Tuesdays with Morrie
By Mitch Albom
Day 1 Audio |
The
Curriculum
The last class of my old professor’s life took place once a week in
his house, by a window in the study where he could watch a small hibiscus plant
shed its pink leaves. The class met on Tuesdays. It began after breakfast. The
subject was The Meaning of Life. It was taught from experience. No grades were
given, but there were oral exams each week. You were expected to respond to
questions, and you were expected to pose questions of your own. You were also
required to perform physical tasks now and then, such as lifting the professor’s
head to a comfortable spot on the pillow or placing his glasses on the bridge of
his nose. Kissing him good-bye earned you extra credit. No books were required,
yet many topics were covered, including love, work, community, family, aging,
forgiveness, and, finally, death. The last lecture was brief, only a few words.
A funeral was held in lieu of graduation. Although no final exam was given, you
were expected to produce one long paper on what was learned. That paper is
presented here. The last class of my old professor’s life had only one student.
I was the student. It is the late spring of 1979, a hot, sticky Saturday
afternoon. Hundreds of us sit together, side by side, in rows of wooden folding
chairs on the main campus lawn. We wear blue nylon robes. We listen impatiently
to long speeches. When the ceremony is over, we throw our caps in the air, and
we are officially graduated from college, the senior class of Brandeis
University in the city of Waltham, Massachusetts. For many of us, the curtain
has just come down on childhood.
Afterward, I find Morrie Schwartz, my favorite professor, and
introduce him to my parents. He is a small man who takes small steps, as if a
strong wind could, at any time, whisk him up into the clouds. In his graduation
day robe, he looks like a cross between a biblical prophet and a Christmas elf
He has sparkling blue green eyes, thinning silver hair that spills onto his
forehead, big ears, a triangular nose, and tufts of graying eyebrows. Although
his teeth are crooked and his lower ones are slanted back—as if someone had once
punched them in—when he smiles it’s as if you’d just told him the first joke on
earth. He tells my parents how I took every class he taught. He tells them, “You
have a special boy here. “Embarrassed, I look at my feet. Before we leave, I
hand my professor a present, a tan briefcase with his initials on the front. I
bought this the day before at a shopping mall. I didn’t want to forget him.
Maybe I didn’t want him to forget me. “Mitch, you are one of the good ones,” he
says, admiring the briefcase. Then he hugs me. I feel his thin arms around my
back. I am taller than he is, and when he holds me, I feel awkward, older, as if
I were the parent and he were the child. He asks if I will stay in touch, and
without hesitation I say, “Of course.” When he steps back, I see that he is
crying.
The
Syllabus
His death sentence came in the summer of 1994. Looking back, Morrie
knew something bad was coming long before that. He knew it the day he gave up
dancing. He had always been a dancer, my old professor. The music didn’t matter.
Rock and roll, big band, the blues. He loved them all. He would close his eyes
and with a blissful smile begin to move to his own sense of rhythm. It wasn’t
always pretty. But then, he didn’t worry about a partner. Morrie danced by
himself. He used to go to this church in Harvard Square every Wednesday night
for something called “Dance Free.” They had flashing lights and booming speakers
and Morrie would wander in among the mostly student crowd, wearing a white
T-shirt and black sweatpants and a towel around his neck, and whatever music was
playing, that’s the music to which he danced. He’d do the lindy to Jimi Hendrix.
He twisted and twirled, he waved his arms like a conductor on amphetamines,
until sweat was dripping down the middle of his back. No one there knew he was a
prominent doctor of sociology, with years of experience as a college professor
and several well-respected books. They just thought he was some old nut. Once,
he brought a tango tape and got them to play it over the speakers. Then he
commandeered the floor, shooting back and forth like some hot Latin lover. When
he finished, everyone applauded. He could have stayed in that moment forever.
