The Saturday Evening Post

COLLEGE OF DREAMS

Where Princeton Nelson came from, a college education wasn’t just at the outer edges of possibility, it was beyond imagination. Yet here he was, a proud member of the class of 2018 at Georgia State University, a computer science major with a cap and gown and a more than respectable 3.3 GPA, taking his place at a crowded indoor commencement ceremony along with the Atlanta Fife Band and professors in gowns of many colors and a cascade of balloons in Panther blue and white that tumbled from the ceiling like confetti.

He, too, got to shake hands with the university president, Mark Becker, whose welcoming remarks had invoked “the magical power of thinking big.” He, too, got to hug his fellow graduates, many of them seven or eight years younger than him. He, too, could bask in the pride of his relatives, none more amazed or delighted than the grandmother who had thrown him out as a teenager because he’d been too unruly to handle.

Princeton Nelson came from nothing, and he understood at an early age that it would be up to him to carve a path to something better.

Nelson came from nothing, and he understood at an early age that it would be up to him to carve a path to something better, because nobody else was going to do it for him. Even when he slipped — and he slipped a lot — he knew the choices he made could mean the difference between life and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Saturday Evening Post

The Saturday Evening Post13 min read
The Making Of A President
Franklin Roosevelt could see it right in front of him. His chance. It was a late-June afternoon in San Francisco, the opening day of the Democratic Party's 1920 convention. Only a few paces away from him, a couple of overfed party functionaries were
The Saturday Evening Post6 min read
Moving Toward Happiness
The night before I bought an abandoned house in the Tuscan hills, I couldn't sleep. For one thing, the church bells near the hotel rang not only the hour but sent out a few bonus clangs for quarter and half hours as well. I was about to get rope burn
The Saturday Evening Post3 min read
Starstruck
Taylor Swift is a huge celebrity. Let's agree on that. But what about Elon Musk? Stephen King? Are they true celebrities? Or are they just well known? Hard to remember in this era of Oscars, Grammys, and self-aggrandizing awards shows of every kind,

Related Books & Audiobooks