You came back in 1968 from teaching Kenyans to speak English to teach Americans how to see the world.
A nine-year-old boy was in your fifth-grade class, precocious, gifted and quite full of himself and ignorance.
It was magical, that connection; the world-wise teacher and the barely contained bolt of potential. It was his only year of school where he never missed a day or dropped a class.
Amazing how subtle, blunt and gentle you were with him, tapping walls of arrogance with a wrecking ball, allowing him to maintain his structure while rocking and rebuilding his foundation.
You saw the boy who danced on the the tightrope between genius and insanity... and quietly fed the jukebox.
He wanted to write; you gave him Frost and cummings. He yearned to draw; you showed him Van Gogh. He thirsted to learn; you taught him how to slake his parched mind.
He left your classroom, but you continued to teach him. You still do, nearly fifty years later.
The last time he saw you, he hurt you, in that casual, caustic way of the high-school senior. Still, when his nieces and nephews with his last name passed through, you'd ask them how he was doing, and asked them to tell him to stop in, or call.
He never did, so he's now reduced to offering words you would have loved to read in their full futility telling you that you are immortal.