But then the dancing stopped. He developed asthma in his sixties. His breathing
became labored. One day he was walking along the Charles River, and a cold burst
of wind left him choking for air. He was rushed to the hospital and injected
with Adrenalin. A few years later, he began to have trouble walking. At a
birthday party for a friend, he stumbled inexplicably. Another night, he fell
down the steps of a theater, startling a small crowd of people. “Give him air!”
someone yelled. He was in his seventies by this point, so they whispered “old
age” and helped him to his feet. But Morrie, who was always more in touch with
his insides than the rest of us, knew something else was wrong. This was more
than old age. He was weary all the time. He had trouble sleeping. He dreamt he
was dying. He began to see doctors. Lots of them. They tested his blood. They
tested his urine. They put a scope up his rear end and looked inside his
intestines. Finally, when nothing could be found, one doctor ordered a muscle
biopsy, taking a small piece out of Morrie’s calf. The lab report came back
suggesting a neurological problem, and Morrie was brought in for yet another
series of tests. In one of those tests, he sat in a special seat as they zapped
him with electrical current—an electric chair, of sortsand studied his
neurological responses. “We need to check this further,” the doctors said,
looking over his results. “Why?” Morrie asked. “What is it?” “We’re not sure.
Your times are slow.” His times were slow? What did that mean? Finally, on a
hot, humid day in August 1994, Morrie and his wife, Charlotte, went to the
neurologist’s office, and he asked them to sit before he broke the news: Morrie
had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Lou Gehrig’s disease, a brutal,
unforgiving illness of the neurological system. There was no known cure. “How
did I get it?” Morrie asked. Nobody knew. “Is it terminal?” Yes. “So I’m going
to die?” Yes, you are, the doctor said. I’m very sorry.
He sat with Morrie and Charlotte for nearly two hours, patiently
answering their questions. When they left, the doctor gave them some information
on ALS, little pamphlets, as if they were opening a bank account. Outside, the
sun was shining and people were going about their business. A woman ran to put
money in the parking meter. Another carried groceries. Charlotte had a million
thoughts running through her mind: How much time do we have left? How will we
manage? How will we pay the bills? My old professor, meanwhile, was stunned by
the normalcy of the day around him. Shouldn’t the world stop? Don’t they know
what has happened to me? But the world did not stop, it took no notice at all,
and as Morrie pulled weakly on the car door, he felt as if he were dropping into
a hole. Now what? he thought. As my old professor searched for answers, the
disease took him over, day by day, week by week. He backed the car out of the
garage one morning and could barely push the brakes. That was the end of his
driving. He kept tripping, so he purchased a cane. That was the end of his
walking free. He went for his regular swim at the YMCA, but found he could no
longer undress himself. So he hired his first home care worker—a theology
student named Tony—who helped him in and out of the pool, and in and out of his
bathing suit. In the locker room, the other swimmers pretended not to stare.
They stared anyhow. That was the end of his privacy. In the fall of 1994, Morrie
came to the hilly Brandeis campus to teach his final college course. He could
have skipped this, of course. The university would have understood. Why suffer
in front of so many people? Stay at home. Get your affairs in order. But the
idea of quitting did not occur to Morrie. Instead, he hobbled into the
classroom, his home for more than thirty years. Because of the cane, he took a
while to reach the chair. Finally, he sat down, dropped his glasses off his
nose, and looked out at the young faces who stared back in silence. “My friends,
I assume you are all here for the Social Psychology class. I have been teaching
this course for twenty years, and this is the first time I can say there is a
risk in taking it, because I have a fatal illness. I may not live to finish the
semester. “If you feel this is a problem, I understand if you wish to drop the
course.” He smiled. And that was the end of his secret. ALS is like a lit
candle: it melts your nerves and leaves your body a pile of wax. Often, it
begins with the legs and works its way up. You lose control of your thigh
muscles, so that you cannot support yourself standing. You lose control of your
trunk muscles, so that you cannot sit up straight. By the end, if you are still
alive, you are breathing through a tube in a hole in your throat, while your
soul, perfectly awake, is imprisoned inside a limp husk, perhaps able to blink,
or cluck a tongue, like something from a science fiction movie, the man frozen
inside his own flesh. This takes no more than five years from the day you
contract the disease. Morrie’s doctors guessed he had two years left. Morrie
knew it was less. But my old professor had made a profound decision, one he
began to construct the day he came out of the doctor’s office with a sword
hanging over his head. Do I wither up and disappear, or do I make the best of my
time left? he had asked himself. He would not wither. He would not be ashamed of
dying. Instead, he would make death his final project, the center point of his
days. Since everyone was going to die, he could be of great value, right? He
could be research. A human textbook. Study me in my slow and patient demise.
