Last year’s shooting of the newspaper staff in Annapolis got me thinking about the downside of holding a grudge. I doubt if there’s anyone in the world who doesn’t feel some resentment over a long ago insult or perceived wrong. How long can you hold a grudge?
Fast forward: twenty years later. I’m back in my hometown with a new job, and I’m seeing this guy at public events and social gatherings more often than I would like. At first, I managed to avoid him. But then I would see him again, and the knot in my stomach told me I was still holding a grudge for that long ago incident. It was not pleasant; I hadn’t felt that way for a long time, so I took another look at this man, and realized he wasn’t really a monster, just an ordinary guy fighting serious health problems and a failing business. He had probably forgotten making such cruel remarks, and hopefully, he had matured enough that he would not do it again.
Then I remembered the words of Martin Luther King, Jr. “Hate is too great a burden to bear, so I chose love.” I won’t say I began to love my former detractor, but carrying a grudge was too great a burden for me to bear, so I let it go.