13 Things You Should Know About Patience

All about the virtue of patience

offline
All about the virtue of patience

1. Got a short temper? Your brain may be partly to blame. Stan Floresco, a psychology professor at the University of British Columbia, Canada, says there's evidence of neurological differences-in frontal lobe functions, which regulate impetuous behaviour, for example-between patient people and those who are easily exasperated.

 

2. You might be able to train yourself into better self-control. Stopping in a moment of impulsiveness and taking a beat could, Floresco says, re-engage frontal lobe functions.

 

3. A Microsoft survey found that the tech-obsessed might be less focused than goldfish. Extensive gadget use has caused a decline in attention spans: from an average of 12 seconds in 2000 to around eight in 2015. (Goldfish clock in at nine seconds.)

 

4. To build patience, find a strategy. British Columbia-based psychotherapist and meditation teacher Michael Stone uses this one: first, he imagines how he'd respond if he was feeling patient. Then he waits until his frustration changes into something else-relief, gratitude or calm.

 

5. Take time to reflect. Because they each require focus, prayer and meditation help build skills required for patience, says Sarah Schnitker, a professor at the Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, USA.

 

6. In the habit of making poor choices? Research shows that putting off decisions-such as weighing our options before making a big electronics purchase-increases the likelihood that, in the future, we'll go for smarter selections.

 

7. Patience is key to building a winning team. A 2013 American study determined that pairs of players who scored high on a patience test were most likely to coordinate in order to earn higher payoffs in a two-player strategy game.

 

Read more!