Resentment
This word is new to me. Not that I didn’t know what it meant or how to use it. But new that it became a full ten minutes of our conversation. His sentence began with, “See, I don’t want to say these things to you without someone else present.” And then went on to explain that he holds resentment towards me.
So, I looked it up later that day. According to dictionary.com, it means, “bitter indignation at having been treated unfairly.” M-W states: a feeling of indignant displeasure or persistent ill will at something regarded as a wrong, insult, or injury.
“treated unfairly....treated unfairly...” I can’t tell someone if they should be bitter about something. But I think I can determine if someone is being treated unfairly or has suffered an insult. As long as we have been together, I have never thought of the word resentment. I never felt either of us were treated unfairly or insulted. We were doing the jobs as we signed up for them, and the best way we could, so we could reap the benefits of our hard work. For him: be successful so that he could retire early and be home by age 47. For me: do my best to raise healthy and independent children that will go out into the world and care for themselves and others.
The word resentment never found a place in my brain. I guess, I could have resented his happy hours after work through the years. While he is sitting back drinking and discussing the trials of his day with the people he spent his day with, I am figuring out how to get 3 children to three different activities all at the same time. As an exhausted mom of two prepping for Easter, I could have resented his boys’ trip to NOLA the same weekend. As a mom of 3 home with various ages on various days, one might expect me to resent his half day Saturday running and coffee time with his mini-city pal. As a mom home with an unexpected third daydreaming about traveling the world, perhaps resenting first class trips to London would be understandable. As a woman without a salary, I can’t help but feel guilty if I spend money on myself, but even when he would buy a $200 rain jacket, I would think, “Good for him! He works hard. I am glad he can treat himself.”
But I didn’t resent. Because even at my unhappiest, even at my loneliest, I believed that it would all pay off. I believed that our hard work and joint efforts would allow him to leave the big-city sooner. And I was willing to make all those sacrifices, alone, by myself, knowing that it wasn’t forever, believing that it would be worth it.
















