We are taught from childhood that patience is the ultimate virtue. Good things come to those who wait. Rome wasn’t built in a day.
We elevate patience to a saintly status, conditioned to believe that if we simply hold on long enough, the universe will inevitably reward our suffering with success.
In his book Same as Ever, Morgan Housel offers a piercing observation that shatters our romanticized view of waiting:
“Patience is often stubbornness in disguise.”
That single sentence is a quiet earthquake. It forces us to examine the things we are holding onto and the real reasons why we refuse to let them go.
We like to tell ourselves we are being patientโwith a stagnant career, a fractured relationship, or a creative project that refuses to take flight. The label of “patience” feels noble. It feels righteous. It protects our ego from the sharp, uncomfortable sting of failure.
But if we strip away the noble veneer, what remains is often simple, unyielding stubbornness. It is the refusal to adapt, the refusal to admit defeat, and the refusal to accept that the world has changed while we were standing still. “I’m staying the course” is much easier to say than “I’m terrified to admit I made a mistake.”
I think about the seasons in my own life where I mistook one for the other.
I held onto projects that had lost their spark, telling myself that the breakthrough was just around the corner, just one more iteration away. Iโve held on to failing investments for far too long.
In hindsight, I wasn’t practicing patience. I was practicing avoidance. I was avoiding the grief of letting go and the daunting reality of starting over from scratch.
So, how do we distinguish between the two? How do we know when we are nurturing a slow-growing seed, and when we are merely digging our heels into the dirt and being stubborn?
The difference lies in our relationship with reality. True patience involves a quiet confidence and an active engagement with the present. It requires us to make incremental progress, to observe the feedback the world gives us, and to adjust accordingly. Patience is flexible yet realistic.
Stubbornness, on the other hand, is rigid. It ignores feedback. It closes its eyes to the changing environment and insists that reality bend to its will.
It takes vulnerability to look at something youโve poured your heart and time into and say, “This isn’t working, and I am choosing to walk away.” It is not a weakness to change your mind when the evidence suggests you should. Often, it is the ultimate act of self-awareness. Annie Duke wrote a whole book about quitting being an underutilized choice.
Sometimes, the most productive thing we can do with our time is to stop waiting, let go, and walk in an entirely new direction.
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