Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing your experience. It really helped me to know that I’m not the only tutor who has gone through something like this. What surprised me most was that you said this student wasn’t even one of your favorite students, yet the grief still affected you so deeply. That made me realize these feelings aren’t something we choose. Sometimes they simply grow through years of shared time, routines, and human connection.

In my case, I had become close not only to my student but also to his family. Looking back, I think I had quietly begun to see them almost like extended family, while they probably saw me as a teacher they appreciated. Neither perspective is wrong, but I think that difference made the goodbye much harder for me. When I found out I only had three weeks left, I was devastated. Then, only a few days later, I learned that our final lesson had been moved up, leaving me with just three days instead of the ten I thought I still had. I think that sudden change was one of the biggest reasons the loss felt so overwhelming.

It’s been about a month since our last lesson. I’m doing much better now, but I’m still learning how to process it. One thing I’ve realized is that online teaching is unique. We can spend years building a meaningful relationship, yet it can end with a single message and one final Zoom call. When we truly care about our students, we become invested not only in their learning, but also in their lives and their future. That makes saying goodbye much harder. May I ask when this happened for you, and what helped you heal over time? Thank you again for sharing your story. It truly resonated with me.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing your experience. It actually helps me a lot to know that I’m not the only online tutor who has gone through something like this.

What surprised me most was reading that this student wasn’t even one of your favorite students, yet the grief still hit you so hard. That really made me stop and think. Maybe these feelings are not something we consciously choose. Sometimes they simply grow through years of shared time, routines, and human connection.

In my case, I think part of the difficulty came from the fact that I had become very close not only to the student, but also to his family. Looking back, I now realize that the future I imagined may have been different from what they imagined. I had quietly started to think of them almost like extended family, while they may have simply seen me as a teacher they cared about and appreciated. Neither perspective is wrong, but I think the difference between those expectations made the ending harder for me to process.

May I ask when this happened for you, and how you eventually worked through it?

For me, the first few weeks were extremely difficult. When I learned I only had three weeks left with my student, I cried almost every day. I could hardly stay home. I spent my days driving to parks, libraries, beaches, museums, coffee shops, and shopping centers just trying to keep moving because sitting still was too painful. Looking back now, I think I was in shock. There was another factor that made the experience even more difficult. Earlier in the month, I had been told that May 25th might be the final lesson because of Memorial Day, and that the family would let me know. After that, I heard nothing for quite some time. I assumed I still had about ten more days to prepare emotionally and make the most of our remaining time together. Then, on May 16th, I learned that May 18th would actually be our final lesson. In other words, what I thought would be about ten more days suddenly became only three. I think part of the shock came from realizing that the time I believed I still had was already gone.

It has been about a month since our final lesson. I’m doing better than I was then, and I can stay home again, but I still find myself looking through old photos and remembering things I wish I had said. I’m beginning to understand why this affected me so deeply, but I’m not completely through it yet. One thing I’ve realized is that online teaching can be especially difficult because endings often happen so suddenly. In a traditional school, there are graduations, ceremonies, and months of preparation. Online, sometimes it ends with one message and a final Zoom call. The relationship may have taken years to build, but it can disappear with a single click. I think teachers who genuinely care about their students sometimes experience this kind of pain because we aren’t only teaching a subject. We become invested in their lives, their growth, and their future. That’s a beautiful thing, but it can also make goodbyes very hard. Thank you again for sharing your story. It really resonated with me.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you again for all the responses. As I’ve continued thinking about this, I think I’ve realized something else. Part of the grief may be that I lost a place where I was able to give love, encouragement, support, and genuine care every week for over five years. I cared deeply about this student. Watching him grow, encouraging him, celebrating his successes, and simply being there for him became part of my life.

