I have thought a lot about what I wanted to say in this message. I went back and reread my old posts to see if I was as redundant as I felt I might be. If there is a redundancy in all this it would be that I have been in a nearly constant search for an answer to what is truly important. It is simple. What is important is how you treat others. How we are remembered. What difference has our presence here made.
In my rereading I realized that I had not shared my Keith Miser story here. I know I have shared it with others from my grad program, with friends and trusted confidants. I am now including you.
If you have read earlier posts you know that I entered the profession of higher education with a great deal of trepidation. I was the blue-collar guy, a middling student in college (but I had fun), and unsure and without direction for a long time. When I was offered the assistantship/fellowship at UVM, I accepted with little idea of what lay in store. So I left a job, took a very pregnant Terri 700 miles from friends and family, and moved to an apartment we had never seen. (long story for another time).
Once I arrived in Burlington and began to connect with my classmates, many of whom are still close friends, I was told by a classmate that I "had the top assistantship in the program", that the competition for the position was fierce. Oh, wow. (in the words of the late, great Joan Didion). No pressure for the guy who wasn't sure if he was good enough to succeed in graduate school, the guy who was unaware of the class migrancy he was experiencing, the code switching he would need to learn in this new environment. Graduate assistant to the Dean of Students, the "best" position among the fellowships.
Probably too much context for this story, but, now it starts. Keith, the Dean, and I were heading down College Street to a meeting on Church Street. As we passed many beautiful Victorian homes that were now fraternity and sorority houses one stood out from the others. Modern, new, it resembled a Pizza Hut more than a frat house. I asked Keith the story behind the odd house and he sighed...
Keith told me that the original house had burned during a bitterly cold Vermont January. As Dean he was called to the scene where the fraternity brothers stood, cold, in shock, some wearing only their underwear. Keith told me he had to find the frat president and do a headcount. He told me he was literally screaming into this guy's face (he was in shock) "do a headcount, do a headcount, tell me who is not here!" The student realized the importance of the roll call and determined that all brothers were accounted for except two. When the campus realized the fire, one of the missing brothers reappeared from staying with his girlfriend, but one brother was missing. Keith arranged for the students to be cared for and stayed with the firefighters to see what was next. What was next was awful. As the firefighters pulled down a wall to get at the flames they discovered the body of the missing brother. He had died in the fire.
Keith then said to me, "I have gone into classrooms many times to tell a student that their grandfather or grandmother, even fathers or mothers had passed. It is never easy, but we as children learn to recognize the mortality of our elders. The hardest phone call to make is to tell a parent that their child has been lost in some tragic accident. Parents aren't ready to outlive their children". He paused as though to let that sink in, and then told me something that has me emotional even as I write this nearly 40 years later. "Joe, I'm telling you this because some day you will be a Dean of Students and you will have to make that call."
Here was a man I respected, admired, loved, and he was telling the insecure, unsure new graduate student that he believed in me, that I would succeed. As I said, (after reaching for the tissues,) that conversation moves me to this day.
Keith passed away last year. Covid made travel impossible but I understand that there will be a service/recognition of his contributions once gatherings are possible again. Best of all, I know that I am not alone in having been touched by the kindness and wisdom of this great man. I can only aspire to have the impact he has had on others. I hope to be remembered as fondly.