Can't sleep been up since 3:15 a.m.  I was thinking about a "....thank 
you for caring about me...." message I had received a few weeks ago from a 
student of thirteen years ago whom I'll call Joe.  The subject line of Joe's 
message read "A Long Overdue Thank You."  That message, those particular words 
took me back over fifty years to Dr. Birdsal Viault.   You know, as John Dewey 
said, we never learn from our experiences, we only learn from reflecting on our 
experiences.  This reflection is where I get really personal about what 
teachers, or anyone who cares about someone else, can do.  

        I unknowingly began to walk the road to who I presently am by stepping 
into Dr. Birdsal Viault's history class as a default history major in the fall 
of my junior year.  My already weak self-esteem and self-confidence had been 
shaken to the core by the seismic devastation of a sophomore semester that 
dashed my--and my family's--visions of a medical career on the rocks of a lousy 
transcript.  I was feeling more pain than usual, feeling a more than usual 
sadder disappointment to myself and others, feeling smaller than usual, feeling 
more unseen in a darker corner, feeling more unworthy and more incompetent than 
usual. I had reinforced the walls and deepened the moats of my inner redoubt to 
further protect myself.  

        About a third of the way into the semester, after handing in a short 
research paper, Birdsal Viault called me into his office.  I thought I would 
receive the usual caustic "you don't know how" destructive dressing down I had 
received so many times from other professors and high school teachers before 
them.  I vividly remember him saying to my surprise, "Mr. Schmier (he always 
used the formal address), you have a lot of potential.  You are a good 
researcher and a very good writer.  I'll help you if you want me to." At the 
time, being a-washed in the formidable shame of "not good enough" and "don't 
belong," I stood there stunned, mentally looking around with a puzzled "who, 
me?"  For a moment I thought he was talking to someone else in his office 
behind me.  After all, only two years earlier I had been a high school graduate 
voted "clown of the class" by my fellow-students, and my teachers almost 
unanimously said I would be the least likely college-bound graduate in the 
class of 1958 to succeed.  The first two years, with a GPA dragged down by poor 
grades, it seemed that I was fulfilling their prophecy.  But, Birdsal Viault 
ignored all that.  He saw something in me  Over the next two years, he worked 
with me, encouraged me, had faith in me, invested in me.  In his own very, very 
reserved way, Birdsal Viault, only eight years my senior and relatively new to 
the professorial game, began to help me start taking down everything I had put 
up that was supposed to keep me safe, or, at least, he helped me to begin to 
remodel my sanctuary. 

        Now a Mr. Keating he wasn't.  He was not one to rip pages out of a book 
or to get photographs to whisper or to go out on retreats in caves or to jump 
up on desks.  He was not given demonstratives.  The reserved aires Dr. Viault 
maintained made him not one for boisterous academic rah-rahs.  I could never 
envision him as a pom-pom waving professorial cheerleader.  He never wore his 
emotion on his sleeve; he almost embodied the idea that emotion was something  
to which those in the Ivory Tower not succumb, much less display.  He seemed 
outwardly to numb his emotions; he never let his guard down, always maintaining 
"proper" professorial decorum, always costuming everything he said and did in 
intellectual garb, always being the stately Ph.D. he thought he was supposed to 
be.  But, his empathy and compassion, closely guarded as they may have been, 
came though his outwardly tough armor.  He always came out from behind his 
separating desk, pulling a chair to sit next to me when giving me feedback.  
His support and encouragement was subdued, slow, patient, and kind, but 
challenging, demanding, and pushing--and touching.  

