Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Virtue awaits the patient.

Patience, they said, was a virtue. Only I wasn't ever quite sure why. 

I always saw her as a rather plain-faced girl with a sweet smile. Too sweet. She always sat with her legs crossed neatly at the ankles, eyes downcast, hands cupped in her lap, one inside the other--and in this way she managed to turn waiting into some kind of colorless prayer.

Patience is like an Artist's portrait model posing prettily through the passage of time. But what does that accomplish? And where is the nobility in that bland brand of immobility?

I realize that patience is not what we may think it to be. Patience has eyes that are keen and kind and look like they want to laugh. And she actually doesn’t sit still very much (except on the inside) and instead walks, sometimes runs, towards the things around her that are most in need of doing and she does them if she can and if she can't she tries anyway--even when it isn’t really her job and no one told her to do it.

Patience sweeps the floor and changes the water in the flower bowls. She attends to phone calls and remembers to feed the dog. And you’d never know she was waiting for something important to happen because she always seems to be happening in the middle of something important. Even if it's just cooking dinner.

And patience makes me want to cultivate that quality inside.

Patience isn't a kind of soggy cereal endurance of intervals or the flat fizzlessness of soda forgotten on the window ledge. It isn't a somnambulist whirling through the night. Mindless of the waking world. Blind to everything but what Is Not.

It's crisper than that. And Real-er too. And so much more engaging and Alive.

Patience is a kind of understanding. An understanding that transcends the 'limitations' of the moment. It's a teacher standing at the blackboard repeating A is for Apple. B is for Boy. Day after day to small puzzled faces. Because she believes that one day they will make the leap that connects the sound to the letter the letter to the word the word to the shiny red contours of a classic fruit. Patience is a kind of trust. A trust that does its part and holds the rest lightly in an open palm. It's a farmer sowing seeds in springtime. Hoeing, watering, weeding. Because he believes the earth will do her part when the time comes. And Patience is a kind of acceptance. An acceptance that allows for doubt. It's a friend who holds your hand when you're not sure of the next step. Because no matter which way you go she'll come with you. Patience is a kind of love. A love that is its own explanation in bewildered circumstance. It is an old, old woman placing a wrinkled parchment hand against the cheek of a reckless child. Because her heart is too wise to make room for offense.

Patience is a kind of virtue. I think I see that now.