In this chapter Mitch and Morrie start to connect well and Mitch notices Morrie is really starting to dwindle away now. Morrie has been writing notes now that only he could probably read. And Morrie now is solely reliable on the oxygen tank. Other than Morrie getting worse, Morrie keeps receiving letters from people from when he got interviewed on Nightline. And one woman actually comes and talks to Morrie about how her mother had died of ALS and can relate to what Morrie is going through. Also, Mitch was asked to imitate Lou Gehrig's speech to Morrie about being the luckiest man in the world even though Morrie doesn't feel like that.
I like how Morrie says he can't feel the same way that Lou Gehrig did. Even though he had the same disease at Lou, Morrie can't relate to it at all because he has no connection to being the luckiest man in the world because if he was he wouldn't have this disease.
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