In a replication study with a different sample, students who received the wise feedback Post-it
—“I’m giving you these comments because I have very high expectations and I know that you can
reach them”—made twice as many edits to their essays as students in the placebo control condition.
Most certainly, Post-it notes are no substitute
for the daily gestures, comments, and actions that
communicate warmth, respect, and high expectations. But these experiments do illuminate the
powerful motivating effect that a simple message can have.
Not every grit paragon has had the benefit of a wise father and mother, but every one I’ve interviewed
could point to
someone
in their life who, at the right time and in the right way, encouraged them to aim
high and provided badly needed confidence and support.
Consider Cody Coleman.
A couple of years ago, Cody sent me an email. He’d seen my TED talk on grit and wanted to know
if we could talk sometime. He thought perhaps his personal story might be helpful. He was majoring
in electrical engineering and computer science at MIT and was on the cusp of graduating with a near-
perfect GPA. From his perspective, talent and opportunity had very little to do with his
accomplishments. Instead, success had been all about passion and perseverance sustained over years
and years.
“Sure, I said, “let’s talk.” Here’s what I learned.
Cody was born
thirty miles east of Trenton, New Jersey, at the Monmouth County Correctional
Institution. His mother was declared insane by the FBI and, when Cody came along, was imprisoned
for threatening to kill a senator’s child. Cody has never met his father. Cody’s grandmother took legal
custody of Cody and his brothers, and probably saved his life by doing so. But she was not a
prototypically wise parent. She may have
wanted
to be loving and strict, but both her body and mind
were in decline. As Cody describes it, he was soon doing more parenting—and cooking and cleaning
—than she was.
“We were poor,” Cody explained. “When my school did food drives, the food went to my family,
because we were the poorest in the neighborhood. And the neighborhood itself wasn’t all that great.
My school district scored below average in every category imaginable.
“To make matters worse,” Cody continued, “I wasn’t really an athletic or smart person. I started
out in remedial English classes. My math scores were average, at best.”
And then what happened?
“One day, my oldest brother—he was eighteen years older than me—he comes home. It was the
summer after my freshman year in high school. He drove up from Virginia to pick me up to spend two
weeks with him, and on the drive back to his place, he turns and asks me, ‘Where do you want to go
to college?’ ”
Cody
told him, “I don’t know. . . . I want to go to a good school. Maybe somewhere like
Princeton.” And then immediately, he took it back: “There’s no way a school like Princeton would
accept me.”
“Why wouldn’t Princeton take you?” Cody’s brother asked him. “You’re doing all right in school.
If you work harder, if you keep pushing yourself, you can get to that level. You have nothing to lose by
trying.”
“That’s when a switch flipped in my head,” Cody said. “I went from ‘Why bother?’ to ‘Why not?’ I
knew I might not get into a really good college, but I figured, if I try, I have a chance. If I never try,
then I have no chance at all.”
The next year, Cody threw himself into his schoolwork. By junior year he was earning straight As.
As a senior, Cody set about finding the best college in the country
for computer science and
engineering. He changed his dream school from Princeton to MIT. During this transformative period,
he met Chantel Smith, an exceptionally wise math teacher who all but adopted him.
It was Chantel who paid for Cody’s driving lessons. It was Chantel who collected a “college dorm
fund” to pay for the supplies he’d need once he moved. It was Chantel who mailed sweaters, hats,
gloves, and warm socks to him for the cold Boston winters, who worried about him every day, who
welcomed him home each holiday break, who stood by Cody at his grandmother’s funeral. It was in
Chantel’s home that Cody first experienced waking on Christmas morning to presents with his name
on them, where he decorated Easter eggs for the first time, and where, at the age of twenty-four, he
had his first family birthday party.
MIT wasn’t entirely smooth sailing, but the new challenges came with an “ecosystem of support,”
as Cody put it. Deans, professors, older students in his fraternity, roommates, and friends—compared
to what he’d experienced growing up, MIT was a haven of attention.
After graduating with top honors, Cody stayed on to get his master’s in electrical engineering and
computer science, earning a perfect GPA while doing so and, at the same time, fielding offers from
doctoral programs and Silicon Valley recruiters.
In deciding between an immediately lucrative career and graduate school, Cody did some hard
thinking about how he’d gotten to where he was. Next fall, he’ll begin
a PhD program in computer
science at Stanford. Here’s the first sentence from his application essay: “My mission is to utilize my
passion for computer science and machine learning to benefit society at large, while serving as an
example of success that will shape the future of our society.”
So, Cody Coleman did not have a psychologically wise mother, father, or grandparent. I wish he
had. What he
did
have was a brother who said the right thing at the right time, an extraordinarily wise
and wonderful high school math teacher, and an ecosystem of other teachers, mentors,
and fellow
students who collectively showed him what’s possible and helped him to get there.
Chantel refuses to take credit for Cody’s success. “The truth is that Cody has touched my life more
than I’ve touched his. He’s taught me that nothing is impossible and no goal is beyond reach. He’s one
of the kindest human beings I have ever met, and I couldn’t be prouder when he calls me ‘Mom.’ ”
A local radio station recently interviewed Cody. Toward the end of the conversation, Cody was
asked what he had to say to listeners struggling to overcome similar life circumstances. “Stay
positive,” Cody said. “Go past those negative beliefs in what’s possible and impossible and just give
it a try.”
Cody had these final words: “You don’t need to be a parent to make a difference in someone’s life.
If you just care about them and get to know what’s going on, you can make an impact. Try to
understand what’s going on in their life and help them through that. That’s
something I experienced
firsthand. It made the difference.”
I
. When I hear that, I sometimes interrupt with a précis of Steve Maier’s research showing that, in fact, finding a way
out
of the
suffering is what does the strengthening.
Chapter 11
THE PLAYING FIELDS OF GRIT
One day, when she was about four years old, my daughter Lucy sat at the kitchen table, struggling to
open a little box of raisins. She was hungry. She wanted those raisins. But the top of that box
stubbornly resisted her efforts. After a minute or so, she put down the unopened box with a sigh and
wandered off. I
was watching from another room, and I nearly gasped.
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