Columnists, Opinion, Z - TOP HOME
 By  Will Stults Published 
2:39 pm Thursday, November 14, 2019

Silent gratitude

We’ve entered the season of gratitude.

My November started with news that I never thought would make me feel thankful, but it did. Nov. 2 at the age of 84, my favorite teacher Mrs. Allen passed away.

She was an English teacher, but her greatest gift was encouragement. She never missed a chance to recognize someone’s accomplishments outside of class. She made sure everyone knew when every game of every sport would be played. She let drama students perform their monologues. She let the speech team speak. She let me read my awful poetry and short stories to the class.

I still remember her patting me on the back and saying, “Will, you have so much to say. The world needs to hear it.” But the thing she said that stuck with me in the biggest way was, “Your poems sound like songs to me.”

The year after she was my teacher, I learned guitar with the intention of playing some Pearl Jam songs and having something to do to kill time. Soon, however, words started coming to me – words to songs I’d never heard before. I remember thinking, “Mrs. Allen said I could write songs.” And so I did.

I believe God knows what we’ll need before we need it and sends angels like Mrs. Allen to give it to us.

I thought of her often. Early on, when I would be so nervous before shows, I would play through a list of encouraging things people had told me: my friend Jason saying, “Man, you can really do that;” Momma saying, “If you just keep at it, something good’s gonna happen;” and Mrs. Allen saying, “You have so much to say. The world needs to hear it.”

She was with me at coffee houses. She was with me at the VBC. She was with me at The Bluebird Café.

For years I thought about calling her but was scared to. I thought it would be awkward, and I was afraid she wouldn’t remember me.

But most good things in my life have been on the other side of fear, so one day I finally did. It was awkward – but just for a little bit – and of course she did not remember me out of thousands of students.

But that didn’t matter. It wasn’t about me. It was about her. She said, “You teach so many kids. The best thing you can do is be a positive influence and hope that will carry on in their lives.”

The call ended with her thanking me for calling and saying most people wait until someone passes to tell them.

Gertrude Stein said, “Silent gratitude isn’t very much to anyone.” I read the news of Mrs. Allen’s passing with the peace of knowing my gratitude had not remained silent.

If your gratitude has been silent, change that this November. Make the call, send the message, say “thank you.”

Mrs. Allen would tell you to. She would tell you the world needs to hear it.

Will Stults is a performing songwriter from Russellville.

Also on Franklin County Times
Safety, appearance shape cleanup operation
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 11, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE -- City crews have started working through a list of 11 unsightly properties as part of a cleanup and code-compliance effort. Mayor David...
NWSCC launches first nursing apprenticeship
Main, News, Phil Campbell, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 11, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — Northwest Shoals Community College has launched a paid nursing apprenticeship program with Decatur Morgan Hospital. The partnership co...
HB67 clears House
Main, News, Russellville
February 11, 2026
Rep. Jamie Kiel’s bill to prohibit the state from selling voters’ phone numbers for comm ercial purposes moved a step closer last week to final passag...
Clubs support American Heart Month
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
February 11, 2026
Most of us can name a family member or friend who heart disease has touched. I can. That is why heart health does not feel abstract to me. It does not...
Health care reform starts with insurers
Columnists, Opinion
February 11, 2026
Every president promises to fix health care, but the system rarely seems to change for the better. Even when so-called reforms pass, prices remain unp...
Community honors Army veteran Weidman
Franklin County, News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 11, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE – Veterans and community members gathered Feb. 2 at Pinkard Funeral Home to honor John Weidman, a U.S. Army veteran who retired as a staf...
Newspaper dresses create walk through fashion history
News, Phil Campbell, Phil Campbell Bobcats
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 11, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — Students in Aleah Harris’ fashion classes created dresses from newspapers with each group picking a different decade. Senior Ava Hall ...
DYW ‘awesome experience’ for Marshall
Franklin County, News
Chelsea Retherford For the FCT 
February 11, 2026
Backstage in Montgomery, as names were called and lights went up onstage, a Franklin County woman was among three local woman doing the unexpected — c...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *