Exercising Patience

Although many situations require us to act and/or think immediately and decisively, there comes a point when we have to be patient. We may not be patient people but some situations mandate that we be patient. I have to admit that I’m not a patient person. I do, however, understand that being successful and remaining successful entails being patient sometimes. I’ve been dealing with some problems for the last two years that I wanted to act immediately and decisively on, but I found that acting immediately and decisively on those problems would not be in my best interest. Yes, I could have solved those problems immediately but I would have missed out on what time has placed in my favor to address those problems with even more auspicious results for me. It’s almost time for me reap the benefits of exercising patience with several serious problems that I’ve let time work in my complete favor. Again, I’m a tremendously impatient person and a person who loves to respond immediately to problems, but I have learned that allowing time to benefit you on some problems will help you to address them in their totality and not just the surface level issues of the problems.

I understand that it can be hard to not immediately respond to a problem that emerges from someone doing something wrong to you. I am a person who has to work hard to try to calm myself down because I don’t mind popping you in your mouth in a heartbeat when you do something wrong to me. Over the past two years, God has been really good to some folks because they were supposed to be…(the Holy Spirit just interceded, so I cannot finish this sentence). Lol! When people do things wrong to you, I have learned that you cannot try to respond to them all immediately all the time. You will find yourself fighting daily battles and never having an opportunity to work on advancing yourself if you attempt to respond to all things people do to you all the time.

I’ve also learned to be more patient in my personal and business relationships. I’m so aggressive that I don’t really want to wait on anything. I’ll see something or someone that I want in a personal and business relationship and I’ll just immediately try to seize the thing or person. This is not a wise thing to do, however. Everything is not made to be seized immediately. You can actually disrupt the natural connection that you have to things and people when you rush your relation to those things and people. When you are as aggressive as I am, it’s vital for you to take a step back and think about how your aggressiveness might be perceived as a tremendously negative thing in a personal and business relationship. You don’t have to change who you are but you can consider how you might better position your natural aggressiveness to benefit you the most. You can allow your aggressiveness to manifest itself in other ways than just immediate reactions.

When you make a conscious effort to be more patient, you can learn serious truths about yourself. You might learn that the things or people you desired are not really what you need or want or what you need or want immediately. When you are not willing to exercise patience sometimes, you could prevent yourself from benefitting from the critical thinking you need. The lack of patience can really lead us to some ignorant decisions.

Of course, it’s essential to act immediately and decisively in many situations, but your dominant approach should not be to act immediately and decisively all the time. When you are always ready to make decisions immediately and decisively, people can begin to start to anticipate you; you become predictable. You need to have some level of unpredictability in your personal and business relationships.

Exercising patience is not being weak—it can often reveal your true strength.

Antonio Maurice Daniels

University of Wisconsin-Madison

8 comments

  1. I enjoyed reading this post. Thank you for sharing. Patience is a must for many individuals. I wish that people exercised it more often for their personal benefit and not to just “put on” for how others want them be or react. As always keep your post coming!

    1. I agree very much. When one reacts and acts like others want he or she to react and act, then the person becomes nothing more than the construct or pet of those people. By exercising patience, one has the opportunity to sit back and think about the fact that he or she has the freedom to be himself or herself. People can discover new freedoms when they exercise patience. One can find a sense of peace and understanding in patience. There’s joy in patience, even when it does not immediately surface, joy will come when we are patient. As a very impatient person, my journey to exercise patience more is offering new perspectives, new victories, new pleasures, new understandings, new hopes, new discoveries, and new dreams. Thanks for reading and your response.

  2. I’m working on this whole patience thing. Something I’m learning how to do in every aspect of my life. From work to relationships, I have to practice it more. Learning how to be patient has helped me avoid making those ‘ignorant decisions.’

    Thanks for writing the post! Inspiring.

  3. oh gosh, i do too. i knew for a long time that patience is virtue. it is just so hard to put it into action and exercise it. i believe it’s constant practice and invloves a lot of meditating and not even perfected. most people react immediately to stimuli and leave the virtue behind especially when they feel they are being attacked. this is also inline with the domestic violence thing. it always takes two to tango for most cases. both men and women were impatient that it leads to violence. this is what we people really need to practice next to honesty to avoid clashes and indecision…

    good luck to us all
    GOD bless

    jacque

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