss@mscc.edu.
          To learn more about Tawan Perry, visit www.TawanPerry.com.  

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