Subscribe to The Next 45 Years


Subscribe to Feed Subscribe to Comments


Email Subscriptions

The Art of Patience

Posted on: Thursday, March 6th, 2008 Categories: Create Lasting Success, Sustain Happiness

Adopt the pace of nature: her secret is patience.” -Ralph Waldo Emerson

The Art of Patience

Today’s world is a need it right now world. Emails, text messages, and cellular telephones have made us much more accessible and our level of accountability much higher. The expectations for immediate attention are overwhelming and can negatively impact our productivity and patience.

However, learning to be more patient can increase feelings of happiness as well as reduce stress and anxiety. Patience can also improve productivity because it creates a better state of mind, a clearer state of mind, for better decision making.

Patience is becoming a lost art. We sometimes feel others becoming more impatient with us if we are not quick to answer or respond right away which will only exacerbate our own impatience. However, most things worth having take time to obtain – they take patience. Art cannot be rushed and patience cannot be lost if the picture is to be finished.

Consider the following four strategies to help you restore the art of patience.

Keep the Proper Perspective
An effective way to establish the importance of keeping the proper perspective is to ask the following question which has been asked countless times before: Imagine you are looking at a 16 ounce glass that contains eight ounces of water. How full is this glass?

If your life perspective tends to be more pessimistic and impatient, your answer is half empty.

If your life perspective tends to be more optimistic and patient, your answer is half full.

Patience allows you to see the good things, the positive things in life. It helps you see the good in any situation and to realize the value that does exist. Keeping the proper perspective makes any situation more tolerable and it provides the patience needed to wait as the rest of the glass is being filled.

Don’t Assume
Too often what you think is what you fear the most. When a particular event or situation is off in the distance, we, as humans, have the tendency to assume the worst. We assume things will not work to plan or we will be disappointed with the results.

Assumptions lead to impatience because the lack of knowledge and uncertainty can make you feel very comfortable. Instead, consider the facts. Look to see if there is any history that can tell you what has happened in the past in order to provide assurances for the future.

In my marriage, I sometimes assume the periods of time when our intimacy is derailed, for whatever reason, will never get back on track again. I grow impatient and frustrated.

Even though my edgy attitude and irritation were not the obstacles to our intimacy barrier in the first place, they become the obstacle because my impatience creates such a negative feeling.

I’m learning to remind myself not to assume these dry spells are nothing more than just the realities of life getting in the way. I’m still learning not to assume the worst. Mary Beth still loves me and cares for me – we are just in a busy cycle.

When I’m able to keep these assumptions at bay, and my impatience low, the intimacy is restored in a very natural and loving way.

Show Empathy
Murphy’s Law always seems to be evoked when I have to run to the bank during a short lunch break and upon arriving in the bank’s lobby I’m greeted with a very long line of other exasperated customers. Not only does my impatience skyrocket, but so does my frustration and anxiety. Neither is good for my health, or my mood.

Rather than focusing on an inconvenient situation, take a full step back and consider how others are reacting to the same situation. When you are the one to provide the levity; the sense of humor, and can turn something negative into something positive, you are in charge of your own level of patience associated with the situation.

Showing empathy to others also helps you to see the circumstance for what it really is, not how it appears to be or feels. Empathy allows you to refocus your energy away from the feelings of impatience and on to something much more productive for everybody.

Providing empathy for others who are becoming increasingly impatient can allow you to hear some good advice coming from your own month – you just need to remember it when it’s your turn to receive it.

Excited by the Wait
The ability to reframe a situation by looking at it from a different point-of-view is another way to restore the art of patience.

Again, is the glass half-full or half-empty? Too often we want to rush through the here and now to get to the thing we are waiting for and anticipating. But rather than dreading the wait, learn to become excited by it. The waiting can be the hardest part when we forget to keep living during this time.

Often the gap of time between when you know something is going to happen and when it actually occurs can be one of the best times for self-awareness to take place. You can learn a lot about yourself during this period.

For example, the time spent in a marriage engagement can be focused on planning how you want to spend the rest of your life. If you are waiting to lose weight and improve your overall health, you can be excited by how you are taking back some control over your life.

The journey, the waiting, may have a more significant impact than the end result. Your impatience may keep you from gaining this experience. Better patience, on the other hand, can be the ideal catalyst for growth to occur.

A renaissance in the art of patience can help to create a beautiful life.

If you enjoyed this article, please subscribe via RSS feed or by email updates.

Please browse our Must-Read Personal Development Bookstore or receive free marriage advice from Marriage Fitness: An Alternative to Counseling.

Share This

Related Posts

9 Responses to “The Art of Patience”

  1. Cameron Schaefer Says:

    Alex,
    Great post! I know for me one of the biggest ways I fight being impatient, especially with people, is by trying to assume the best.

    Did someone just cut you off on the interstate? Maybe it was a doctor rushing to the hospital for a life-saving surgery. Is there a long line at the drive-thru? Maybe they just had a cook walk out.

    While some may call this being ignorant or naive, it is choosing to look at things from a specific perspective, with empathy, not assuming, just like you said…and I’ve found it is a huge guard against cynicism and impatience in general.

    -Cameron

  2. Tejvan Pettinger Says:

    Good article on the virtues of patience. It’s something I need to try develop…

  3. Alex Blackwell Says:

    Cameron - I agree! I don’t think it’s naive at all, it’s just looking at things for a different perspective. Thanks for sharing.

    Tejvan, patience is something I work on developing every day!

  4. Lorraine Cohen Says:

    Great post Alex

    I love your point about being excited about the wait. Great reframe.

    I will add that to my journey of having patience!

    Warmly,

    Lorraine
    http://www.powerfull-living.biz/blog

  5. Patricia - Spiritual Journey Of A Lightworker Says:

    Patience is a valuable lesson that my husband has helped me develop over our 35 years of marriage. When I learned patience, a lot of stress dropped off of my shoulders and mind. I learned to be more in the moment instead of worrying about being late for this or that situation.

    In our marriage, I learned that our being “in love” cycles in and out of my life. The Love is always there as the ever growing foundation of our marriage. I have always loved my husband but I have also gone through times when I didn’t like him very much. I have learned to look at what is it in myself that he is mirroring that I don’t like. Then I work at accepting that part of myself and loving that part of myself. This whole process can teach you patience as well.

    Loving another person in marriage or any relationship always takes committment. I probably have renewed that committment to my husband and to myself about every 10 years of our marriage. A marriage isn’t something to take for granted. Our divorce rates in the US show us how little Americans seem to value that committment.

  6. sir jorge Says:

    Yes, marriage is a tough one at times, but it’s so worth the commitment. Even at my young age, I realize that.

  7. Pat R Says:

    Alex - I surely appreciated your post as I needed to hear about patience today and feel it. I agree. When you take the time to step back from the situation or put humor into it, the urgency and need to get 20 things done at once seems to fade.

  8. Jonathan Says:

    Thank you very much, I truly enjoyed this post. I have subscribed to you RSS. Cheers

  9. Jonathan Mead Says:

    By not assuming we can remove a lot of the emotional pain we experience. We often are hurt by friends or our lover because we assume they know what we are thinking. We think “they should know” and we set ourselves up for hurt. It’s much better to ask questions.

    Great post, thank you for sharing your wisdom.

Leave a Reply

Daily Inspiration

"When I dare to be powerful, to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I'm afraid." - Audre Lorde

Blog Design
thenext45years.com All Rights Reserved
Close
E-mail It