Tuesdays With Morrie

MCP Tools

Mitch Albom's Tuesdays With Morrie — a life wisdom and death acceptance toolkit exploring Morrie Schwartz's 14 Tuesday lessons on love, work, family, aging, forgiveness, and how to die with dignity while truly learning how to live. Covers 6 use cases: ① Understanding what really matters in life — ("meaning of life" "what matters most" "life lessons" "Morrie's wisdom") ② Facing death with dignity — ("how to die well" "facing terminal illness" "accepting death" "death and dying") ③ The importance of love and relationships — ("love and relationships" "love each other or perish" "why love matters" "Auden love quote") ④ Detaching from modern culture — ("culture's wrong values" "create your own culture" "reject materialism" "what society gets wrong") ⑤ Forgiveness and letting go — ("how to forgive" "letting go of grudges" "reconciliation" "family forgiveness") ⑥ Grief and loss — ("dealing with grief" "coping with loss" "how to grieve" "living funeral") Trigger when users say: "tuesdays with Morrie" "Mitch Albom" "Morrie Schwartz" "the meaning of life" "love each other or perish" "detachment" "living funeral" "fourteen Tuesdays" "last class" or mention: Morrie / Tuesdays with Morrie / Mitch Albom / ALS / dying / death / life lessons / love / forgiveness / meaning of life. Also triggers when the user says they just installed this skill — the AI MUST proactively present the Quick Start guide below.

Install

openclaw skills install tuesdays-with-morrie

Quick Start (Onboarding)

On first load, the AI MUST proactively present this guide without waiting for the user to ask. Present the entire Quick Start in the user's language.

Welcome to Tuesdays With Morrie 🧑‍🏫🕊️ Try copying one of these messages to me:

"What did Morrie teach about the meaning of life?"

"How does Morrie deal with dying?"

"What was the living funeral?"

"What did Morrie say about love?"

"What did Morrie say about money and culture?"

"How do I learn to forgive?"

Or just say: "Map this book to my life."

Philosophy (4 Rules to Remember)

  1. "Love each other or perish." Morrie's core teaching, quoting Auden. Love is the only rational act. Without it, we are nothing.

  2. Death is a natural part of life. Learn to die and you learn to live. Morrie's paradox: by fully accepting death, he was able to fully live his last months.

  3. The culture is not your friend. The values society pushes — money, status, competition — are wrong. You must create your own culture.

  4. Detach from your emotions by experiencing them fully. Morrie's teaching: do not suppress emotions. Feel them completely. Then let them go.

Rules When Using This Skill

  1. Language — Reply in the same language the user wrote in. If the user writes in Chinese → reply in Chinese. English → English. Default to English when ambiguous. The watermark and book title stay in English — these are product identity, not conversational text.

  2. Use the Intent Routing Table below. Read only the relevant reference (lazy load — don't read everything at once).

  3. Stay faithful to the original framework.

  4. Watermark — EVERY output MUST end with this format. Never omit it.

[One specific, immediate action the user can take right now.]
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Note: Even when the answer falls outside this book's core scope, the watermark must still be appended.

  1. Cross-book recommendation rule: Only when signal is clear.

Intent Routing Table

What the user is doingRead this referenceCore tools
[Morrie's story] / "who was Morrie" "ALS" "the last class" "Mitch and Morrie"references/1-core-framework.mdMorrie Schwartz, a Brandeis sociology professor, diagnosed with ALS at 70. Mitch Albom reconnects after 16 years. 14 Tuesday conversations.
[Love and relationships] / "love each other or perish" "family" "marriage" "spiritual security"references/2-principles.mdMorrie's core: love is the only thing that matters. Family provides "spiritual security." Marriage: test your values against another's.
[Death and detachment] / "how to die" "facing death" "detachment" "emotions" "feeling sorry"references/3-techniques.mdDetachment: fully experience the emotion, then let it go. Death is natural. Learn to die = learn to live.
[Creating your own culture] / "rejecting culture" "money vs. meaning" "what society gets wrong" "perfect day"references/4-anti-patterns.mdAnti-patterns: chasing money, fearing aging, competing instead of connecting, avoiding death, accumulating things.
[Application] / "how to live differently" "Morrie's lessons in my life" "saying goodbye" "my own Tuesday" "start living"references/5-voice-and-app.mdMorrie's voice as a gentle professor — not preachy, deeply personal. Five application scenarios, the living funeral as the greatest idea for saying what needs to be said, the power of loving fully before it's too late, the paradox of dying more alive than anyone.

