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This week, Americans lined up at the polls to decide the leadership of our country for the next four years. While it may take some time to determine the outcome of the election, it’s safe to say that half of those people will end up disappointed, and some will try to argue that America’s legacy — along with their personal legacies — is doomed.
Yet only a small part of America’s legacy is based on who lives at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. It’s prominently dictated by the actions and decisions of hundreds of millions of people who build their own legacies one day at a time, regardless of their circumstances or who the president is.
The Greatest Generation taught us this 80 years ago, when it defeated Germany and Japan. This was a generation that came of age during the Great Depression and fought with great courage and strength in America’s most daunting war. They could have given up any time, and I doubt we would have blamed them. Instead, they cemented their legacies one person at a time.
Choose Your Legacy
It took time for me to realize that I can contribute to changing the world around me. I returned from multiple military deployments, which resulted in the honor of being the first living Marine to receive the Medal of Honor in more than 40 years.
However, I also struggle with depression and alcohol. It wasn’t until I had already unintentionally lived for many years as a victim of the circumstances I had faced that I realized I could choose what my legacy was going to be.
After that fateful realization, I began writing about how people can find purpose in their lives, speaking to Marines who are struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder and other challenges. This year, I’ve partnered with the Marine Corps Scholarship Foundation to provide educational opportunities for America’s future leaders. The “If You Can, You Must” scholarship will raise $2 million to help the children of Marines in need, encouraging them to take ownership of their lives and setting them up to become America’s future leaders.
Circumstances Don’t Determine Results
I have political opinions, but I’m always confident in America’s future because each of us can make a difference under any circumstances. Martin Luther King Jr. was a black man in a time of segregation, Viktor Frankl survived a concentration camp, and Mother Teresa ministered in the slums of Calcutta.
Each of them changed the world — and also the worlds of those around them. While you may not have a national holiday named after you like MLK or receive the Nobel Peace Prize like Mother Teresa, each of us has the opportunity to make a difference that will live on in the people we coach, the children we raise, and the students we teach. When you have the strength of purpose to know how and where you’re going to make a difference, that’s a huge advantage. That’s why, when I speak to Marines, I tell them they’re the lucky ones — they get the opportunity to wear the cloth of the greatest organization on the planet. Their purpose is right in front of them.
The most enduring legacies were created by people who blew right past their circumstances. They didn’t ask why some misfortune befell them — they found out what they could do about it. That’s why the “If You Can, You Must” scholarship is about more than money; it is designed to be a catalyst to turn challenges into opportunities and opportunities into reality. It also represents our national community coming together, regardless of politics — first for the Marines who put the flag ahead of political partisanship, and then for the rest of us, returning the favor for our children.
I hope every person who could legally vote on November 5 actually did. It’s part of your contribution to our national legacy. But don’t forget that what you do on November 6 — and every day after that — might be even more important.
Another version of this article previously appeared at InsideSources.com. Reprinted with permission.
Dakota Meyer is a former U.S. Marine, and in 2011, became the first member of that branch to receive the Medal of Honor in more than 40 years.
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