Tuesdays With Morrie

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The Book “Tuesdays with Morrie” has many influential lessons and themes. Although some themes are more prominent than others, but all the themes show how one man can make the best of his dying days. He makes acceptance threw detachment, He learns that love is more important than anything, but mostly he learns that once you learn how to die, you learn how to live.

To begin with Morrie made acceptance threw detachment. This is one of many themes threw out the story because as Morrie’s conditions worsen, he decides to simplify detach himself from the situation. He detaches himself by letting his feelings take over him. By doing this he is able to remove himself from the pain and fear. If Morrie chose not to detach his feelings he would have built …show more content…

And this is important – not just for someone like me, who is dying, but for someone like you, who is perfectly healthy. Learn to detach” ”. He does not want to die being upset and scared, in those frightening moments, he detaches so that he may accept the importance of life and embraces his death. “ “… I had a terrible spell. It went on for hours. And I really wasn’t sure I was going to make it. No breath. No end of the choking. At one point, I started to get dizzy… and then I felt a certain peace, I felt that I was ready to go.” His eyes widened. “Mitch, it was a most incredible feeling. The sensation of accepting what was happening, being at peace. I was thinking about a dream I had last week, where I was crossing a bridge into something unknown. Being ready to move on to whatever was next.” But you didn’t. Morrie waited a …show more content…

Morrie says this on the fourth Tuesday in response to Mitch's question about how one can prepare for death. . When he tells Mitch that one must know how to die before one can know how to live, he means that one must accept the possibility of one's own death before he can truly appreciate what he has on earth, it will all be out of reach, prompts the urge to appreciate and value what one can have only for a limited period of time, and to use every moment of that time doing something that one will not regret when the bird sings its last note. He responds with a Buddhist philosophy that every day, one must ask the bird on his shoulder if that day is the day he will die. The philosophy serves as a metaphor for his awareness that his death may come at any moment. The bird itself is symbolic of Morrie's consciousness that his death is fast-approaching, and his readiness to accept it when it does arrive. He hopes that Mitch will realize that this bird is on everyone's shoulder at every moment of their lives, despite how young or old they may be. He teaches Mitch that he should live his life to the fullest and show love and

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