Just came across the following story in my gratitude studies.  It isn't about gratitude, but about love, but all things are intertwined.
As a young man, Brother Vern Crowley said he learned something    of the crucial lesson the Prophet Joseph had taught the early Saints in Nauvoo    when he told them to "love others, even our enemies as well as friends."    This is a good lesson for each of us.
    After his father became ill, Vern Crowley took responsibility for  running the family wrecking yard although he was only fifteen years of  age. Some customers occasionally took unfair advantage of the young man,  and parts were disappearing from the lot overnight. Vern was angry and  vowed to catch someone and make an example of him. Vengeance would be  his.
    Just after his father had started to recover from his illness, Vern  was making his rounds of the yard one night at closing time. It was  nearly dark. In a distant corner of the property, he caught sight of  someone carrying a large piece of machinery toward the back fence. He  ran like a champion athlete and caught the young thief. His first  thought was to take out his frustrations with his fists and then drag  the boy to the front office and call the police. His heart was full of  anger and vengeance. He had caught his thief, and he intended to get his  just dues.
    Out of nowhere, Vern’s father came along, put his weak and    infirm hand on his son’s shoulder, and said, "I see you’re a bit upset,    Vern. Can I handle this?" He then walked over to the young would-be thief    and put his arm around his shoulder, looked him in the eye for a moment, and    said, "Son, tell me, why are you doing this? Why were you trying to steal    that transmission?" Then Mr. Crowley started walking toward the office    with his arm around the boy, asking questions about the young man’s car problems    as they walked. By the time they had arrived at the office, the father said,    "Well, I think your clutch is gone and that’s causing your problem."
    In the meantime, Vern was fuming. "Who cares about his    clutch?" he thought. "Let’s call the police and get this over with."    But his father just kept talking. "Vern, get him a clutch. Get him a throwout    bearing, too. And get him a pressure plate. That should take care of it."    The father handed all of the parts to the young man who had attempted robbery    and said, "Take these. And here’s the transmission, too. You don’t have    to steal, young man. Just ask for it. There’s a way out of every problem. People    are willing to help."
    Brother Vern Crowley said he learned an everlasting lesson    in love that day. The young man came back to the lot often. Voluntarily, month    by month, he paid for all of the parts Vic Crowley had given him, including    the transmission. During those visits he asked Vern why his dad was the way    he was and why he did what he did. Vern told him something of their Latter-day    Saint beliefs and how much his father loved the Lord and loved people. Eventually    the would-be thief was baptized. Vern later said, "It’s hard now to describe    the feelings I had and what I went through in that experience. I, too, was young.    I had caught my crook. I was going to extract the utmost penalty. But my father    taught me a different way."
    A different way? A better way? A higher way? A more excellent way?  Oh, how the world could benefit from such a magnificent lesson. As  Moroni declares:
    "Wherefore, whoso believeth in God might with surety    hope for a better world," 
    "In the gift of his Son hath God prepared a more excellent    way." (Ether 12:4, 11.)
    President David O. McKay once said:
    "The peace of Christ does not come by seeking the superficial    things of life, neither does it come except as it springs from the individual’s    heart. Jesus said to his disciples: ‘Peace I leave with you, my peace I give    unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you.’ "(Gospel Ideals, Salt    Lake City: Improvement Era, 1953, pp. 39-40.)
From a talk by Howard W. Hunter, entitled "A More Excellent Way" 
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