UNTHANKED
PEOPLE
When
William Stidger taught at Boston University, he once reflected upon the great
number of unthanked people in his life. Those who had helped nurture him,
inspire him, or who cared enough about him to leave a lasting impression.
One was
a schoolteacher he’d not heard of in many years. But he remembered that she had
gone out of her way to put a love of verse in him, and Will had loved poetry
all his life. He wrote a letter of thanks to her.
The
reply he received, written in the feeble scrawl of the aged, began, “My dear
Willie.” He was delighted. Now over 50, bald and a professor, he didn’t
think there was a person left in the world who would call him “Willie.” Here is
that letter:
My dear Willie,
I cannot tell you how much
your note meant to me. I am in my eighties, living alone in a small room,
cooking my own meals, lonely, and, like the last leaf of autumn, lingering
behind. You will be interested to know that I taught school for 50 years,
and yours is the first note of appreciation I ever received. It came on a
blue-cold morning, and it cheered me as nothing has in many years.
Not
prone to cry easily, Will wept over that note. She was one of the great
unthanked people from Will’s past. You know them. We all do. The teacher who
made a difference. That coach we’ll never forget. The music instructor or
Sunday School worker who helped us to believe in ourselves. That scout leader
who cared.
We all
remember people who shaped our lives in various ways. People whose influence
changed us. Will Stidger found a way to show his appreciation -- he wrote them
letters.
Who are
some of the unthanked people from your past? It may not be too late to say,
“Thanks.”
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