"This Is Water" is a renowned commencement address delivered by American author David Foster Wallace to the graduating class of Kenyon College on May 21, 2005.[1]In the speech, Wallace uses the metaphor of two young fish swimming unaware of the water that surrounds them to illustrate how individuals often fail to recognize the most pervasive and essential realities of their existence, particularly the default mode of self-centered thinking that dominates adult life.[2]He argues that a genuine liberal arts education equips graduates not with specialized knowledge, but with the capacity for simple awareness—the conscious choice to perceive and interpret everyday experiences from multiple perspectives, fostering empathy and compassion even in mundane, frustrating routines like grocery shopping or commuting.[2]Wallace warns against unconsciously "worshipping" money, power, or intellect, which can lead to isolation and despair, and instead advocates for the hard work of deciding what truly matters, emphasizing that "the really important kind of freedom involves attention, and awareness, and discipline, and effort, and being able truly to care about other people and to sacrifice for them, over and over, in myriad petty little unsexy ways, every day."[2]Posthumously published as a slim illustrated book titled This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life on April 14, 2009, by Little, Brown and Company, the work has achieved enduring popularity for its insightful exploration of consciousness and human connection.[3]The address remains one of Kenyon College's most requested alumni resources and continues to resonate in educational, philosophical, and motivational discussions worldwide.[4]
Origins and Delivery
Kenyon College Commencement
The "This Is Water" speech was originally delivered by David Foster Wallace on May 21, 2005, at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, as the keynote address during the undergraduate commencement ceremony.[4][5]The event took place outdoors as part of Kenyon's longstanding annual commencement traditions, which celebrate the graduating class amid the college's rural campus setting.[4] Wallace, a prominent American novelist and essayist best known for his 1996 novel Infinite Jest, was selected as the speaker after being nominated by two seniors, Meredith Farmer and Jackie Giordano-Hayes, who appreciated his alignment with the college's emphasis on liberal arts education and critical thinking.[4][6]The audience included the approximately 400 members of the class of 2005, along with faculty, staff, and families, gathered for the formal proceedings.[7][4]Wallace delivered the speech extemporaneously from prepared notes over the course of about 22 minutes, during which he also removed his signature bandanna midway through.[8][9] Prior to the address, he met briefly with students in the English department's Sunset Cottage, where he discussed revisions he had made to the speech that morning.[4]
David Foster Wallace's Personal Context
In 2005, David Foster Wallace was 43 years old when he delivered the commencement address at Kenyon College.[6] By this point in his career, he had established himself as a prominent American author, most notably with the publication of his acclaimed novel Infinite Jest in 1996, which garnered widespread critical praise and a MacArthur Fellowship in 1997.[10] In 2005, the same year as the speech, he released the essay collection Consider the Lobster, featuring pieces on topics ranging from the Maine Lobster Festival to the ethics of lobster boiling, further solidifying his reputation for incisive cultural commentary.[10] Additionally, Wallace had been teaching creative writing and literature at Pomona College in Claremont, California, since 2002, where he engaged deeply with students and valued the academic environment.[10]Wallace's personal life at the time was marked by longstanding struggles with mental health and substance abuse. He had battled clinical depression since his college years in the early 1980s, managing it through medication and therapy, though it persisted as a profound challenge.[10] His history of addiction dated back to the late 1980s, when he entered rehabilitation for alcohol and drug dependency, achieving sobriety through programs like Alcoholics Anonymous, which influenced his reflections on self-awareness and recovery.[4] These experiences compounded his anxiety around public speaking, making high-profile engagements particularly daunting; he often expressed discomfort with crowds and initially viewed himself as too young or unprepared for such roles.[6]Wallace's selection as Kenyon's commencement speaker stemmed from a student-led process that highlighted his alignment with the institution's emphasis on thoughtful inquiry. Nominated by senior Meredith Farmer in late 2004, Wallace emerged as the top choice among a junior class committee of about a dozen students, who lobbied for him over finalists like Hillary Clinton and John Glenn by distributing materials on his work.[6] The committee appreciated how his writing captured the complexities of modern existence in ways that echoed Kenyon's liberal arts mission, leading President Georgia Nugent to extend the formal invitation despite Wallace's initial reluctance—he balked at the prospect, citing his nerves, but accepted after persistent encouragement from college staff.[4]In preparing the address, Wallace drew on his introspections about navigating adulthood and the transformative potential of education, revising drafts meticulously in the days leading up to the event. On the morning of May 21, 2005, he met with students in an English department office, surrounded by inked-up pages and cups stained with tobacco spit from his dipping habit, as he trimmed the speech to fit the time constraints while preserving its core insights.[4] This process reflected his broader approach to writing, informed by personal trials and a commitment to exploring human consciousness.[6]
