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There are people who pass through our lives briefly, yet leave marks that time never erases. I briefly mentioned him in last week’s article, but his story deserves its own telling.
He was a teacher named Richard Hunter, though to nearly everyone at Bryanston School in Dorset, England, he was simply known as “Bunty.”
I arrived at boarding school at the age of ten. To some boys it may have been an adventure, but for others, including me, it could feel lonely, intimidating, and emotionally overwhelming. The environment was not one that naturally nurtured vulnerability. You learned quickly to hide weakness, suppress fear, and simply endure.
Yet within that world there are sometimes individuals who quietly change everything.
Many years later, long after leaving school, I found myself writing Bunty a letter. By then he had already passed away. What surprised me was not that I still remembered him, but how deeply his influence had stayed with me across the decades.
“It’s the memories of 25 years ago that finds me writing this letter,” I began.
As I wrote, memories returned of a frightened teenager struggling to find confidence and direction. One passage captured what I had never fully expressed while he was alive:
“You took me under your wings without judging my weaknesses but pulling on my strength.”
At a time when I often saw only my shortcomings, Bunty saw something else. He offered encouragement without fanfare, guidance without judgment, and kindness without expectation of recognition.
Reading the memorial service written after his death helped me understand that my experience was not unique. Others saw the same qualities I had seen.
He was described as patient, modest, compassionate, and deeply human. One passage spoke of his willingness to share in the “difficulties, frustrations and sadnesses” of his students. Another described his belief that life could not be measured by material success, status, or outward achievement.
“Don’t try to quantify the qualitative,” he often said.
That line has stayed with me.
So much of life encourages us to measure ourselves by numbers: income, achievements, titles, possessions, net worth, and accolades.
Yet some of the most important forces in our lives cannot be measured at all.
How do you quantify the confidence restored by a few words of encouragement? How do you measure the impact of someone who helps a struggling child believe in himself again? What value do you place on compassion shown at exactly the moment it is needed most?
I doubt Bunty ever realized how many lives he shaped in small, almost invisible ways. Perhaps that is the nature of true influence. It rarely announces itself at the time. Only years later do we recognize its significance.
Toward the end of my letter, I wrote: “I wish now you could see what I have become.”
Those words were never about accomplishments. They were about gratitude.
Like many people, I have stumbled along the way. I have experienced failures, disappointments, and moments of self-doubt. But I have also built a career, raised a family, and lived a life that younger versions of myself might never have imagined.
Part of that journey was made possible because one teacher saw strengths that I could not yet see in myself.
Richard Hunter passed away only months after I left school, losing a battle with cancer that he fought with remarkable courage. In the last letter I received from him, he wrote, “I keep fighting this damn disease.” Decades later, those words still resonate with me. They speak not only of his struggle, but of the lesson he left behind. Life would bring disappointments, setbacks, and moments of self-doubt, but whenever they came, I did my best to follow Bunty’s example and simply keep fighting.
Looking back now, my memories of boarding school are no longer defined solely by hardship. They are also defined by gratitude for the rare individuals whose kindness can alter the direction of another person’s life without ever asking for recognition in return.
Perhaps that is why I am writing this today. Not because Bunty needs to know, but because I do.
And perhaps that is the real measure of a life well lived: not what we accumulate, but what we leave behind in other people.
Richard Hunter : March 1926 – December 1977
My two children had the same English teacher three years apart. With my daughter who was an excellent student you would read very thoughtful comments on her corrected papers. My son at that time was what I would call a generally disinterested student. The teacher’s comments on his papers were just as thoughtful. At our annual school district meeting (a New England thing) I sought the teacher out and praised him for making equal effort at commenting on unequal students’ work.
Maybe it was because he really loved teaching. He had left a job on Wall Street to teach.
Thanks David for the comment. I suspect that’s exactly it, teaching can be so rewarding.
The best teachers seem to see the person, not just the grades. What impressed me most about Bunty was that he made you feel valued regardless of where you stood academically. Your English teacher sounds very much cut from the same cloth.
Andrew, like many others, your post here reminded me of two different kinds of teachers. One group cared, showed respect, and offered both encouragement and guidance. The other group really didn’t care, and just got by doing the minimum. Their influence was often negative.
On reflection, there is a third group – – – the ones that left no mark at all. These were the ones who merely delivered the lessons.
Thank you Jeff for the comment.
That’s a wonderful observation. Looking back, I think you’re right, there are teachers who inspire us, teachers who discourage us, and a much larger group we simply forget. The fact that we still remember certain teachers decades later says something remarkable about the influence they had on our lives.
Andrew, what a deeply human post. I was never lucky enough to have a teacher like that, though I’m now good friends with two of my former teachers — we met again through racket sports. Interestingly, neither of them can really remember me as a pupil. I’m still not sure whether to take that as a good sign or a bad one.
Thank you Mark. I suspect that’s probably a good sign! What struck me about Bunty wasn’t whether he remembered every student, but how he made each student feel when they needed encouragement. It’s wonderful that you’ve been able to reconnect with your former teachers and build friendships with them later in life.
Another powerful post, Andrew. As Chris writes below, my mind also went back to teachers who made a difference.
Thank you Dan for your comment. We may forget many details from our school years, but we rarely forget the individuals who believed in us when we needed it most. And going back 50 years is quite the jolt to the memory.
Beautiful tribute to your beloved teacher, Andrew. I am sure we all were thinking of the teachers who made a difference in our lives as we were reading your post. I know I was. Thanks. Chris
Thank you, Chris. I think you’re right. We may forget the lessons, but we rarely forget the people that believed in us.
When I read the following, “You learned quickly to hide weakness, suppress fear, and simply endure.” To me it sounds like advice a lawyer would give to a client as he heads off to prison. What a powerful way of describing your experience. Now I fully understand why Jonathan was permanently scarred by his time there.
Thank you David for your comment. Yes, the teasing aside one still had to deal with inedible food, and lumpy stained mattresses with sometimes fifteen or more boarders in one room.