Make your ego porous. Will is of little
importance, complaining is nothing, fame is nothing. Openness, patience,
receptivity, solitude is everything. --Rainer Maria Rilke
4 Reasons to Cultivate Patience
--by Kira M. Newman, syndicated from Greater Good, Apr 07, 2016
As
virtues go, patience is a quiet one.
It’s
often exhibited behind closed doors, not on a public stage: A father telling a
third bedtime story to his son, a dancer waiting for her injury to heal. In
public, it’s the impatient ones who grab all our attention: drivers honking in
traffic, grumbling customers in slow-moving lines. We have epic movies exalting
the virtues of courage and compassion, but a movie about patience might be a bit
of a snoozer.
Yet
patience is essential to daily life—and might be key to a happy one. Having
patience means being able to wait calmly in the face of frustration or
adversity, so anywhere there is frustration or adversity—i.e., nearly
everywhere—we have the opportunity to practice it. At home with our kids, at
work with our colleagues, at the grocery store with half our city’s population,
patience can make the difference between annoyance and equanimity, between worry
and tranquility.
Religions
and philosophers have long praised the virtue of patience; now researchers are
starting to do so as well. Recent studies have found that, sure enough, good
things really do come to those who wait. Some of these science-backed benefits
are detailed below, along with three ways to cultivate more patience in your
life.
1. Patient people enjoy better mental health
This
finding is probably easy to believe if you call to mind the stereotypical
impatient person: face red, head steaming. And sure enough, according to a 2007
study by Fuller Theological
Seminary professor Sarah A. Schnitker and UC Davis psychology professor Robert Emmons,
patient people tend to experience less depression and negative emotions, perhaps
because they can cope better with upsetting or stressful situations. They also
rate themselves as more mindful and feel more gratitude, more connection to
mankind and to the universe, and a greater sense of abundance.
In
2012, Schnitker sought
to refine our understanding of patience, recognizing that it comes in many
different stripes. One type is interpersonal patience, which doesn’t involve
waiting but simply facing annoying people with equanimity. In a study of nearly
400 undergraduates, she found that those who are more patient toward others also
tend to be more hopeful and more satisfied with their lives.
Another
type of patience involves waiting out life’s hardships without frustration or
despair—think of the unemployed person who persistently fills out job
applications or the cancer patient waiting for her treatment to work.
Unsurprisingly, in Schnitker’s study, this type of courageous patience was
linked to more hope.
Finally,
patience over daily hassles—traffic jams, long lines at the grocery store, a
malfunctioning computer—seems to go along with good mental health. In
particular, people who have this type of patience are more satisfied with life
and less depressed.
These
studies are good news for people who are already patient, but what about those
of us who want tobecome more patient? In her 2012 study, Schnitker
invited 71 undergraduates to participate in two weeks of patience training,
where they learned to identify feelings and their triggers, regulate their
emotions, empathize with others, and meditate. In two weeks, participants
reported feeling more patient toward the trying people in their lives, feeling
less depressed, and experiencing higher levels of positive emotions. In other
words, patience seems to be a skill you can practice—more on that below—and
doing so might bring benefits to your mental health.
2. Patient people are better friends and neighbors
In
relationships with others, patience becomes a form of kindness. Think of the
best friend who comforts you night after night over the heartache that just
won’t go away, or the grandchild who smiles through the story she has heard her
grandfather tell countless times. Indeed, research suggests that patient people
tend to be more cooperative, more
empathic, more equitable, and more forgiving. “Patience involves
emphatically assuming some personal discomfort to alleviate the suffering of
those around us,” write Debra R. Comer and Leslie E. Sekerka in their 2014
study.
Evidence
of this is found in a 2008
study that put participants into
groups of four and asked them to contribute money to a common pot, which would
be doubled and redistributed. The game gave players a financial incentive to be
stingy, yet patient people contributed more to the pot than other players
did.
