Episode 9 – How to Avoid Holiday Battles
Let’s talk about the things you can do to avoid holiday battles and what to concentrate on to remember what the true meaning of the season is all about.
Let’s talk about the things you can do to avoid holiday battles and what to concentrate on to remember what the true meaning of the season is all about.
“Death ends a life, but not a relationship,” was an important quote to Mitch Albom’s beloved professor, Morrie Schwartz, and one he often shared.
Step inside Morrie’s classroom and learn how to extend that olive branch and shed your regrets simply by saying, “I’m sorry.”
Morrie said, “If you don’t like the culture, don’t buy it.” It’s as pertinent today as it was when Morrie uttered these words over 20 years ago. From the culture of celebrity we face today, to the obsession with divisive politics, all of these are part of a cultural environment that sometimes we don’t feel we’re a part of.
Perhaps the most important lesson Mitch Albom learned from his beloved professor, Morrie Schwartz, was the importance of giving to others.
Morrie said there was no substitute for the experience of having children. The hosts discuss the importance of family, the decision to have – or to not have – children and how today’s decisions will affect you later in life.
Age is not a competition, but we often see it as such. In this episode, we’ll discuss, through Morrie’s wisdom, how to look at what is good, true and beautiful in your own life right now.
Guest Dr. Phil McGraw joins Mitch Albom to discuss who he keeps close and how he chooses those he spends his precious time with
In 1975, a young Mitch Albom, a freshman student at Brandeis University, walked into a sociology class taught by Morrie Schwartz. and so began a relationship that would not only change both of their lives, but the lives of millions of others along the way.