A Season for Patience

0 Views· 12/04/22
Phillip Berry | Orient Yourself
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Click the arrow above to listen to this post. Patience is power. Patience is not an absence of action; rather it is “timing,” it waits on the right time to act, for the right principles, and in the right way. Fulton Sheen A Quest for Action We spend so much time in action. As leaders, managers, and working professionals, we are measured in what we produce. Our effectiveness is tied to our productivity. This fuels our need for action: make it happen, get it done, keep moving. All of that productivity produces an obsession with the kinetic, the real or imagined sense of clear progress. But work and life move in seasons. And, there is a time for all of them. A time to sow and a time to reap. A time to tear down and a time to build. A time to weep and a time to laugh. A time to be silent and a time to speak. A time to make things happen and a time for patience. Even the off-season has its season. Every now and then, we need to create space for a time to wait and to let things unfold. We need a season of patience. In a season of patience, we need to nurture. It is a time to feed and water our crops, our herds, our projects, ourselves. It is a break from the big, sweeping efforts of championships, planting, and harvest, and a move to the seemingly slow interior work that seems to move nothing. However, the season of patience isn’t passive, merely relegating us to waiting for something to happen. Patience demands a different kind of output…and a different kind of input. It has its own rhythm. A cadence slowed to a resting heartbeat, but still moving life along. A Time for Preparation This is the season of preparation. The season of reflection. The season of waiting with intention. It demands that we don’t tweak the seeds we’ve planted or overwork tired muscles. It allows for replenishment, restocking, restoring, and rejuvenation. We feel the natural flow of such seasons as they follow their own patterns. Patterns that don’t always align with quarterly expectations, deadlines, or quotas. They will vary with the calendar, our chosen profession, and the cycle of life in which we find ourself, our role, or our organization. Patience can be incredibly difficult as it calls us to engage in a counter-intuitive way. It is not retreat but it also is not invasion. We want to launch our assault and force the issue but the timing may not be right – the season has not yet come. In waiting, we struggle with what to DO. We struggle with “non-productivity” and the sense that we are not making something happen. Forward motion must be active, right? The season of patience demands different skills. It needs the branch that bends with the wind. It needs the boat that rolls with the tide. It needs the wings that rest upon the airstream, allowing momentum to generate lift. It needs the hands that occupy themselves in other ways, while the heart and mind move in the flow of this particular moment of time. For the drivers of the world, this can be maddening. We want to see movement. We want action. We want dramatic results. We want to see the seed turn into the rose and bloom quickly. We want it all on our schedule. We want to throw gas on the fire. Know Your Seasons So what do we do? Know thyself. Know your seasons. With time and perspective, it all makes much more sense. Of course you want it when you want it. Wall Street will not change. Investors will not care about your seasons. Our society does not want to wait for anything. Your own internal clock will still alarm loudly with other expectations. Step back. See the bigger picture. Look back a

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