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Personal Development

Providence, persistence, and patience; The three Ps to building success and a flourishing life

“We can either pay now and play later or play now and pay later. Either way, we pay.” John Maxwell

Photo Courtesy of uBreakifix North - Las Vegas

True success isn’t merely an output; it’s the fruit of steady effort, deep character, and trust that some results depend on forces beyond ourselves. This blend of determination, disciplined waiting, and faith forms the main axis of a flourishing life.

We live in an age allergic to waiting. We are wired for instant gratification; the dopamine rush of “now.” Yet, what makes life truly meaningful often unfolds in the slow, deliberate rhythm of time. The Biblical wisdom that “to everything there is a season” feels almost like an afterthought to a generation raised on speed.

“Success is simply a matter of luck. Ask any failure.”

Earl Wilson once remarked with irony, “Success is simply a matter of luck. Ask any failure.” His statement pierces our cultural impatience: the assumption that success is random, when in truth, it is the result of unseen persistence. We admire outcomes, not the process that forged them. Champions are celebrated in the ring, but their victory is conceived long before: in sweat, silence, and obscurity.

Perseverance is not merely a moral virtue; it is a developmental necessity. Every enduring achievement is an act of delayed gratification. Neuroscience even supports this: studies show that individuals who can delay immediate pleasure for long-term goals (as demonstrated in the classic “Marshmallow Test”) tend to achieve higher success and emotional stability over time.

The same holds true spiritually. God rarely entrusts great responsibilities to untested hands. Blessings without character become burdens. God will not give you what your character cannot sustain. A patient soul is not passive; it is quietly active: sowing, watering, and trusting the timing of providence. Like the farmer who cannot command the rain, we must learn to labour faithfully while accepting that some outcomes lie beyond human control.

The story of the Chinese bamboo tree remains one of the most vivid metaphors for perseverance. For four years, the farmer waters the seed without visible progress. Then, in the fifth year, within six short weeks, the tree shoots up to 80 feet, but the miracle was not in its sudden growth; it was in its unseen preparation. During those silent years, the bamboo was developing deep, intricate roots strong enough to sustain its towering height.

This is the hidden architecture of success. Growth is often subterranean before it becomes spectacular. Like the bamboo, we too must cultivate our inner life, building emotional endurance, spiritual depth, and moral integrity. Without those roots, our achievements collapse under their own weight.

“The cost of avoiding discipline is deferred pain.”

Modern culture celebrates acceleration, “move fast and break things,” as Silicon Valley once declared. Yet, what is built fast often breaks faster. Mushrooms appear overnight, but so do they decay. Oaks take decades, but they endure for centuries. Success without structure is fragile. The cost of avoiding discipline is deferred pain. Every life lesson has an invoice attached only the timing differs. So, focus on formation before manifestation. Build depth before visibility. If your roots are deep, no storm will uproot you.

There remains, however, a mystery that human effort alone cannot explain, the element of providence. For all our striving, certain doors open only by grace. History, nature, and scripture converge on one truth: the ultimate outcomes of life are not fully ours to control.

This is not fatalism; it is humility. To acknowledge providence is to recognize that human labour and divine orchestration co-exist. Therefore, we must live with a paradox: work as if everything depends on you, and trust as if everything depends on God. When life resists logic, surrender to providence. When success finally arrives, remember the Source that sustained you through the silent years.

In the end, success is not merely what we achieve, but who we become in the process

 

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