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Education can insert you inside places your ancestors never dreamed of and make a monumental impact on society. Just ask Princeton defender, Terrell Seabrooks.
Seabrooks, the junior out of West Palm Beach, Fla., is on track to graduate with a Bachelor of Arts from the prestigious Ivy League school. However, this past year has inspired him to strive for more — in more ways than one.
This August, Seabrooks lost his father, Greg, after a bout with COVID-19. In one of his final conversations with his father, Seabrooks shared his intention to study at Harvard Law School. His father stressed the importance of education, and his passing has kindled the fire for Seabrooks to make a generational impact.
A former US Lacrosse All-American who won the 2017 Congressional Debate National Championship, Seabrooks is poised to join the Harvard School of Law as a J.D. candidate and graduate with the Class of 2026. According to 2020 submitted data from the American Bar Association’s National Lawyer Population Survey, African-American lawyers account for 5 percent of resident active attorneys.
We spoke with Seabrooks about his love for lacrosse and how his ambitions led him to Harvard.
“When my great-grandson is born, he will be my faith turned to flesh.” - Nana Hattie
TERRELL SEABROOKS
Hometown: West Palm Beach, FL
Position: Defense
College: Princeton (2018-21)
High School: Oxbridge Academy (2013-17)
What do lacrosse and family mean to you?
At the fundamental level, lacrosse is an expression of fun. It’s what I got to do in order to show my happiness and joy. I started playing when I was in the fourth grade as my football coach suggested it as a spring activity. Since then, it’s been about fun. Lacrosse in Florida at that age, you weren’t thinking about playing college lacrosse. You’re thinking it’s something to do with a bunch of friends. Even into college, it’s about competing. Winning is a lot more fun than losing.
Family is everything to me right now. My immediate family, they are the people who provide the support for me when I need it the most. It takes on a different meaning this Fall with the things I’ve gone through. I’ve been back home and reconnecting with them in ways I haven’t since leaving out to college.
In a bigger sense, family includes the brothers on my team that I play with every single day, the coaching staff around us and our strength and conditioning coaches. The way you go through struggles together, the highs and lows, it’s something incredible. There’s a larger family that we live in, the lacrosse world and the country we live in. The way I was raised, everybody is my neighbor and family. If you can find something to have a common bond over, we are connected as family.
Why is education so important?
As a Black man in America right now, I understood that education was not always granted to my great grandfather, my grandmother, and older family members.
My father, Greg, unfortunately, passed away this August due to complications of COVID-19. One of the last conversations I had with him was telling him that I was accepted into Harvard Law School. That was three days before he was admitted into the hospital. The conversation was different because at the time he was shielding me from knowing how bad it was and he lived on the opposite end of Florida. Any father that talks to his son doesn’t want to lead-on how things can get. He sounded quieter that day but I didn’t understand why.
What he told my mother was, ‘I want to see him get his first degree.’ My dad never completed high school and realized education was important for opening doors and possibilities that he didn’t always have access to. There are things my dad would school anybody on – things on which he is an unquestionable expert. We have to realize that people walk different strokes in life and they have different ways of getting where they are. Their input and values are just as important as everybody else.
Sometimes people believe if you do something ‘praiseworthy’ or got into a certain school, that it gives you value in this world. That’s not the case. My Dad taught me that on your quest to be excellent, you care for people along your path. This is not a journey you take alone. Each generation we’re trying to leave things better off than what we had, and my parents built and allowed me to use these opportunities. Education is something you must take and keep a hold of because it’s what gives you power in this world right now.