This
kind of selflessness is found among people with all three types of patience
mentioned above, not just interpersonal patience: In Schnitker’s 2012 study, all
three were associated with higher “agreeableness,” apersonality
trait characterized by warmth,
kindness, and cooperation. The interpersonally patient people even tended to be
less lonely, perhaps because making and keeping friends—with all their quirks
and slip-ups—generally requires a healthy dose of patience. “Patience may enable
individuals to tolerate flaws in others, therefore displaying more generosity,
compassion, mercy, and forgiveness,” write Schnitker and Emmons in their 2007
study.
On
a group level, patience may be one of the foundations of civil society. Patient
people are more likely to
vote, an activity that entails waiting months or years for our elected
official to implement better policies. Evolutionary theorists believe that patience
helped our ancestors survive because it allowed them to do good deeds and
wait for others to reciprocate, instead of demanding immediate compensation
(which would more likely lead to conflict than cooperation). In that same vein,
patience is linked to trust in the people and the institutions around us.
3. Patience helps us achieve our goals
More
on Patience
Read
about the
benefits of delaying gratification.
Watch a video on
patience(embedded below) byGratitude Revealed, a journey into the science of
gratitude and emotional wellness. The GGSC created the science facts, quizzes,
and practical exercises accompanying each Gratitude Revealed video.
The
road to achievement is a long one, and those without patience—who want to see
results immediately—may not be willing to walk it. Think of the recent critiques
of millennials for being unwilling to “pay their dues” in an entry-level job,
jumping from position to position rather than growing and learning.
In
her 2012 study, Schnitker also examined whether patience helps students get
things done. In five surveys they completed over the course of a semester,
patient people of all stripes reported exerting more effort toward their goals
than other people did. Those with interpersonal patience in particular made more
progress toward their goals and were more satisfied when they achieved them
(particularly if those goals were difficult) compared with less patient people.
According to Schnitker’s analysis, that greater satisfaction with achieving
their goals explained why these patient achievers were more content with their
lives as a whole.
4. Patience is linked to good health
The
study of patience is still new, but there’s some emerging evidence that it might
even be good for our health. In their 2007 study, Schnitker and Emmons found
that patient people were less likely to report health problems like headaches,
acne flair-ups, ulcers, diarrhea, and pneumonia. Other research has found that
people who exhibit impatience
and irritability—a characteristic of the Type A personality—tend to have
more health complaints and worse sleep. If patience can reduce our daily stress,
it’s reasonable to speculate that it could also protect us against stress’s
damaging health effects.
Three ways to cultivate patience
This
is all good news for the naturally patient—or for those who have the time and
opportunity to take an intensive two-week training in patience. But what about
the rest of us?
It
seems there are everyday ways to build patience as well. Here are some
strategies suggested by emerging patience research.
Reframe
the situation. Feeling impatient is
not just an automatic emotional response; it involves conscious thoughts and
beliefs, too. If a colleague is late to a meeting, you can fume about their lack
of respect, or see those extra 15 minutes as an opportunity to get some reading
done. Patience
is linked to self-control, and consciously trying to regulate our emotions
can help us train our self-control muscles.
Practice
mindfulness. In one study, kids who
did a six-month mindfulness program in school becameless
impulsive and more willing to wait for a reward. The GGSC’s Christine Carter
alsorecommendsmindfulness
practice for parents: Taking a deep breath and noticing your feelings of anger
or overwhelm (for example, when your kids start yet another argument right
before bedtime) can help you respond with more patience.
Practice
gratitude. In another study, adults
who were feeling grateful were also better at patientlydelaying
gratification. When given the choice between getting an immediate cash
reward or waiting a year for a larger ($100) windfall, less grateful people
caved in once the immediate payment offer climbed to $18. Grateful people,
however, could hold out until the amount reached $30. If we’re thankful for what
we have today, we’re not desperate for more stuff or better circumstances
immediately.
We
can try to shelter ourselves from frustration and adversity, but they come with
the territory of being human. Practicing patience in everyday situations—like
with our punctuality-challenged coworker—will not only make life more pleasant
in the present, but might also help pave the way for a more satisfying and
successful future.
An inspiring video on patience.
Be The Change: Bring a little more patience
into your experience of life this week. For inspiration here's a passage by
Sharon Salzberg that speaks to the power of this oft-overlooked
quality.