preview

Tuesdays With Morrie Thesis Statement

Decent Essays

Mitch Albom is a an American Journalist who has written many books of the course of his career. His first well selling book he wrote was Tuesdays with Morrie, a story about him reconnecting with his old college professor for one final lesson, his own death by Lou Gehrig's disease, more commonly known as ALS. ALS is a neurodegenerative disease that causes deterioration of nerve cells, and there is no known cure. They talk about Morrie's life leading up to the diagnosis, and how his life was affected by it forever. Mr. Albom refers to ALS as a lit candle, slowly progressing throughout the whole body of the candle. Tuesdays with Morrie shows that our culture is wrapped up in our own selves that we rarely take the time to care for others until …show more content…

The author said that he was interested, so he kept on watching to see what ALS was and he was surprised when he saw his old college professor Morrie Schwartz as the man with ALS. At first Mitch did not seem to care about the person suffering, but only about the ALS, but once he found out that the person suffering from the disease was someone who he had a connection with, he cared about the person. “Had I not been flicking through the TV channels late one night, when something caught my ear.”
(Albom 7). He was scrolling through TV channels when ABC-TV’s nightline showed Ted Koppel outside a suburban house, Albom was intrigued, so he kept on watching to see what the program had to say. Ted Koppel went inside and then the camera crew focused on an old man, when Mr. Albom recognized that it was his old college professor Morrie Schwartz. This caused him to watch on to see why they were interviewing Morrie, and he found out that Morrie has …show more content…

As Morrie’s date grew more tangible, Morrie began to become more wise and more open to the world, and more self-reflecting on how he had acted over the years of his life. This usually happens to many people, but sadly, not all people get wiser with age. Many stories have this type of plot line, where someone wakes up to the world around them, and they get smarter. That was even the plot line for The Matrix movie series. But in Morrie’s case, he wasn’t the one who was waking up, it was the people around him waking up to Morrie dying, that Morrie wouldn’t die because of old age, but of a disease that has no cure. The people around him started to realize how fragile the human existence is compared to the universe, because it will carry on no matter who you are. Most people think that they are invincible, that nothing can take them out, but something simple that’s not even alive like a virus can kill you, it shows how easy it is to die. Morrie did talk about humanity’s fragile existence once in the book, talking about the Yugoslavian Civil War, “The other night, on TV, I saw people in Bosnia running across the street, getting fired upon, killed, innocent victims … and I just started to cry. I could feel their anguish as if was my own.” Morrie did not know any of those people who were killed in the conflict,

Get Access