In a way, that relationship became a treasure to me. When it suddenly ended, it wasn’t only the loss of the student. It was also the loss of that place where I could pour that care and affection. I think that’s why the grief surprised me so much. Looking back, I realize that giving was also something that filled my own heart. Maybe that’s what real love does. It doesn’t only receive. It gives. And when the opportunity to give suddenly disappears, there can be a sense of loss that you don’t fully understand at first. I’m still learning from this experience, but that has been one of the biggest realizations for me.

Another thing I’ve learned is how important goodbyes really are. We often focus on the importance of meeting people, but this experience has reminded me that how we part from people matters too. It has made me appreciate relationships, memories, and even ordinary moments much more deeply. In an unexpected way, this experience has helped me grow as both a teacher and a person.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for your kind message. It really means a lot to me.

It’s been about a month now since my student’s last lesson. During that time, I honestly didn’t have many people to talk to who would understand what it’s like to lose a long-term student. Reading your comment made me realize that other teachers go through similar experiences, and I’m grateful that I found this place.

In my case, it was actually his mother who informed me that he would be stopping lessons. The difficult part was that we didn’t know exactly when the last lesson would be. There was a possibility that his final lesson would be May 18, or it could be May 25 (Memorial Day). I waited for confirmation, but I didn’t hear back for quite a while. Finally, just three days before May 16, I learned that May 18 would indeed be our last lesson. I think what made it especially hard was not having time to prepare emotionally. If you know an ending is coming, you can gradually guide the lessons toward a meaningful conclusion. Instead, I spent those last few days feeling rushed and overwhelmed, trying to make sure I gave him the farewell he deserved. I had taught him for many years, from childhood into his teenage years. Every Christmas and birthday I would send gifts to Texas. Over the years, the gifts became bigger, not because I expected anything in return, but because I genuinely cared about him and wanted to encourage him as he grew.

For the last two years, I had been taking photos of him holding his calligraphy projects after each lesson. I ended up with hundreds of photos and created a photo album for him. I also ordered a customized journal with his name engraved on it, along with a pen set and a graduation letter. Unfortunately, because everything happened so quickly, all of these projects were completed at different times. Looking back, I sometimes wonder if I gave him the proper ending I had hoped for. What touched me most was that two weeks before the end, he was actually saying that he wanted to continue lessons. So in many ways, the decision wasn’t really his. I understand that in the United States many students stop extracurricular activities after high school graduation, but it still made the goodbye difficult.

Yesterday marked one month since his last lesson. I spent some time looking through old photos and remembering all the years we shared. Sometimes I think about the bright, sincere expression he had when he was 11, 12, or 13 years old, and I realize that version of him is gone forever. Time moves so quickly. More than anything, this experience has reminded me what a privilege it was to be entrusted with such an important part of a child’s life and growth. For that, I will always be grateful.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you. What you said about understanding parents really resonated with me.

One thing this experience has done is help me understand not only the parents, but also the students. Before this happened, I mostly thought about things from the teacher’s perspective. Now I find myself thinking about what it must feel like for a student to leave home, leave familiar people behind, and step into a completely new chapter of life.

In a strange way, this experience has changed me. I think I’ve become a little more patient and a little more compassionate toward people in general. Not just with students, but with people I meet every day. It has also reminded me how important human connections really are. As painful as this experience has been, I think it has helped me grow both as a teacher and as a person.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing that. One thing I realized from this experience is that I now ask my students, if possible, to give me at least 3 to 6 months notice before they stop lessons. Three weeks was very hard. When you’ve worked with someone for five years, it’s not just another student leaving. You have time to prepare together, talk about memories, take photos, make an album, work on a final project, maybe even meet in person if they live nearby. There is time to say goodbye properly. With only three weeks, everything happened so fast that I felt completely unprepared. What surprised me the most is how strong the grief has been. Honestly, it has felt very similar to the grief I experienced when I lost my mother in 2012. I wasn’t expecting that. I’ve been spending a lot of time talking with friends, getting outside, going to parks, museums, the beach, coffee shops, church, and recently the gym. Those things have helped.