Watch what happens to me. Learn with me. Morrie would walk that final bridge
between life and death, and narrate the trip. The fall semester passed quickly.
The pills increased. Therapy became a regular routine. Nurses came to his house
to work with Morrie’s withering legs, to keep the muscles active, bending them
back and forth as if pumping water from a well. Massage specialists came by once
a week to try to soothe the constant, heavy stiffness he felt. He met with
meditation teachers, and closed his eyes and narrowed his thoughts until his
world shrunk down to a single breath, in and out, in and out. One day, using his
cane, he stepped onto the curb and fell over into the street. The cane was
exchanged for a walker. As his body weakened, the back and forth to the bathroom
became too exhausting, so Morrie began to urinate into a large beaker. He had to
support himself as he did this, meaning someone had to hold the beaker while
Morrie filled it. Most of us would be embarrassed by all this, especially at
Morrie’s age. But Morrie was not like most of us. When some of his close
colleagues would visit, he would say to them, “Listen, I have to pee. Would you
mind helping? Are you okay with that?” Often, to their own surprise, they were.
In fact, he entertained a growing stream of visitors. He had discussion groups
about dying, what it really meant, how societies had always been afraid of it
without necessarily understanding it. He told his friends that if they really
wanted to help him, they would treat him not with sympathy but with visits,
phone calls, a sharing of their problems—the way they had always shared their
problems, because Morrie had always been a wonderful listener. For all that was
happening to him, his voice was strong and inviting, and his mind was vibrating
with a million thoughts. He was intent on proving that the word “dying” was not
synonymous with “useless.” The New Year came and went. Although he never said it
to anyone, Morrie knew this would be the last year of his life. He was using a
wheelchair now, and he was fighting time to say all the things he wanted to say
to all the people he loved. When a colleague at Brandeis died suddenly of a
heart attack, Morrie went to his funeral. He came home depressed. “What a
waste,” he said. “All those people saying all those wonderful things, and Irv
never got to hear any of it.” Morrie had a better idea. He made some calls. He
chose a date. And on a cold Sunday afternoon, he was joined in his home by a
small group of friends and family for a “living funeral.” Each of them spoke and
paid tribute to my old professor. Some cried. Some laughed. One woman read a
poem:
“My dear and loving cousin … Your ageless heart as you move through
time, layer on layer, tender sequoia …”
Morrie cried and laughed with them. And all the heartfelt things we
never get to say to those we love, Morrie said that day. His “living funeral”
was a rousing success. Only Morrie wasn’t dead yet. In fact, the most unusual
part of his life was about to unfold.
The
Student
At this point, I should explain what had happened to me since that
summer day when I last hugged my dear and wise professor, and promised to keep
in touch. I did not keep in touch. In fact, I lost contact with most of the
people I knew in college, including my, beer-drinking friends and the first
woman I ever woke up with in the morning. The years after graduation hardened me
into someone quite different from the strutting graduate who left campus that
day headed for New York City, ready to offer the world his talent. The world, I
discovered, was not all that interested. I wandered around my early twenties,
paying rent and reading classifieds and wondering why the lights were not
turning green for me. My dream was to be a famous musician (I played the piano),
but after several years of dark, empty nightclubs, broken promises, bands that
kept breaking up and producers who seemed excited about everyone but me, the
dream soured. I was failing for the first time in my life. At the same time, I
had my first serious encounter with death. My favorite uncle, my mother’s
brother, the man who had taught me music, taught me to drive, teased me about
girls, thrown me a football—that one adult whom I targeted as a child and said,
“That’s who I want to be when I grow up”—died of pancreatic cancer at the age of
forty-four. He was a short, handsome man with a thick mustache, and I was with
him for the last year of his life, living in an apartment just below his. I
watched his strong body wither, then bloat, saw him suffer, night after night,
doubled over at the dinner table, pressing on his stomach, his eyes shut, his
mouth contorted in pain. “Ahhhhh, God,” he would moan. “Ahhhhhh, Jesus!” The
rest of us—my aunt, his two young sons, me—stood there, silently, cleaning the
plates, averting our eyes. It was the most helpless I have ever felt in my life.