Speech Content
Opening Parable
The opening of David Foster Wallace's 2005 commencement speech at Kenyon College features a brief parable designed to capture the audience's attention from the outset. Wallace recounts: "There are these two young fish swimming along, and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says, 'Morning, boys, how's the water?' And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and goes, 'What the hell is water?'"[2] This anecdote sets a lighthearted tone through its simple narrative structure and the humorous exasperation in the young fish's dialogue.The parable's purpose is to illustrate the difficulty in perceiving fundamental aspects of one's environment that are so pervasive they become invisible. Wallace immediately explains: "The immediate point of the fish story is that the most obvious, ubiquitous, important realities are often the ones that are the hardest to see and talk about."[2] By employing this everyday metaphor, he underscores how routine existence can obscure essential truths, using the water as a symbol for unexamined assumptions in life.Delivered in a conversational manner, the story's brevity and wit engage the graduates directly, avoiding didacticism in favor of relatable storytelling. This approach aligns with Wallace's broader rhetorical style in the speech, prioritizing accessibility to draw listeners into deeper reflection.[2] The parable then transitions seamlessly into the speech's central theme, prompting Wallace to address the role of a liberal arts education: "Of course the main requirement of speeches like this is that I’m supposed to talk about your liberal arts education’s meaning, so that now I’ve actually gone and done some practical research."[2] This shift highlights education's potential to foster recognition of those "invisible" realities, framing the rest of the address.
Core Narrative and Arguments
Following the opening parable that frames the speech by highlighting how the most obvious realities can be hardest to see, Wallace transitions into a vivid anecdote depicting the banal frustrations of adult life. He describes a typical day for a recent graduate: enduring heavy traffic after a grueling workday, arriving exhausted at a crowded grocery store, navigating long checkout lines amid impatient shoppers, a wailing child in the cart ahead, and an apparently inattentive cashier fumbling with coupons. This scenario exemplifies the monotonous "rat race" of routine existence, where mundane irritations accumulate into overwhelming stress without deliberate intervention.[2][8]Wallace then articulates the central argument regarding the purpose of a liberal arts education, asserting that its true value lies not in imparting specific knowledge or skills—"what to think"—but in cultivating the ability "how to think," which grants the freedom to consciously select one's focus and default mindset amid life's chaos. This education equips individuals to override the innate human tendency toward self-centered interpretation, where everything revolves around personal inconvenience or desire. Without this training, the "adult world" devolves into isolation and absorption in one's own needs, fostering a cycle of resentment and disconnection in everyday interactions.[2][8]Building on this, Wallace critiques the unexamined "adult world" as a landscape of profound loneliness and self-absorption if navigated on autopilot, warning that the relentless pursuit of career, status, and material success—likened to a competitive "rat race"—intensifies rather than alleviates these struggles without conscious effort to shift perspective. He urges the graduates to actively practice empathy, such as considering the hidden hardships of others in the grocery line (e.g., the child's exhausted parents or the cashier's demanding day), as a means to counteract this default. Furthermore, he calls for reorienting one's "worship"—the inevitable devotion humans direct toward something—away from false idols like money, power, or physical allure, which inevitably lead to dissatisfaction and ruin, toward more sustaining alternatives like compassion, community, or ethical principles.[2][8]In closing the main body, Wallace reiterates the "this is water" metaphor as a poignant reminder of the hidden truths in ordinary life—the profound significance embedded in the seemingly trivial—and emphasizes that true freedom demands ongoing, effortful awareness to remain "alive" to these realities, underscoring the speech's exhortation to lifelong conscious choice.[2][8]
Themes and Philosophical Analysis
The Default Setting of Self-Centeredness
In David Foster Wallace's 2005 commencement speech "This Is Water," the "default setting" refers to the innate, unconscious human tendency toward deep self-centeredness, where individuals perceive themselves as the absolute center of the universe and interpret all experiences through this egocentric lens. Wallace describes this mindset as "hard-wired into our boards at birth," reinforced by the fact that every personal experience inherently positions the self as the most vivid and important entity, leading to an automatic dismissal of others' perspectives.[8] This default is not a deliberate choice but a baseline mode of cognition, akin to the automatic settings on a television that dictate what is viewed unless actively adjusted.[11]Wallace illustrates the default setting through relatable everyday examples, such as navigating heavy traffic, where stalled vehicles and other drivers become infuriating obstacles blocking one's path, or dealing with a rude service clerk who is seen merely as an annoyance rather than a person with their own burdens. In the grocery storeanecdote, for instance, crowded aisles and long checkout lines evoke resentment toward fellow shoppers, who appear "repulsive," "stupid," and "cow-like" in their apparent disregard for the speaker's convenience.