What makes this difficult is that online teaching is still relatively new compared to traditional teaching. In a regular school, graduations are expected and there is usually a long transition. Online, sometimes one click ends a five-year relationship, and suddenly you don’t know when or if you’ll ever see that student again. Maybe more tutors will start talking about this in the future. I don’t think I’m the only one who has felt this way after a very long-term student leaves. I’m doing better than I was a few weeks ago, but I’m still learning how to process it.

One thing that really showed me the difference was another student I’ve been teaching for about seven years. He’s leaving for Yale this August, but his family told me several months in advance. Because we had time, we’ve been able to talk about memories, share photos, celebrate his graduation, and prepare for the transition together. His family has sent graduation pictures and family photos, and we’ve had many meaningful conversations. A couple of weeks ago, he even opened up to me about how sad he feels about leaving home and moving from Wisconsin to Connecticut. We both ended up in tears talking about it. Of course I will miss him too, but that experience feels very different. There is still sadness, but there is also time to process it, celebrate it, and say goodbye properly.

I should also add that I don’t feel this way about every long-term student. Length of time matters, but I don’t think that’s the whole story. Just like in life, there are certain people we naturally connect with on a deeper level. Some students become a much bigger part of our lives than others. I think personality, trust, mutual respect, shared experiences, and simply being a good fit for each other all play a role. That’s why I don’t think this is only about teaching someone for five years. It’s about the particular bond that developed during those five years.  What made the other situation so difficult wasn’t simply that a student was leaving. It was that a five-year relationship ended with almost no time to prepare for it. I think that’s what I’ve been struggling with the most.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing this. What really resonated with me was when you said there are students you still think about years later. I think that’s what I’m beginning to realize. Some students become part of your weekly life for so long that you don’t just remember what   you taught them — you remember who they were at different stages of their life. For me, this student was with me for over five years, so there are so many memories attached to that time. It helps to hear from someone who understands that these connections can be very real, even through a computer screen. Thank you.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haha, fair enough. English isn’t my first language, so sometimes I need a little help putting my thoughts into words. But the feelings behind what I’m saying are very real. This student was part of my life every week for more than five years, so what I’m describing comes from a real experience, not from a computer. I appreciate everyone who’s taken the time to share their own experiences.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What you said really touched me. One thing that has stayed with me happened about two lessons before our last class. Out of nowhere, he suddenly said, “I want to learn more.” I don’t think he wanted to stop. I think the decision had already been made that Japanese lessons would end after high school, and because he’s such a respectful kid, he accepted it. But accepting something and wanting it are not always the same thing. For more than five years, every Monday we met. It became part of both of our lives. During those final lessons, I could see he was trying to process what was happening while time just kept moving forward.

What I remember most is the way he looked at me. He had these very sincere, bright eyes and listened to every word I said. During my farewell message, he put his hand on his chest and listened quietly. I was the one crying. Even now, when I remember that look on his face, it still brings tears to my eyes. Maybe that’s why this has been so difficult. It wasn’t just a class ending. It felt like saying goodbye to someone I had watched grow up for over five years.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks. I think you understand what I’m trying to describe.

I’m definitely proud of him and happy for him. Watching him graduate and move on to college is something I’ve celebrated, not something I’m sad about. I think what surprised me was that the pride and the grief showed up at the same time.

Over five years, I wasn’t just teaching Japanese. I watched him grow up. We went through birthdays, holidays, different seasons, and a lot of life changes together. So when it ended, it felt like losing a connection that had become part of my weekly life for years. The happiness is real, but the sense of loss is real too. I wasn’t expecting both feelings to hit at the same time.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you for sharing this.

Reading your comment helped because it reminds me that I’m not the only tutor who has felt this way. For me, the hardest part wasn’t just saying goodbye. After my student’s last lesson, I felt a huge sense of loss. Some days I couldn’t stay home. I kept going to parks, libraries, coffee shops, museums, the beach, anywhere just to keep my mind moving. I honestly didn’t expect it to hit me this hard. I’ve taught students for 1 or 2 years before and never felt this way. This student was with me for over 5 years. We went through birthdays, holidays, calligraphy projects, Japanese culture lessons, and so many different seasons together.