One night in May, my uncle and I sat on the balcony of his apartment. It was
breezy and warm. He looked out toward the horizon and said, through gritted
teeth, that he wouldn’t be around to see his kids into the next school year. He
asked if I would look after them. I told him not to talk that way. He stared at
me sadly. He died a few weeks later. After the funeral, my life changed. I felt
as if time were suddenly precious, water going down an open drain, and I could
not move quickly enough. No more playing music at half-empty night clubs. No
more writing songs in my apartment, songs that no one would hear. I returned to
school. I earned a master’s degree in journalism and took the first job offered,
as a sports writer. Instead of chasing my own fame, I wrote about famous
athletes chasing theirs. I worked for newspapers and freelanced for magazines. I
worked at a pace that knew no hours, no limits. I would wake up in the morning,
brush my teeth, and sit down at the typewriter in the same clothes I had slept
in. My uncle had worked for a corporation and hated it—same thing, every day—and
I was determined never to end up like him. I bounced around from New York to
Florida and eventually took a job in Detroit as a columnist for the Detroit Free
Press. The sports appetite in that city was insatiable—they had professional
teams in football, basketball, baseball, and hockey—and it matched my ambition.
In a few years, I was not only penning columns, I was writing sports books,
doing radio shows, and appearing regularly on TV, spouting my opinions on rich
football players and hypocritical college sports programs. I was part of the
media thunderstorm that now soaks our country. I was in demand. I stopped
renting. I started buying. I bought a house on a hill. I bought cars. I invested
in stocks and built a portfolio. I was cranked to a fifth gear, and everything I
did, I did on a deadline. I exercised like a demon. I drove my car at breakneck
speed. I made more money than I had ever figured to see. I met a dark-haired
woman named Janine who somehow loved me despite my schedule and the constant
absences. We married after a seven year courtship. I was back to work a week
after the wedding. I told her—and myself—that we would one day start a family,
something she wanted very much. But that day never came. Instead, I buried
myself in accomplishments, because with accomplishments, I believed I could
control things, I could squeeze in every last piece of happiness before I got
sick and died, like my uncle before me, which I figured was my natural fate. As
for Morrie? Well, I thought about him now and then, the things he had taught me
about “being human” and “relating to others,” but it was always in the distance,
as if from another life. Over the years, I threw away any mail that came from
Brandeis University, figuring they were only asking for money. So I did not know
of Morrie’s illness. The people who might have told me were long forgotten,
their phone numbers buried in some packed-away box in the attic.
It might have stayed that way, had I not been flicking through the
TV channels late one night, when something caught my ear …
The
Audiovisual
In March of 1995, a limousine carrying Ted Koppel, the host of
ABC-TV’s “Nightline” pulled up to the snow-covered curb outside Morrie’s house
in West Newton, Massachusetts. Morrie was in a wheelchair full-time now, getting
used to helpers lifting him like a heavy sack from the chair to the bed and the
bed to the chair. He had begun to cough while eating, and chewing was a chore.
His legs were dead; he would never walk again. Yet he refused to be depressed.
Instead, Morrie had become a lightning rod of ideas. He jotted down his thoughts
on yellow pads, envelopes, folders, scrap paper. He wrote bite-sized
philosophies about living with death’s shadow: “Accept what you are able to do
and what you are not able to do”; “Accept the past as past, without denying it
or discarding it”; “Learn to forgive yourself and to forgive others”; “Don’t
assume that it’s too late to get involved.” After a while, he had more than
fifty of these “aphorisms,” which he shared with his friends. One friend, a
fellow Brandeis professor named Maurie Stein, was so taken with the words that
he sent them to a Boston Globe reporter, who came out and wrote a long feature
story on Morrie. The headline read:
A Professor’s Final Course: His Own Death
The article caught the eye of a producer from the “Nightline” show,
who brought it to Koppel in Washington, D. C. “Take a look at this,” the
producer said. Next thing you knew, there were cameramen in Morrie’s living room
and Koppel’s limousine was in front of the house. Several of Morrie’s friends
and family members had gathered to meet Koppel, and when the famous man entered
the house, they buzzed with excitement—all except Morrie, who wheeled himself
forward, raised his eyebrows, and interrupted the clamor with his high, singsong
voice. “Ted, I need to check you out before I agree to do this interview.” There
was an awkward moment of silence, then the two men were ushered into the study.