[8] These scenarios highlight how the default setting transforms routine interactions into sources of frustration, as the self's needs and discomforts overshadow any recognition of shared human struggles.[11]Conceptually, Wallace's notion of the default setting emerges from observations of everyday psychology rather than rigorous formal philosophy, though it echoes solipsism's emphasis on the isolation of the self without adopting its extreme metaphysical claims that only one's mind can be verified to exist.[12] Unlike solipsism's abstract doubt, Wallace's default is a practical, pervasive blindness to others' realities, rooted in biological and experiential defaults that prioritize personal immediacy.[13]The implications of operating under this default setting are profound, particularly in adulthood, where it cultivates chronic boredom and resentment amid the monotony of daily life, trapping individuals in a "rat race" of unexamined reactions that yield only superficial relief.[11] Wallace warns that without intervention, this mindset engenders a spiritual emptiness, marked by a persistent, gnawing sense of loss for some unattainable "infinite thing," rendering existence hollow and disconnected from deeper meaning.[8]
Awareness, Empathy, and Conscious Choice
In "This Is Water," David Foster Wallace posits that genuine awareness involves deliberately choosing what to attend to in daily life, thereby recognizing the "water" of ordinary existence that is often invisible due to habituated inattention. This recognition demands ongoing mental effort to prioritize meaningful perspectives over automatic reactions, allowing individuals to perceive routine moments as potentially profound rather than merely tedious. Wallace illustrates this through the metaphor of young fish unaware of their surrounding water, emphasizing that the most obvious realities—such as the interconnectedness of everyday experiences—require conscious acknowledgment to become visible.[8]Central to this awareness is the cultivation of empathy, which Wallace describes as the exercise of freedom to construct alternative narratives about others' lives, thereby humanizing interactions. For instance, in a crowded grocery store, one might choose to imagine the clerk's chronic foot pain from standing all day or the frustrations of the parent with a screaming child, rather than viewing them solely as obstacles to one's own convenience. This empathetic reframing transforms potential irritation into compassion, underscoring the speech's argument that such choices counteract the default self-centeredness that otherwise dominates perception.[2]Wallace frames conscious choice as the core outcome of education, particularly liberal arts training, which equips individuals to reject the "natural" but destructive worship of self, money, or power in favor of more ethical orientations. He asserts that everyone inevitably worships something, and the task is to select objects of devotion that foster growth rather than isolation, such as principles of kindness or community. This deliberate rejection enables a life of disciplined attention, where education serves not as rote knowledge acquisition but as a tool for exercising the "most basic freedom" of thought.[8]The speech infuses these practices with a spiritual dimension, invoking concepts like "grace" and the "soul" as non-dogmatic frameworks for transcending ego-driven existence. Wallace suggests that true worship recognizes a reality beyond material concerns, potentially through religious or philosophical lenses that emphasize humility and connection without rigid prescriptions. Ultimately, sustained awareness, empathy, and choice lead to a "well-adjusted" existence, where the banality of daily routines becomes an arena for compassionate living rather than despair.[2]
Publication History
Transcription and Book Release
Following the delivery of the speech at Kenyon College on May 21, 2005, it was recorded by a student using a Hi-8 camera, and a transcription was promptly prepared as a personal favor to David Foster Wallace. This initial transcription began circulating informally online during the summer of 2005 via email and early social media platforms, though it remained relatively obscure until after Wallace's death.[4][14]An adapted version of the speech was published in The Wall Street Journal on September 19, 2008, shortly after Wallace's suicide on September 12, 2008, which sparked renewed interest in his unpublished and lesser-known works.[15]The speech's posthumous publication as a book was announced in December 2008. Titled This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life, it was released on April 14, 2009, by Little, Brown and Company as a slim hardcover edition comprising 144 pages. The ISBN for this first edition is 978-0-316-06822-2.[16][17]The book version represents an edited rendition of the original speech, incorporating minor revisions for clarity while preserving its core structure and tone. Notably, the publisher removed a specific reference to suicide—"They shoot the terrible master"—from the text, aiming to mitigate potential sensitivity issues in light of his recent death. This release capitalized on the wave of public and literary attention following Wallace's passing.[18][17]
Multimedia Adaptations
