SPEECOM
Toastmasters Club
Articles
Fundamental Purpose of Toastmasters
- written by Toastmasters
founder Ralph C Smedley, was originally
published in the December
1935 issue of the Toastmaster -
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Our Fundamental Purpose.
"JUST what is the purpose
of the Toastmasters Clubs? said a man to me the other day as we talked
about his becoming a member. "Is it just to teach men to face an audience,
or is there something more to it than that?"
His question is not an unusual
one, and is one that should be considered by every member, for it not only
has its bearing on immediate matters, but definitely concerns the problem
of continuous membership and the values of persistence.
The obvious purpose is to
help men overcome the fear of the audience, gain facility in speech and
learn how to express themselves clearly and concisely, but this is really
a minor consideration in the minds of those who more adequately understand
the possibilities of the work. The fundamental thing is to develop personality.
Self-expression of any constructive sort helps in the integration of character,
in the building of
personality and in the discovery
and conservation of latent avilities. No kind of self expression is more
effective to these ends than that involved in public speech.
My own interest in the Toastmasters
Clubs would be very much less if learning to make a speech represented
the ultimate value in it. I have been lead to give thought and energy to
the promotion of Toastmasters because I have learned, through many years
of experience, that it affords the finest and most efficient means of bringing
out and developing the very best that is in men. If I were to become personal,
I could name scores whose individual histories prove this assertion - men
whose lives have been
enriched, whose ability
to serve has been increased, whose talents have been discovered, whose
mental horizons have been extended, all because of the opportunity for
personal development which they have found in the simple but effective
program of the Toastmasters Club.
"Better Speaking certainly
- but that's only the beginning">
Much of this is beyond the
present thinking of the newer clubs, but it must always be borne in mind
the fundamental motive of our movement is to make men better citizens,
better members of the human brotherhood by teaching them to use the best
that is in them.
This process of personality
development is not one that can be carried through in a short time. A man
can spend six months as a member of a Toastmasters Club and then drop out,
feeling that he has learned to make a pretty good speech. Many, to their
own detriment, do just this. Perhaps such a man has gained what he wants,
but he totally missed our real purpose, and he has failed to take advantage
of the opportunity to gain for himself a priceless endowment of moral and
spiritual growth. It is the man
who persists through the
years who finds the genuine treasure in
the Toastmasters idea.
I have in mind one man who
joined one of the clubs a number of years ago. He show quick improvement.
He became an excellent speaker, and in the course of a year, other things
intervened, dropped out, counting himeself to have achieved success. After
an interval of more than a year, he came back again and started in earnest
on the quest for something, the exact nature of which he did not understand,
but which he wanted. The result today, after persistent application for
more than two years, is that this man
has arrived at the place
of true mastery, both of his speaking ability and of his own self. He has
discovered new realms in his own mind which he had never known before.
He has made himself far more than a speaker - he is a thinker. In his service
to the community, he is a new man. In his own business, he has won advancement.
His life means more to hime and to his environment than it could ever have
meant without some such stimulating, guiding influence as he has found
the Toastmasters Club.
This experience is typical
of many who have stayed with the work. It is the best arguement I know
for long continued membership, and it is a convincing testimonial to the
mental, spiritual and social values of the movement.
When we think of the purpose
of the Toastmasters Club, let us remember that there are two rather distinct
groups of purpose. The first is the superficial one, of helping men to
learn to make better speaches. The second is the fundamental one, of helping
men to build themselves into the very best of which they are capable. The
first can be achieved in a comparatively short time.
The second is a work of years
- of a lifetime. Both purpose are worthhy, but the second is the one that
really counts.
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