The door was shut. “Man,” one friend whispered outside the door, “I hope Ted
goes easy on Morrie.” “I hope Morrie goes easy on Ted,” said the other. Inside
the office, Morrie motioned for Koppel to sit down. He crossed his hands in his
lap and smiled. “Tell me something close to your heart,” Morrie began. “My
heart?” Koppel studied the old man. “All right,” he said cautiously, and he
spoke about his children. They were close to his heart, weren’t they? “Good,”
Morrie said. “Now tell me something, about your faith.” Koppel was
uncomfortable. “I usually don’t talk about such things with people I’ve only
known a few minutes.” “Ted, I’m dying,” Morrie said, peering over his glasses.
“I don’t have a lot of time here.” Koppel laughed. All right. Faith. He quoted a
passage from Marcus Aurelius, something he felt strongly about. Morrie nodded.
“Now let me ask you something,” Koppel said. “Have you ever seen my program?”
Morrie shrugged. “Twice, I think.” “Twice? That’s all?” “Don’t feel bad. I’ve
only seen ‘Oprah’ once.” “Well, the two times you saw my show, what did you
think?” Morrie paused. “To be honest?” “Yes?” “I thought you were a narcissist.”
Koppel burst into laughter. “I’m too ugly to be a narcissist,” he said. Soon the
cameras were rolling in front of the living room fireplace, with Koppel in his
crisp blue suit and Morrie in his shaggy gray sweater. He had refused fancy
clothes or makeup for this interview. His philosophy was that death should not
be embarrassing; he was not about to powder its nose. Because Morrie sat in the
wheelchair, the camera never caught his withered legs. And because he was still
able to move his hands—Morrie always spoke with both hands waving—he showed
great passion when explaining how you face the end of life. “Ted,” he said,
“when all this started, I asked myself, ‘Am I going to withdraw from the world,
like most people do, or am I going to live?’ I decided I’m going to live—or at
least try to live—the way I want, with dignity, with courage, with humor, with
composure. “There are some mornings when I cry and cry and mourn for myself.
Some mornings, I’m so angry and bitter. But it doesn’t last too long. Then I get
up and say, ‘I want to live …’ “So far, I’ve been able to do it. Will I be able
to continue? I don’t know. But I’m betting on myself that I will.” Koppel seemed
extremely taken with Morrie. He asked about the humility that death induced.
“Well, Fred,” Morrie said accidentally, then he quickly corrected himself. “I
mean Ted … “ “Now that’s inducing humility,” Koppel said, laughing. The
two men spoke about the afterlife. They spoke about Morrie’s increasing
dependency on other people. He already needed help eating and sitting and moving
from place to place. What, Koppel asked, did Morrie dread the most about his
slow, insidious decay? Morrie paused. He asked if he could say this certain
thing on television. Koppel said go ahead. Morrie looked straight into the eyes
of the most famous interviewer in America. “Well, Ted, one day soon, someone’s
gonna have to wipe my butt.” The program aired on a Friday night. It began with
Ted Koppel from behind the desk in Washington, his voice booming with authority.
“Who is Morrie Schwartz,” he said, “and why, by the end of the night, are so
many of you going to care about him?” A thousand miles away, in my house on the
hill, I was casually flipping channels. I heard these words from the TV set “Who
is Morrie Schwartz?”—and went numb.
It is our first class together, in the spring of 1976. I enter
Morrie’s large office and notice the seemingly countless books that line the
wall, shelf after shelf. Books on sociology, philosophy, religion, psychology.
