Current:Home > NewsMy dying high school writing teacher has one more lesson. Don't wait to say thank you. -AssetVision
My dying high school writing teacher has one more lesson. Don't wait to say thank you.
Rekubit View
Date:2025-04-10 18:55:33
The last words I spoke to George Lukacs were sincere but woefully delayed: “Thank you, thank you, thank you.”
Mr. Lukacs was my high school English teacher in the 1980s. He is, in many ways, the reason I write for a living.
In late March, I learned via a social media post that he’s dying, and realized I had never – not in the 30-plus years since graduating – told him what a profound impact he had on my life. I had never thanked him.
So I rushed to track him down, and he graciously carved out time for a call. We caught up recently, we laughed and chatted, condensed decades into minutes, and I told him the things I should have said long ago. In that conversation, there was, appropriately, a final lesson.
Too often we forget to thank those who've helped us along the way
I wasn’t planning on writing about this – it was personal. But in the weeks that followed, it stuck with me, and I came to think what I learned from Mr. Lukacs should be shared.
It’s simple, really: Don’t wait. Don’t wait to thank those who have changed you. Don’t wait to let the teachers, mentors or counselors, the ones who once helped you take the next step, know they made your life better than it would have been without them.
A teacher who changed the way I think
When I entered Mr. Lukacs’ English class in high school, I already had the fundamentals of good writing stamped into my brain. I had learned the form and structure that undergird a strong essay, but it had often felt like someone was teaching me with one hand holding a lid tight on my imagination.
Mr. Lukacs lifted that lid. He was an advocate for young writers letting their freak flags fly. He delighted in creativity and busting some of the previously sacrosanct rules that restrained our inventiveness.
'Do not lose your sense of humor':Duke graduates who walked out on Jerry Seinfeld's commencement speech failed Life 101
He sarcastically awarded a gold-painted shovel – the Golden Shovel – to the students who most gloriously and effectively B.S.’d, as in "shoveled the bull----," their way through essays.
Other teachers had kept us grounded because we needed to be. Mr. Lukacs let us soar because we were ready.
High school comes and goes, and we move on
I remember him from high school as a character – affable and kind. His trademark laugh often echoed off the buildings, sounding – and I say this with great reverence – like someone had stepped on a dolphin’s tail.
As high school students often do, I moved on from the foundational teachers who molded and shaped my mind. I grew up, found a career, formed a family and lived. All things good teachers want for their charges. A good life.
And as that good life unfolds, we forget to look back.
A sad announcement that landed like a gut punch
In March, a friend shared a video Mr. Lukacs had posted. It was titled “A Farewell Wave,” words that punched.
I sat on my couch and watched as the now-gray-haired, bespectacled man looked into a camera and said: “Now an endgame has begun. I don’t know how much time I have, but it won’t likely be long.”
Damn it.
He was diagnosed with liposarcoma in 2001. Surgeries and treatment kept him alive, but his students, past and present, kept him going.
"The joy that I derived from interacting with all of you gave me a reason to be alive,” he said in the video.
He continued: “Thank you for making nearly every day of my life a joy. I hope that your lives have been magical. Even more, I hope that you recognize how magical they have been.”
A scramble for a chance to say thanks
I reached out to another past teacher to get Mr. Lukacs' email, then reached out to him asking to speak by phone, writing, “You have, lo these many years, remained a voice in the back of my head as I write.”
We had the chance to talk. I had the chance to tell him how much I owe him for teaching me to love writing and for showing me that I don't need to write like everyone else to be a writer – I just need to be myself and let the writing follow.
When I decided to share this story, I emailed him for permission. He responded, “I’m frankly surprised to be still here.” And he ended with “please write something powerful!”
No pressure.
We can all learn from Mr. Lukacs' final lesson
It’s my hope Mr. Lukacs will be able to read this before he ascends to the great classroom in the sky. (Don’t worry, I think he’d like that joke.)
But more so, I hope others read this and think about reaching back into their past and finding that person they should’ve thanked ages ago. That person who made a difference. That person who mattered.
Remember Jim Valvano:I inherited a cancer gene from my dad. He also left me a game plan to live.
A farewell, a poem and gratitude immeasurable
Mr. Lukacs ended his farewell video quoting the poet Walt Whitman: “And to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier.”
That’s from Whitman’s epic “Song of Myself.” As much as I will miss Mr. Lukacs, and as much as I appreciate him, I will never forgive him for forcing me to read a 52-part poem.
But I did (sort of … OK, I skimmed part of it), and what struck me was the line preceding the one he quoted: “All goes onward and outward, nothing collapses.”
Onward, Mr. Lukacs. Thank you for the final lesson. (Though I could’ve done without the poetry, if I’m being honest.)
Your student, always,
— Rex
Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on X, formerly Twitter, @RexHuppke and Facebook facebook.com/RexIsAJerk
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- 3 women and dog found dead, man fatally shot by police in North Las Vegas: Police
- Another suspect arrested in shooting that wounded 8 high school students at Philadelphia bus stop
- Berkeley to return parking lot on top of sacred site to Ohlone tribe after settlement with developer
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Judge overseeing Georgia election interference case dismisses some charges against Trump
- House GOP launch new probe of Jan. 6 and try shifting blame for the Capitol attack away from Trump
- The 10 Best Places to Buy Spring Wedding Guest Dresses Both Online & In-Store
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Delete a background? Easy. Smooth out a face? Seamless. Digital photo manipulation is now mainstream
Ranking
- Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
- Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s Wife Bianca Censori Seen Together for First Time at Listening Party
- TEA Business College’s Mission and Achievements
- Evangelical Christians are fierce Israel supporters. Now they are visiting as war-time volunteers
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Danielle Hunter, Houston Texans agree to two-year, $49 million contract, per reports
- American-Israeli IDF soldier Itay Chen confirmed to have died during Hamas' Oct. 7 terror attack
- The 10 Best Places to Buy Spring Wedding Guest Dresses Both Online & In-Store
Recommendation
Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
TEA Business College The leap from quantitative trading to artificial
Missing Washington state woman found dead in Mexico; man described as suspect arrested
Olivia Munn Shares Breast Cancer Diagnosis
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Nebraska governor approves regulations to allow gender-affirming care for minors
House poised to pass bill that could ban TikTok but it faces uncertain path in the Senate
Appeal coming from North Carolina Republicans in elections boards litigation