Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet narrate the experience
Answers
Answer:
Narrate an experience of patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet. Dear student, ... - Patience had never been one of my virtues: I was so upset and anxious about my marks being skipped in the list. - All sorts of thoughts crossed my mind: I must have done very badly or I might have been disqualified for some reason
Answer:
It is better to wait than to mess up the whole thing. Most of the people can't be patient even for some minutes. Anger and hatred occupy our mind if we don't be patient. Patience is bitter but its fruit is sweet.
Explanation:
Where can I apply this in my life?
Patience is a habit. It’s a muscle that needs to be used to become stronger. If you don’t use it, you tend to lose it. And, at least in my opinion, it starts with attitude. What is your attitude towards waiting? How patient are you? If you can wait just a few seconds longer, the habit becomes stronger.
How long can you wait before attacking that cookie, or whatever your favorite food might be? What about your favorite activity? Can you wait for the end of the day? Can you wait for the weekend? Can you wait for a vacation? Or do you have to call in sick and start doing it right now?
Could you use a little more patience? Just practice, right? You can start with small things, like waiting another day before ordering that thing you saw online and just have to have. You can wait another 30 seconds before gobbling up your favorite dessert. Yes the delay is bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
I’ve been impatient a lot lately. I just started a new job, and nothing seems to be moving quickly. Everything takes too long. It’s just not fair. And that, for me at least, is the root of the problem. My primary problem with patience is my presumption that just because things could go faster, they should.
Take a moment and consider situations where you have trouble being patient. Is it with your kids, your neighbors, your favorite snack, or…? Grab some paper and write down a couple of these situations. Now look at each and consider what is at the root of it. Why can’t you be patient, or what wears thin and then breaks your patience?
Do your issues come down to your attitude? Yes,
you want it, and you want it now, but why do you think you should have it, and have it right now? What’s wrong with half an hour from now? What’s wrong with tomorrow? If you can find the why, you will soon see the how which will allow you to better work on your patience.
I have to remind myself that life isn’t fair. Just because someone else has a nicer car doesn’t mean I have to get one right now. Life isn’t fair, and everyone has different priorities. I’m choosing to do other things with my money, and hope the fruit of retirement is sweeter than that shiny new car.
We all have things in our lives which try our patience. What will you do today to better your patience? It won’t get better by itself.