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Home » TRANSCRIPT: What My Worst Enemy Taught Me About Gratitude: Jim Enderle

TRANSCRIPT: What My Worst Enemy Taught Me About Gratitude: Jim Enderle

Read the full transcript of Jim Enderle’s talk titled “What My Worst Enemy Taught Me About Gratitude” at TEDxBismarck 2021 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Seeking Revenge

JIM ENDERLE: I was there to kill him. I was a Navy hospital corpsman deployed to Iraq when an al-Qaeda militant we detained had somehow obtained an envelope with my family’s address. He joyously taunted me by waving the precious envelope. He threatened my family. I planned my revenge and waited for a chance and three weeks later when enemy mortars and rockets accidentally struck where he was housed, I found my way into his compound, its fence ripped open by one of the rockets.

But instead of confrontation, I found him grievously wounded. As I came into his view and he looked up at me, I realized that any chance at survival he had depended on me. Should I use a tourniquet in my left cargo pocket or the pistol in my right hand? His skin was dark and weathered. His arm was broken in at least two places and with his good arm he tried desperately to pull himself away from me. A hopeless task.

Right then I was surprised to feel grief, sorrow. To be in such a condition yet be so terrified is to try to pull himself away from me. Selfishly I didn’t want to be seen as the murderer I went to his compound to be. Suddenly I felt responsible for his fear, for the perpetuation of war. I wished I could stop it.

I felt an unexplainable empathy. He had been sweating and then he wasn’t. It seemed to take all the energy he had just to breathe. His fingers didn’t penetrate the concrete-like desert ground and finally the wince, painful wince on his face just faded.