patience

Purposeful Parenting (Part 1): The Wonder of Waiting

The school year is wrapping up, and we are heading into summer. Those words might make you feel relieved that you made it through yet another year. Time to celebrate! However, you might be dreading these next few months with the kids at home 24/7. Parenting is exhausting work!

Years ago, I wrote a 5-part blog series on Purposeful Parenting. I’m no expert, but our firstborn did just graduate from college. Around here, we’re on the cusp of a new season. We didn’t do a lot of things right, but did we learn a lot? YES! I went back and re-read those old posts, and guess what—they’re still relevant today!

Let’s dive in….

THE WONDER OF WAITING

Normally, I hate standing in line. It’s such a bore and a waste of time. Unless something interesting happens… and last week, it did.

I got a front-row seat to a spectacular lesson in parenting in the Target checkout line. I parked my buggy behind a dad and his four year-old little boy. The boy hopped on one foot. He hopped on the other. He put his chubby little hands on everything in sight. I listened to him talk nonstop, commenting on every single thing in his field of vision. 

Nutella snack pack.
Oooohhh…Chapstick.
Tape.
Batteries.
Magazine. (Why is it behind this plastic thing?)
Gum.
Candy.

Wait a second. “Candy?”

Hands and elbows flew out every which way. Like whack-a-mole, but gentler, the boy’s father patted his little head. “No, no. Not now. We’re going to the circus.”

I’ve often wondered why we don’t host birthday parties in the checkout aisles of our favorite stores. What could be more fun than duck-duck goose and ring-around-the-rosy in the midst of our favorite things? And a goody bag to choose what we want from the endless buffet of trinkets and gadgets and treats galore.

“Tic tacs.”  The boy tugged on his father’s pant leg. “Dad! Tic tacs.” His big, brown eyes pleaded for consent. “I want tic tacs!”

It was only 10:00 in the morning, but clearly in no mood to argue the merits of one snack versus another, Dad finally said, “Would you rather have the tic-tacs now or cotton candy at the circus?”

No contest, right? I mean, of course this kid is going to choose the cotton candy at the circus. They’re headed there now, in fact. In less than an hour, he can have cotton candy before he’s even had lunch.

I sympathized with the boy. My heart went out to him. I know that pressing feeling, when now seems like too late, and the desperation of wanting something so badly that waiting feels like the most torturous thing on earth.

But you can guess what the kid picked. He picked the green tic-tacs. Because every four year-old needs a 1 1/2 calorie breath mint to make it through the day. Right?

His poor dad didn’t even see it coming.  Incredulous, he asked, “Really? You would rather have tic-tacs than cotton candy?”

From behind my buggy, I couldn’t help but smirk. A child after my own heart.

“Yes, Dad. Yes!” Perplexed, the dad gave in.

He sighed. “It’s just a mint, you know.”

But I don’t think that little boy even heard him. Or maybe he did, but he didn’t flinch. He clutched the tic-tacs to his chest as if protecting a great treasure.

I have to admit, I really wish I could have followed them to the circus because my guess is that that little boy forgot all about the tic-tacs when he saw those billowing clouds of pink and blue spun sugar. The empty box of tic-tacs would be poor comfort for the throngs of kids with candy pushing past him on the way to their seats.

Delayed gratification is hard, even for adults. We want what we want when we want it. How many times have I hit the “buy” button when I know I should have waited? How hastily have I sent an angry email when I should have given myself time to process my anger? Over and over again, I have robbed God of what he might have done because he didn’t do what I thought he should have done on my timeline.

I am reminded of something I read once by psychologist, Carl Jung. He said, “If there is anything we wish to change in the child, we should first examine it and see whether it is not something that could be better changed in ourselves.”

So, while I’d love to be able to see into my future, to know for certain that something even better waits for me there, I am sometimes like a little child, hoarding tic-tacs in my pockets and cheeks, not believing that the cotton candy exists or that it’s waiting there for me, or regretfully, even that I deserve it. In moments of weakness, it seems cruel and unusual to make me wait for something that may or may not be real.

Just because I haven’t yet seen it doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist.

I want to show my kids that waiting can be wonderful, that the in-between isn’t only pain and longing, but that even if it is, it’s okay, and that while we don’t know for sure what the future holds, it’s not always in our best interest to propel ourselves headlong into desire. What heals me on these days is the gentle reminder that I am not alone. All of us have spent a season in the in-between and I bet if we sat down across the table, over coffee, sharing our stories, you would tell me your tales of waiting, too–how it was worth it and what you learned and why you wouldn’t go back and change it for anything in the world.