The original audio recording of David Foster Wallace's 2005 Kenyon College commencement speech, titled "This Is Water," was captured during the event and later made available online through various platforms, including a full version hosted on educational and cultural websites.[11][19] This recording, approximately 24 minutes in length, features Wallace delivering the speech in his own voice and was released as an official audiobook edition in 2010 by Hachette Audio under the title This Is Water: The Original David Foster Wallace Recording.[20][21]Video adaptations of the speech emerged in the early 2010s, beginning with illustrated and animated interpretations that paired excerpts or the full text with visual storytelling to enhance its accessibility. A notable 2013short filmvisualization, produced as an online video, incorporated parts of the speech with dynamic illustrations and garnered significant attention, amassing millions of views before facing potential rights-related challenges that led to its limited availability.[22] Fan-created recreations and narrations have proliferated on YouTube since the late 2000s, including full-speech readings with custom animations or commentary, some exceeding 1 million views and contributing to the speech's ongoing digital dissemination.[23][9]Digitally, the full transcript of "This Is Water" has been freely accessible on reputable online archives since at least 2009, with fs.blog providing a complete, annotated version alongside the original audio for educational purposes.[11] The speech experienced viral spread following the 2009 book publication, circulating widely on TED-like platforms and video-sharing sites, where it was shared as inspirational content and reached audiences beyond literary circles.[24]E-book editions of the speech, based on the 2009 Little, Brown print publication, became available starting around 2010 through major digital retailers, allowing readers to access the illustrated transcript in electronic format.[25][26] Excerpts and related content from "This Is Water" have also appeared in posthumous David Foster Wallace anthologies, such as the 2012 collection Both Flesh and Not, which compiles his nonfiction essays and references the speech's themes within broader discussions of compassion and awareness.[27][28]As of 2025, the original audio recording remains officially available on streaming platforms like Audible, where it continues to be offered as a standalone audiobook narrated by Wallace, ensuring sustained accessibility without notable new multimedia adaptations beyond fan-driven content.[20][29]
Reception and Cultural Legacy
Initial Critical Response
The commencement speech delivered by David Foster Wallace at Kenyon College on May 21, 2005, was positively received by the audience for its witty parable opening and insightful commentary on the challenges of adultawareness and empathy. Attendees and graduates appreciated its humorous yet profound take on escaping self-centered "default settings," though it garnered limited initial media coverage beyond local mentions.[4][6]The 2009 book adaptation, This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life, received mixed critical responses. In a New York Times review, Tom Bissell highlighted the speech's inspirational emphasis on conscious choice and compassion amid mundane routines but critiqued its brevity—spanning just 137 pages with sparse text—as well as minor edits that altered the original delivery, while underscoring the tragic irony of its message following Wallace's 2008 suicide.[12]The Christian Science Monitor praised its practical wisdom on maintaining awareness "day in and day out," positioning it as a vital reminder of empathy's role in daily life.[30]Critics often acclaimed the book for its accessibility, providing a concise introduction to Wallace's philosophical concerns in contrast to the dense prose of works like Infinite Jest. However, some viewed its core arguments as overly simplistic or preachy, reducing complex existential themes to self-help platitudes. The publication's formatting, featuring large print, ample white space, and whimsical illustrations, also drew ire for feeling gimmicky and diluting the speech's intellectual weight.[31][32]Driven by Wallace's devoted cult following in the wake of his death, the book achieved strong initial sales through Little, Brown and Company.[33]
Enduring Impact and Influence
Following Wallace's suicide in 2008, "This Is Water" experienced a surge in popularity, rapidly spreading online as a viral phenomenon with millions of YouTube views and shared transcripts by 2015.[6][34] This digital dissemination amplified its reach beyond academic circles, establishing it as a cornerstone of inspirational content in the internet era.In educational settings, the speech has been widely adopted in college curricula, appearing in courses on philosophy, composition, and mindfulness at institutions such as Princeton University, UCLA, and Weber State University.[35][36][37] It is also frequently referenced in self-help literature for its practical insights on conscious living, often alongside discussions of personal growth and awareness.[38]Culturally, "This Is Water" has permeated media landscapes, with quotations appearing in podcasts and television-inspired content, influencing creators like Michael Schur, a noted fan of Wallace's work, in explorations of empathy and ethics.[39] It has inspired retrospectives, such as 2025 LinkedIn articles commemorating the speech's 20th anniversary, highlighting its timeless relevance, along with events including a symposium by the David Foster Wallace Society and podcasts discussing its lessons.[40][41][42]The speech's broader influence extends to contemporary dialogues on mental health and empathy amid digital distractions, paralleling key tenets of mindfulness movements by emphasizing deliberate awareness over autopilot existence.[43] At Kenyon College, it prompts annual reflections during commencement events, while the 2009 book adaptation has achieved enduring sales success without sparking significant controversies.[4]