The Art of Waiting Rightly: Why Patience Is the Wrong Word
Most people find waiting
difficult. Whether it’s a child squirming in front of a marshmallow or an
entrepreneur itching to launch before the market is ready, delay triggers
anxiety, frustration, and impulsive action.
But there’s waiting that drains
you—and waiting that prepares you.
The famous Stanford marshmallow
experiment showed that children who could wait for two marshmallows instead of
eating one immediately tended to have better life outcomes years later. The
secret wasn't sheer willpower. It was strategy: they covered their eyes, turned
away, sang to themselves. They didn't just bear the wait.
They worked the wait.
The Problem with
"Patience"
Let’s be honest: the word patience feels
passive. It sounds like gritting your teeth, enduring discomfort, and hoping
relief comes soon. That’s not what wise waiting is about.
Better words exist:
- Composure – calm readiness without
suffering
- Strategic delay – waiting as a tactical
choice
- Joyful waiting – celebrating small
milestones along the way
- Calculated non-action – deliberately
holding fire until victory is certain
These aren’t soft skills. They’re
strategic disciplines.
What Sun Zi Teaches Us About
Waiting
"Winners plan first and
only choose to fight the war they can win. Losers fight first and then try to
win—which is too late."
If you haven’t planned to win, or
winning isn’t yet possible, don’t act. Wait. Gather intelligence. Brainstorm.
When you are sure you can win, then move decisively.
Waiting rightly means
distinguishing between:
- Productive planning (which requires
delay)
- Procrastination (delay without
intelligence)
One is discipline. The other is
fear.
The I-Ching's Wisdom: The Need
Hexagram (需)
The ancient Chinese text describes
waiting as clouds gathering in the sky—rain is coming, but not yet
falling. During this time:
- Prepare actively – waiting is not
killing time. Learn, build, strengthen.
- Maintain joy – celebrate small
successes. Joy is the secret to a long wait.
- Keep integrity – even under complaints
or sabotage, don't lose your calm.
- Observe and reflect – watch the world
objectively while your internal strength grows.
- Expect surprises – when the wait ends,
treat unexpected developments with respect.
The bigger the opportunity, the
greater the challenges during the waiting period.
The Steve Jobs Example: Waiting
for the Next Big Thing
In 1998, Apple was on the brink of
death. Steve Jobs returned and launched the iMac—a beautiful, colorful,
all-in-one computer. It saved Apple. Sales soared. The company was alive again.
Reporters asked him: What's
next? What are you working on?
Jobs replied that he would wait.
He wasn't going to force the next product. He would let the next big
thing reveal itself.
For three full years (1998
to 2001), Apple seemed quiet. Competitors churned out mediocre products.
Critics wondered if Jobs had run out of ideas.
Then came the iPod. A tiny hard
drive that put "1,000 songs in your pocket." Then the iTunes Store.
Then the iPhone. Then the App Store.
Those three years of waiting
weren't empty. Jobs and his team were observing, experimenting, and preparing.
They didn't rush into digital music or mobile phones until they saw a clear
path to win. When they moved, they moved decisively—and changed the world.
Jobs understood Sun Zi's
principle: If you cannot win, do not act. Wait, gather intelligence,
and only strike when victory is certain.
Six Practical Rules for Waiting
Rightly
- Have perseverance – prepare for a long
wait.
- Don't mind internal complaints – your
own frustration will speak. Listen, but don't obey.
- Prepare for external sabotage – others
may not understand your delay.
- Prepare for attacks – strategic waiting
often invites criticism.
- Celebrate small successes – interim
rewards keep hope alive.
- Stay ready for good surprises – when
opportunity arrives, be prepared to act with integrity.
How to Learn This Skill
From behavioral science and
ancient wisdom combined:
- Distract yourself – shift attention
away from the object of waiting
- Add friction – make impulsive action
harder (e.g., 24-hour purchase rule)
- Break time into chunks – “just five
more minutes,” repeated
- Reframe waiting as a choice – “I choose
to wait for a better result”
- Practice low-stakes waiting daily –
extra seconds before eating, texting, replying
- Forgive yourself when you fail –
self-criticism makes waiting harder
The Bottom Line
Waiting is not passive endurance.
It is active preparation with strategic composure.
Sun Zi gives us the
calculation: Can I win? If not, don't act.
The I-Ching gives us the
attitude: Wait with joy, integrity, and readiness.
Steve Jobs gives us the
proof: After saving Apple, he waited three years—and then delivered the
iPod, iPhone, and more.
And the marshmallow test gives us
the evidence: Those who learn to wait well tend to live well.
So the next time you find yourself
in a waiting period—whether for a career move, a relationship decision, a
creative project, or simply a reply—don't grit your teeth.
Hold steady. Prepare. Celebrate
small wins. And move only when the time is truly ripe.
That's not patience.
That's mastery.