        His comments to me and my work were always kind, constructive 
supportive, and encouraging.  He never said an angry or corrosive word to me.  
He always accenuated the positive.  He was the first to make me open my 
eyes--even if they were at the time only a squint--make me feel like I had a 
future, that I could dream, that I had a unique potential.  He showed me things 
about my self that I didn't know and didn't believe were there.  It was he who 
gave me confidence to go on for my Masters degree and then at his urging on for 
my Ph.D.   He made a difference in my life, he helped send me on my way.  It 
was a way I would never have struggled to find, the way ahead to a meaningful, 
satisfied, purposeful, and fulfilling life.  Though he sent me on my way, it 
was a route that was still fraught with a struggle between an angelic sense of 
worthiness to be loved and belong on one hand and the demonic minions of 
self-doubt and worry.  It wasn't until I had my shape-shifting epiphany 
twenty-eight years later that spark  Dr. Viault struck burst into a brilliant 
flame.  I realized at that moment in late 1991 that you find your way not by 
just opening doors to the amazing unknown ahead, but by what hard doors you 
close behind you, acting out from a place of knowing your worthiness.   

        Birdsal Viault has since died.  He had lived a short hop from Charlotte 
where my Susie and I often had visited her parents.  But, for some reason, he 
wouldn't take my calls, wouldn't agree for me to call upon him, would never 
answer my letters, would never responded to my later emails.  I don't know why 
and I won't speculate.   Then, again, he never was able to accept a "thank 
you;" always seemingly embarrassed by those two appreciative words.  I see now 
that Dr. Viault, for whatever reasons, had what Brene Brown in her "Daring 
Greatly" calls a "allergy to vulnerability."  I always had a sense that he had 
built a protective facade around, with which I could relate, against being hurt 
or being seen as weak or being accused of gullibility, or being assaulted as 
"unprofessional," or being judged as unmanly.  I remember overhearing the chair 
of the department assailing Dr. Viault as if he was trying to beat the emotion 
out of him, asserting that when it came to me, Dr. Viault was wasting his 
precious time, that he should stop being so emotional and, in his words, "just 
cut him out from the herd."  Nevertheless, he cautiously became my ally.  He 
quietly dared greatly to reach out.  He secretly made a connection, and 
silently went all in wholeheartedly .  Though I don't think he realized it, he 
had thrown caution to the wind and had put a lot of himself on the line for me. 
 

        So, Dr. Viault, though you wouldn't allow me to say it in person, thank 
you for being who you were and still are to me.  Thank you for extending your 
hand and having the first hand in my achievement.  Thank you for not being 
isolated and remote, for noticing me, for acknowledging me, for your beautiful 
thoughts, for mentoring me, for caring about me, for being kind to me, for 
nurturing me, for loving me in your own reserved way, for having faith in me, 
for believing in me, for taking me from being stuck in the abyss of 
hopelessness to start climbing up to the heights of hopefulness, for taking me 
from ugliness to getting a first peek at my beauty, for being my "philosopher's 
stone" and helping me to start transmuting from a base metal of worthlessness 
to a noble mettle of worthiness,  for letting me begin developing my own 
"elixir of life," for supporting me when no one else would, for encouraging me 
when all others did just the opposite.  While I could never pay off the debt I 
owe you, I realized, however, as someone said, my greatest acts of gratitude is 
living by them, doing for others what you did for me, that I could "pay off my 
debt forward" by unconditionally loving with my whole heart and soul, by 
willing to show up and go all in, and by helping others to be their own 
alchemists as you helped me.  So, I thank you, Birdsal Viault.  All the Joes 
whom you've touched through me thank you.  And, I thank all the Birdsal Viaults 
who were and are out there transforming lives as teachers should, and not just 
credentialling.  Wherever  and whoever you all are, I am deeply grateful.  

Make it a good day

-Louis-


Louis Schmier                                   
http://www.therandomthoughts.edublogs.org       
203 E. Brookwood Pl                         http://www.therandomthoughts.com
Valdosta, Ga 31602 
(C)  229-630-0821                             /\   /\  /\                 /\    
 /\
                                                      /^\\/  \/   \   /\/\__   
/   \  /   \
                                                     /     \/   \_ \/ /   \/ 
/\/  /  \    /\  \
                                                   //\/\/ /\    \__/__/_/\_\/   
 \_/__\  \
                                             /\"If you want to climb 
mountains,\ /\
                                         _ /  \    don't practice on mole 
hills" - /   \_


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