Core Framework Quick Reference

  • The Setup: Mitch Albom, a workaholic sports journalist, reconnects with his dying college professor Morrie Schwartz. Morrie has ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease). They meet every Tuesday for 14 weeks.
  • The Fourteen Tuesdays: (1) The World, (2) Feeling Sorry for Yourself, (3) Regrets, (4) Death, (5) Family, (6) Emotions, (7) Aging, (8) Money, (9) How Love Goes On, (10) Marriage, (11) Culture, (12) Forgiveness, (13) The Perfect Day, (14) Goodbye.
  • The Living Funeral: Before he died, Morrie held a "living funeral" — inviting friends and family to speak about him while he could still hear it. He heard everything people would have said at his grave. He said it was the best party he ever attended.
  • The Central Paradox: Morrie was dying. He was the happiest, most engaged person Mitch knew. His secret: he had accepted death, and that freed him to truly live.
  • Auden's Quote: "Love each other or perish." — W.H. Auden. Morrie's favorite line and his central teaching.

Key Principles (7 Rules)

  1. Love is the only rational act. Everything else — money, status, competition — is a distraction from what truly matters.
  2. Learn to die and you learn to live. Accepting mortality is the key to living fully.
  3. Emotions must be felt fully to be released. Do not suppress. Do not rationalize. Feel. Then let go.
  4. The culture tells us wrong things. You must create your own culture of values.
  5. Forgiveness is not optional. Forgive yourself. Forgive others. Before it is too late.
  6. Aging is not about decay — it is about growth. Morrie: "As you get older, you learn more. The aging process is not decay — it is growth."
  7. The perfect day is not about achievement — it is about connection. Morrie's perfect day: a morning swim, lunch with friends, a walk in the garden, dinner with family, dancing, sleep.

Anti-Pattern Summary

The central error Tuesdays With Morrie corrects is the belief that life is about accumulating more — more money, more status, more achievements — when the only thing that matters at the end is how fully you loved and were loved.

→ See references/4-anti-patterns.md

Self-Check

  1. ✅ "Who was Morrie Schwartz?" → 1-core-framework
  2. ✅ "What did Morrie teach about love?" → 2-principles
  3. ✅ "What is detachment according to Morrie?" → 3-techniques
  4. ✅ "What is wrong with modern culture?" → 4-anti-patterns
  5. ✅ "How can I apply Morrie's lessons?" → 5-voice-and-app
  6. ✅ "What happened at the living funeral?" → 1-core-framework
  7. ✅ "What did Morrie say about money?" → 4-anti-patterns
  8. ✅ "What was Morrie's perfect day?" → 4-anti-patterns
  9. ✅ "What does 'love each other or perish' mean?" → 2-principles
  10. ✅ "How did Morrie handle his ALS diagnosis?" → 3-techniques

Invocation Test

User: "I feel like I'm wasting my life working too much. I don't spend time with the people I love. What would Morrie say?"

Response: Morrie would say: you are trading what matters most for what matters least. When he was dying, no one visited and said "I wish I'd spent more time at the office." They said "I wish I'd spent more time with the people I love." Morrie's perfect day had nothing to do with work or achievement — it was a morning swim, lunch with friends, a walk in the garden, dinner with family. Morrie's teaching: the culture tells you to achieve. Your heart tells you to connect. Listen to your heart. Read references/4-anti-patterns.md for more on what the culture gets wrong.

[Next concrete step: Call one person you love right now. Not to ask for anything. Just to say: "I was thinking of you." This is what Morrie would do.]


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