There is a large rug on the hardwood floor and a window that looks out on the
campus walk. Only a dozen or so students are there, fumbling with notebooks and
syllabi. Most of them wear jeans and earth shoes and plaid flannel shirts. I
tell myself it will not be easy to cut a class this small. Maybe I shouldn’t
take it. “Mitchell?” Morrie says, reading from the attendance list. I raise a
hand. “Do you prefer Mitch? Or is Mitchell better?” I have never been asked this
by a teacher. I do a double take at this guy in his yellow turtleneck and green
corduroy pants, the silver hair that falls on his forehead. He is smiling.
Mitch, I say. Mitch is what my friends called me. “Well, Mitch it is then,”
Morrie says, as if closing a deal. “And, Mitch?”
Yes? “I hope that one day you will think of me as your friend.”
The
Orientation
As I turned the rental car onto Morrie’s street in West Newton, a
quiet suburb of Boston, I had a cup of coffee in one hand and a cellular phone
between my ear and shoulder. I was talking to a TV producer about a piece we
were doing. My eyes jumped from the digital clock—my return flight was in a few
hours—to the mailbox numbers on the tree-lined suburban street. The car radio
was on, the all-news station. This was how I operated, five things at once.
“Roll back the tape,” I said to the producer. “Let me hear that part again.”
“Okay,” he said. “It’s gonna take a second.” Suddenly, I was upon the house. I
pushed the brakes, spilling coffee in my lap. As the car stopped, I caught a
glimpse of a large Japanese maple tree and three figures sitting near it in the
driveway, a young man and a middleaged woman flanking a small old man in a
wheelchair. Morrie. At the sight of my old professor, I froze. “Hello?” the
producer said in my ear. “Did I lose you?… “ I had not seen him in sixteen
years. His hair was thinner, nearly white, and his face was gaunt. I suddenly
felt unprepared for this reunion—for one thing, I was stuck on the phone—and I
hoped that he hadn’t noticed my arrival, so that I could drive around the block
a few more times, finish my business, get mentally ready. But Morrie, this new,
withered version of a man I had once known so well, was smiling at the car,
hands folded in his lap, waiting for me to emerge. “Hey?” the producer said
again. “Are you there?” For all the time we’d spent together, for all the
kindness and patience Morrie had shown me when I was young, I should have
dropped the phone and jumped from the car, run and held him and kissed him
hello. Instead, I killed the engine and sunk down off the seat, as if I were
looking for something. “Yeah, yeah, I’m here,” I whispered, and continued my
conversation with the TV producer until we were finished. I did what I had
become best at doing: I tended to my work, even while my dying professor waited
on his front lawn. I am not proud of this, but that is what I did. Now, five
minutes later, Morrie was hugging me, his thinning hair rubbing against my
cheek. I had told him I was searching for my keys, that’s what had taken me so
long in the car, and I squeezed him tighter, as if I could crush my little lie.
Although the spring sunshine was warm, he wore a windbreaker and his legs were
covered by a blanket. He smelled faintly sour, the way people on medication
sometimes do. With his face pressed close to mine, I could hear his labored
breathing in my ear. “My old friend,” he whispered, “you’ve come back at last.”
He rocked against me, not letting go, his hands reaching up for my elbows as I
bent over him. I was surprised at such affection after all these years, but
then, in the stone walls I had built between my present and my past, I had
forgotten how close we once were. I remembered graduation day, the briefcase,
his tears at my departure, and I swallowed because I knew, deep down, that I was
no longer the good, gift-bearing student he remembered. I only hoped that, for
the next few hours, I could fool him. Inside the house, we sat at a walnut
dining room table, near a window that looked out on the neighbor’s house. Morrie
fussed with his wheelchair, trying to get comfortable. As was his custom, he
wanted to feed me, and I said all right. One of the helpers, a stout Italian
woman named Connie, cut up bread and tomatoes and brought containers of chicken
salad, hummus, and tabouli. She also brought some pills. Morrie looked at them
and sighed. His eyes were more sunken than I remembered them, and his cheekbones
more pronounced. This gave him a harsher, older look—until he smiled, of course,
and the sagging cheeks gathered up like curtains. “Mitch,” he said softly, “you
know that I’m dying.” I knew. “All right, then.” Morrie swallowed the pills, put
down the paper cup, inhaled deeply, then let it out. “Shall I tell you what it’s
like?” What it’s like? To die? “Yes,” he said. Although I was unaware of it, our
last class had just begun.
