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Personal Development

We need to stop treating patience like a personality trait you either have, or don’t

“The world tells us to “just be patient,” but rarely acknowledges how agonizing that can be. ”

Photo by Ono Kosuki

Of all the virtues, patience might be the most misunderstood, and the hardest to practice. We often talk about it as a soft, saintly quality: the ability to wait calmly, to endure without complaint, but for many people, being patient isn’t about keeping their cool in a long grocery line. It’s a daily internal battle, one that’s far more complex than it looks on the surface.

We toss around the word “impatient” too easily. Someone gets restless while waiting for test results, or agitated when plans fall apart, and we say they’re impatient as if they’ve failed some moral test, but what if impatience isn’t a flaw in character, but a signal flare from something deeper? Often, what gets dismissed as impatience is really: frustration, anxiety, unhealed trauma, or long-repressed grief. It’s rarely just about being in a hurry or being annoyed at being given the wrong coffee order.

Think about it: when a person seems “impatient,” they’re usually reacting to something that feels out of their control. A delay. A silence. An answer that never comes. Their reaction may be abrupt, or edgy, but underneath is a storm of emotion they may not even fully recognize. Impatience, in many cases, is a mask that hides a history, a buildup of disappointment, loss, or longing.

People who have lived through uncertainty, or trauma often struggle the most with patience. For them, waiting doesn’t feel neutral, it feels threatening. It activates fear. It reminds them of moments when they had to wait for bad news, or when they had no power over what happened next. So no, it’s not just that they can’t stand waiting. It’s that waiting feels like drowning in the memory of not being safe.

We need to stop treating patience like a personality trait you either have, or don’t. It’s a skill and sometimes a hard-won one. For some, patience comes naturally. For others, it’s learned through trial, through therapy, through falling apart and getting back up again. It’s forged in the fire of difficult life experiences, not handed out at birth.

Let’s be honest: modern life doesn’t make it easier. We live in a culture of instant gratification. We expect quick replies, fast results, immediate fixes, and internet downloads at the speed of light. When things take time, we see it as a problem to solve, not a process to endure. The world tells us to “just be patient,” but rarely acknowledges how agonizing that can be. Especially when what you’re waiting for matters deeply: healing, forgiveness, stability, or simply clarity.

Here’s what we often forget: patience isn’t passive. It’s not about sitting quietly with a smile. Real patience is active. It’s choosing to breathe through the discomfort. It’s resisting the urge to lash out when things aren’t happening fast enough. It’s waking up every day with questions unanswered and still finding a way to move forward. That’s courage, not complacency.

So, if you find yourself feeling impatient (especially with yourself) pause for a moment. Ask what’s underneath it. Is it fear? Sadness? Exhaustion? Are you waiting for something you never got? Are you holding onto hope that feels frayed? These are not weaknesses. They are parts of your story and naming them might be the first step toward genuine patience, not just the kind that looks good on the outside.

The next time you want to call someone “impatient,” consider instead what they might be carrying. The truth is many of the people who appear the most impatient are actually holding themselves together with remarkable strength.

Patience is hard. It’s a quiet, invisible labour, and for some, it’s nothing short of heroic.

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