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Is it True the Best Things Come to Those Who Wait?

Imagination flourishes in the margins of our lives.

It’s a magical time when anything can be.

If you can dream it, you can do it.
The best things come to those who wait.
Ah, and patience is a virtue.

These are the clichés we all know by heart.

But the reality is that waiting can be hard.

Right this very minute, I’m dreaming of a beach vacation that’s still eight (EIGHT!) months away. Just thinking about the sun on my face brings a smile to my lips. Despite the fact we’re barely out of summer here in Georgia and the leaves here are only just beginning to make the seasonal transition from deepest green to radiant hues of orange and red, I’m imagining the sand between my toes, warm waves lapping at my feet.

Hopeful anticipation brings light to my soul.

Our family has been going to the same resort town for more than a decade. One year, it rained almost the entire time. Not only that, but one of my kids came down with a weird infection which required frequent sheet-washing. Another child, deep in the throes of potty training, tortured us all with her frantic, immediate urges, and one child suffered a short, but potent bout of food poisoning.

Sounds terrible, right?

The best part of that trip was definitely the months I spent looking forward to it.

We didn’t take many family vacations when I was a kid, so instead of dreaming about island getaways, I fantasized about what was for dinner and the cartoons I was going to record on my VCR on Saturday mornings. These things came and went like clockwork. I could count on them.

Then I grew up, became responsible for making my own dinner and discovered the real meaning of the phrase “working for the weekend.” I began a new season of waiting for things like “the one” and tuning my ear to “my calling,” both of which seemed very big and grownup and kind of scary. But kind of fun too.

Waiting suddenly became more than just ticking off the minutes on my bedside clock. My soul carried the full weight of an unknown future, but it was a future bright with possibility.

Back then, I was young and there’s a lot of grace when you’re just starting out on your own and trying to figure things out.

“You’ve got time,” everybody said.

And I did.

But now I’m in my 40s, and everybody kind of already assumes I have it all figured out, so being thrust into the throes of waiting causes a knee-jerk reaction to—how should I say this—PANIC.

Time is not on my side.

But I don’t want to wallow in the wait. Although waiting is hard, waiting can also be good.

What if I anticipated what’s next in my life with the same expectant joy I approach my summer vacation? What if the waiting was the best part of what’s next?

Just because I have to be patient doesn’t mean I’m paralyzed.

June will be here before I know it. And my dreams aren’t passive. We’re saving up for this trip. I’m exercising everyday to prepare my body for swimsuit season. The kids have already analyzed the floor plan of the house where we’ll stay and negotiated the logistics of who’s sleeping where. This is the vacation I anticipate all year, so when June finally rolls around I want to be ready.

One week at the beach is a very small thing compared to that next big career step or decision to abandon what’s comfortable to do something other people might think is crazy. The tension of the in-between is an important time of preparation.

It can also be a time of hopeful anticipation.

I’m reminded of a verse in Zechariah, which brings me great comfort, even though these words were not said directly to me: “Do not despise this small beginning, for the eyes of the Lord rejoice to see the work begin, to see the plumb line in the hand of Zerubbabel (Zechariah 4:10).” 

Indeed, these are the days that will prepare us for a new day.

  • If we could re-frame what it means to wait, how would that change our attitude in the midst of it?

  • Would we be better equipped to accept what comes, whether it’s what we want or simply what’s next?

  • Could we learn to embrace the in-between?

Everybody I know is either waiting on something or waiting for something. Perhaps, like me, you’re hopeful of a new day. Or maybe you’re overwhelmed with a terrible, soul-crushing pain you think will never end. Maybe you feel hopeless about what’s next. Maybe you’re ambivalent because the wait has been longer than you anticipated, and you’re just…tired. You feel like there’s somebody on the other end of an invisible phone cord saying,

“Thank you for your patience. Please stay on the line. Your call is very important to me.”

You’re frustrated because right now seems so much better than five months from now.

Or five years from now.

Or five decades from now.

But if we got everything we wanted right now, we’d miss all that growth that comes from working hard in the midst of what’s in the middle—what’s between the before and after.

“Thank you for your patience. Please stay on the line. Your call is very important to me.”

Stay the course.

Wouldn’t you love to be able to one day say,

THIS was worth the wait.”

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