Mitch Albom graduates from his college and promises his professor to stay in touch, being one of his favourite students, but fails to fulfill that promise as he’s busy working really hard and making tons of money. Moorie, reaching the old age gets diagnosed with ALS, an incapacitating illness that leaves his body slowly decaying. Mitch has put some distance between his teacher until the point when he sees him on a show Nightline, in which Ted Koppel converses with Morrie about his illness and how Morrie felt about death. Mitch restores his association with Morrie by flying out from Detroit to visit Morrie each Tuesday in his home in Massachusetts. As of now Mitch works as a writer, for the most part composing stories about games. He wound up noticeably keen on what Morrie needed to state and began carrying a recording device to their …show more content…
Mitch isn't the optimistic, delicate young fellow he had been the point at which he was in school; he has turned out to be fatigued, having "exchanged bunches of dreams for a greater paycheck." Morrie inquires as to whether he finds a sense of contentment with himself, and Mitch can just squirm awkwardly accordingly. Morrie says that dying is only one thing that brings sadness; living unhappily has the same effect. His words hit a line with the young fellow, and, after coming back from a short business trip, Mitch plans to visit Morrie again on Tuesday, in what basically turns into the opening session of the educator's last class, a class for