It is my freshman year. Morrie is older than most of the teachers,
and I am younger than most of the students, having left high school a year
early. To compensate for my youth on campus, I wear old gray sweatshirts and box
in a local gym and walk around with an unlit cigarette in my mouth, even though
I do not smoke. I drive a beat-up Mercury Cougar, with the windows down and the
music up. I seek my identity in toughness—but it is Morrie’s softness that draws
me, and because he does not look at me as a kid trying to be something more than
I am, I relax. I finish that first course with him and enroll for another. He is
an easy marker; he does not much care for grades. One year, they say, during the
Vietnam War, Morrie gave all his male students A’s to help them keep their
student deferments. I begin to call Morrie “Coach,” the way I used to address my
high school track coach. Morrie likes the nickname. “Coach,” he says. “All
right, I’ll be your coach. And you can be my player. You can play all the lovely
parts of life that I’m too old for now.” Sometimes we eat together in the
cafeteria. Morrie, to my delight, is even more of a slob than I am. He talks
instead of chewing, laughs with his mouth open, delivers a passionate thought
through a mouthful of egg salad, the little yellow pieces spewing from his
teeth. It cracks me up. The whole time I know him, I have two overwhelming
desires: to hug him and to give him a napkin.
The
Classroom
The sun beamed in through the dining room window, lighting up the
hardwood floor. We had been talking there for nearly two hours. The phone rang
yet again and Morrie asked his helper, Connie, to get it. She had been jotting
the callers’ names in Morrie’s small black appointment book. Friends. Meditation
teachers. A discussion group. Someone who wanted to photograph him for a
magazine. It was clear I was not the only one interested in visiting my old
professor—the “Nightline” appearance had made him something of a celebrity—but I
was impressed with, perhaps even a bit envious of, all the friends that Morrie
seemed to have. I thought about the “buddies” that circled my orbit back in
college. Where had they gone? “You know, Mitch, now that I’m dying, I’ve become
much more interesting to people.” You were always interesting. “Ho.” Morrie
smiled. “You’re kind.” No, I’m not, I thought. “Here’s the thing,” he said.
“People see me as a bridge. I’m not as alive as I used to be, but I’m not yet
dead. I’m sort of … in-between.” He coughed, then regained his smile. “I’m on
the last great journey here—and people want me to tell them what to pack.” The
phone rang again. “Morrie, can you talk?” Connie asked. “I’m visiting with my
old pal now,” he announced. “Let them call back.” I cannot tell you why he
received me so warmly. I was hardly the promising student who had left him
sixteen years earlier. Had it not been for “Nightline,” Morrie might have died
without ever seeing me again. I had no good excuse for this, except the one that
everyone these days seems to have. I had become too wrapped up in the siren song
of my own life. I was busy. What happened to me? I asked myself. Morrie’s
high, smoky voice took me back to my university years, when I thought rich
people were evil, a shirt and tie were prison clothes, and life without freedom
to get up and go motorcycle beneath you, breeze in your face, down the streets
of Paris, into the mountains of Tibet—was not a good life at all. What
happened to me? The eighties happened. The nineties happened. Death and
sickness and getting fat and going bald happened. I traded lots of dreams for a
bigger paycheck, and I never even realized I was doing it. Yet here was Morrie
talking with the wonder of our college years, as if I’d simply been on a long
vacation. “Have you found someone to share your heart with?” he asked. “Are you
giving to your community? “Are you at peace with yourself? “Are you trying to be
as human as you can be?” I squirmed, wanting to show I had been grappling deeply
with such questions. What happened to me? I once promised myself I would
never work for money, that I would join the Peace Corps, that I would live in
beautiful, inspirational places. Instead, I had been in Detroit for ten years
now, at the same workplace, using the same bank, visiting the same barber. I was
thirty-seven, more efficient than in college, tied to computers and modems and
cell phones. I wrote articles about rich athletes who, for the most part, could
not care less about people like me. I was no longer young for my peer group, nor
did I walk around in gray sweatshirts with unlit cigarettes in my mouth. I did
not have long discussions over egg salad sandwiches about the meaning of life.