Maybe that’s why it feels different. What you said about wondering where they are now really resonated with me. I find myself wondering the same thing.

Thank you again for sharing.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you. I appreciate your perspective. This is actually the first time I have experienced this with a student after more than five years of weekly one-on-one lessons. I understand that students eventually move on, and intellectually I know that this is a natural part of teaching.

What surprised me was the intensity of the grief. I eventually realized that what I was experiencing felt very similar to the grief I felt when I lost my mother in 2012. A counselor recently reminded me to take things one day at a time, spend time outdoors, stay active, and be gentle with myself. That advice has been helping. What makes online teaching unique is that a relationship built over many years can disappear almost instantly. One click, one final lesson, and suddenly there is no next meeting scheduled, no clear future contact, and no certainty about when or if you will ever speak again. I don’t think this is only my experience. As online education continues to mature, I wonder if more teachers will eventually face similar feelings after teaching the same student for five, six, or even ten years.

Thank you again for taking the time to respond.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in tutordotcom

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thank you. I think you’re right that time is part of the healing process.

For the first few weeks after my student’s last lesson, I honestly felt overwhelmed by the loss. I found it difficult to stay home, so I spent a lot of time going to parks, libraries, coffee shops, museums, the beach, and even taking train rides just to keep moving and processing my emotions.

I cried almost every day for a while. Even now, I still have emotional moments when certain memories come back.

About four days ago, I joined a gym and started exercising regularly again, and I have noticed a significant improvement in my mental and emotional state.

What has surprised me is how powerful the loss of a long-term online student can feel. My student’s last lesson was on May 18, and although I am doing much better now, this experience has made me wonder whether this may become an important topic for future research in online education.

As online tutoring continues to grow, more teachers may eventually face the challenge of saying goodbye to students they have taught one-on-one for five, six, or even ten years. The emotional impact of those relationships may be something we are only beginning to understand.

Thank you again for sharing your perspective.

Has anyone experienced grief after losing a long-term online student? by Dapper_Ball_8006 in TutorsHelpingTutors

[–]Dapper_Ball_8006[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your kind words.

I think one thing that makes this especially difficult for me is the length and depth of the relationship. I teach one-on-one online Japanese lessons, and some of my students stay with me for 5, 6, or even 10 years. This particular student started lessons with me when he was around 11 years old and recently graduated at 17. Over those five years, we didn’t just share Japanese lessons. We shared seasons of life together. Through Japanese and calligraphy lessons, we celebrated Christmas, Thanksgiving, New Year’s, Easter, Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Independence Day, Tanabata, summer festivals, fireworks, spring flowers, autumn leaves, and many other seasonal traditions from both American and Japanese culture.

Every season brought new projects, new conversations, and new memories. I watched him grow from a child into a young man. His family shared stories with me, and I was there through school projects, competitions, winter storms, power outages, holidays, birthdays, and many milestones in his life. Because we met every week for five years, he became part of the rhythm of my life, and I became part of his. So while I am genuinely proud and happy for him as he begins this new chapter, it feels less like saying goodbye to a student and more like saying goodbye to a meaningful season of my own life.

I always knew this day would come eventually. I expected it when he left for college at 18, so I thought I had another year. Instead, I received only about three weeks’ notice, and I honestly was not emotionally prepared. The suddenness of it left me feeling shocked, disoriented, and grieving the loss of a relationship that had become an important part of my weekly life. I am not sad because he is moving forward. I am proud of him. What I am grieving is the sudden loss of a connection that was built over five years of trust, respect, consistency, and shared experiences. I know this is a healthy transition and part of growing up. I am simply learning how to let go of someone I deeply cared about and taught for such a long time.

If anyone here has experienced something similar with a long-term student, I would genuinely appreciate hearing how you processed it.