April 19, 2011 by 77zhang99t
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Amazing,Louis Vuitton Wallets, I thought. I worked in the news business. I covered stories where people died. I interviewed grieving family members. I even attended the funerals. I never cried. Morrie, for the suffering of people half a world away,Louis Vuitton Palermo, was weeping. Is this what comes at the end,Louis Vuitton Tivoli, I wondered? Maybe death is the great equalizer, the one big thing that can finally make strangers shed a tear for one another.
Morrie honked loudly into the tissue. "This is okay with you,Louis Vuitton Speedy, isn't it? Men crying?"
Sure, I said,Louis Vuitton Neverfull, too quickly.
He grinned. "Ah, Mitch, I'm gonna loosen you up. One day, I'm gonna show you it's okay to cry."
Yeah, yeah, I said. "Yeah,Louis Vuitton L, yeah," he said.
We laughed because he used to say the same thing nearly twenty years earlier. Mostly on Tuesdays. In fact, Tuesday had always been our day together. Most of my courses with Morrie were on Tuesdays,Louis Vuitton Cirrus, he had office hours on Tuesdays,Louis Vuitton Galliera, and when I wrote my senior thesiswhich was pretty much Morrie's suggestion, right from the start-it was on Tuesdays that we sat together, by his desk, or in the cafeteria,Louis Vuitton Delightful, or on the steps of Pearlman Hall, going over the work.
So it seemed only fitting that we were back together on a Tuesday,Louis Vuitton Siracusa, here in the house with the Japanese maple out front. As I readied to go,Louis Vuitton Keepall, I mentioned this to Morrie.
"We're Tuesday people,Louis Vuitton Estrela," he said. Tuesday people, I repeated.
Morrie smiled.
"Mitch,Louis Vuitton Artsy, you asked about caring for people I don't even know. But can I tell you the thing I'm learning most with this disease?"
What's that?
"The most important thing in life is to learn how to give out love,Louis Vuitton Alma, and to let it come in."