Imagine being disconnected from your best friend. You’ve gone so long without them, that the friend’s existence is forgotten to you, even after all the memories you might’ve shared in the past. Then, during an average day, you find out that friend is chronically ill and is going to die very soon. How would you react? Would you try to reconnect and savour every last moment? Or just stay very far away and detached? Mitch Albom, author of Tuesdays with Morrie, was faced with that very decision when he saw his old college professor, Morrie Schwartz, on national TV, talking about ALS. Instead of simply ignoring this and leaving Morrie to die, Mitch traveled across the country to meet up with Morrie. Morrie responded to this by giving Mitch one final class about life. In this novel, the author uses Figurative Language and Aphorisms to display the theme, “Following the popular culture is not always the best way.” …show more content…
They seem half-asleep, even when they’re busy doing things they think are important (43).” Morrie illustrates today’s labourers and general consumers are walking around, not really sure why they’re doing the things that they do, but yet they do it anyway. The popular culture encourages people to get a job that pays well, even if they don’t enjoy it. Essentially, as long as you make money, it doesn’t matter how happy you are, you’ve got money! But that’s exactly the problem. Why make big bucks by monotonously walking around every day, doing the same thing, taking the same route, making the same coffee, filing the same reports, when you could actually enjoy yourself. Who cares what the culture says? As long as you enjoy yourself what’s the