“You Made It”
08/25/2025

Bowsher opened with words of gratitude before inviting the audience into a moment of pause and breathe. “This is our evidence of being alive,” she said, before extending a message of congratulations, “You made it.”
Opening Convocation Forum Welcomes Class of 2029
Bluffton University officially welcomed the Class of 2029 during Opening Convocation Forum, Tuesday, Aug. 19, with a welcoming address from Megan Bowsher, MSW, LISW, clinical psychotherapist at Creative Hope Counseling, Bluffton, Ohio. In her address, Bowsher encouraged students to embrace courage, imperfection and the transformative journey ahead.
Bowsher opened with words of gratitude before inviting the audience into a moment of pause and breathe. “This is our evidence of being alive,” she said, before extending a message of congratulations, “You made it.”
Acknowledging the uncertainty, late nights and difficult goodbyes that accompanied each student’s arrival on campus, Bowsher reminded students the difficult work they did brought them here. “Be you a scholar, an artist, or an athlete, you belong here, not because you are perfect but because you were willing. Becoming is messy, courageous and deeply human.”
Throughout Bowsher’s remarks, courage emerged as the central theme. She noted her definition of courage was not the kind marked by dramatic gestures, but the everyday bravery that sustains growth. It was “the kind that whispers, ‘try again’ after you fail,” and the kind that allows individuals to show up authentically, even when terrified.
Quoting author Brené Brown, Bowsher reminded students that real courage means allowing yourself to be seen, even without control of the outcome. Vulnerability, she explained, is not weakness but the birthplace of growth.
The address did not shy away from the challenges ahead. The Bowsher referenced the phrase “embrace the suck,” noting that some days will be hard—homesickness, roommate conflicts, academic setbacks. “Discomfort does not always mean wrong,” she said. “Perhaps it just means new.”
Drawing from her own academic journey, beginning as a young mother living in a shelter, struggling with developmental courses and self-doubt, Bowsher reminded students that persistence and courage, not perfection, had carried her forward. Four degrees later, she shared, her story is proof that imperfect beginnings can lead to extraordinary outcomes.
“You will face breakups, meltdowns and identity shifts,” she told students. “And you will be okay. Conflict can be safe. You can disagree and still be respected. You can struggle and still be supportive. That is the power of this place, of this community.”
Bowsher emphasized Bluffton University’s role not only in shaping intellect but also in nurturing students’ full becoming. “Allow yourself to fall into this community,” she urged. “The most courageous journey you will ever take is the one that leads you back home to yourself.”
Her final words offered both reassurance and challenge: “You are imperfect, you are unfinished and you are already so very brave. Welcome to Bluffton, and welcome to the invitation of your becoming.”