My days were full, yet I remained, much of the time, unsatisfied. What
happened to me? “Coach,” I said suddenly, remembering the nickname. Morrie
beamed. “That’s me. I’m still your coach.” He laughed and resumed his eating, a
meal he had started forty minutes earlier. I watched him now, his hands working
gingerly, as if he were learning to use them for the very first time. He could
not press down hard with a knife. His fingers shook. Each bite was a struggle;
he chewed the food finely before swallowing, and sometimes it slid out the sides
of his lips, so that he had to put down what he was holding to dab his face with
a napkin. The skin from his wrist to his knuckles was dotted with age spots, and
it was loose, like skin hanging from a chicken soup bone. For a while, we just
ate like that, a sick old man, a healthy, younger man, both absorbing the quiet
of the room. I would say it was an embarrassed silence, but I seemed to be the
only one embarrassed. “Dying,” Morrie suddenly said, “is only one thing to be
sad over, Mitch. Living unhappily is something else. So many of the people who
come to visit me are unhappy.” Why? “Well, for one thing, the culture we have
does not make people feel good about themselves. We’re teaching the wrong
things. And you have to be strong enough to say if the culture doesn’t work,
don’t buy it. Create your own. Most people can’t do it. They’re more unhappy
than me—even in my current condition. “I may be dying, but I am surrounded by
loving, caring souls. How many people can say that?” I was astonished by his
complete lack of self-pity. Morrie, who could no longer dance, swim, bathe, or
walk; Morrie, who could no longer answer his own door, dry himself after a
shower, or even roll over in bed. How could he be so accepting? I watched him
struggle with his fork, picking at a piece of tomato, missing it the first two
times—a pathetic scene, and yet I could not deny that sitting in his presence
was almost magically serene, the same calm breeze that soothed me back in
college. I shot a glance at my watch—force of habit—it was getting late, and I
thought about changing my plane reservation home. Then Morrie did something that
haunts me to this day. “You know how I’m going to die?” he said. I raised my
eyebrows. “I’m going to suffocate. Yes. My lungs, because of my asthma, can’t
handle the disease. It’s moving up my body, this ALS. It’s already got my legs.
Pretty soon it’ll get my arms and hands. And when it hits my lungs … He shrugged
his shoulders. “… I’m sunk.” I had no idea what to say, so I said, “Well, you
know, I mean … you never know.” Morrie closed his eyes. “I know, Mitch. You
mustn’t be afraid of my dying. I’ve had a good life, and we all know it’s going
to happen. I maybe have four or five months.” Come on, I said nervously. Nobody
can say “I can,” he said softly. “There’s even a little test. A doctor showed
me.” A test? “Inhale a few times.” I did as he said. “Now, once more, but this
time, when you exhale, count as many numbers as you can before you take another
breath.” I quickly exhaled the numbers. “One-two-three-four-five-six-seven-eight
…” I reached seventy before my breath was gone. “Good,” Morrie said. “You have
healthy lungs. Now. Watch what I do.” He inhaled, then began his number count in
a soft, wobbly voice.
“One-two-three-four-five-six-seven-eight-nine-ten-eleven-twelve-thirteen-fourteen-fifteensixteen-seventeen-eighteen—”
He stopped, gasping for air. “When the doctor first asked me to do this, I could
reach twenty-three. Now it’s eighteen.” He closed his eyes, shook his head. “My
tank is almost empty.” I tapped my thighs nervously. That was enough for one
afternoon. “Come back and see your old professor,” Morrie said when I hugged him
good-bye. I promised I would, and I tried not to think about the last time I
promised this.
Day Two Text | Tuesdays with Morrie |
English I Stories | Evans Homepage |