Delayed Gratification. The words sparkle with tension.
I was eleven or twelve and wanted to wear stockings and makeup. Absolutely not, I was told. Pouting got me nowhere. Mouthing off, while within my constitutional right to free speech was, frankly, stupid.
There was only one thing to do. I had to plan for my thirteenth birthday and the lipstick that I would plaster across my wide mouth.
When I was sixteen, I had a list of things I would do once I was eighteen: date who I wanted, go where I wanted, smoke cigarettes, and drink gin and tonics. I would plaster my face with makeup, wear short-short skirts and become famous.
Now, the truth of the matter is that at sixteen I was not emotionally ready to do any of those things. I was a rather young sixteen, and, frankly, dating would have gotten me nowhere except in awkward situations with boys who were even more awkward. I wanted to do, in the immediate moment, what “all” the other girls were doing. Today, as I think about the pregnant high school girls I knew, I am thankful that none of those changing voiced, raging hormonal fellows were lining up at my door.
Sociologists call it “impulse control.” I was bred on delayed gratification. I am intimately familiar with delayed gratification. I know impulse control—sometimes to a fault—like I know my own breath.
Perhaps this is why I am more than a little frustrated with people who whine about the political process and want change overnight with no effort on their parts (vote in the last election; thoroughly study issues and history?). It’s the same impulse that whines for the money, the new car, the jewels, or the lover immediately, without putting in any effort. Perhaps, in either case, they are not ready.
I remember how long it took me to finally begin writing every day. I remember how I chided myself because I wasn’t discovered (yeah, lightning in a bottle) and because I did not feel the need to jump through the many hoops and changes required to become famous. I remember how I showed little understanding or compassion for myself as I tried to fit into my own skin and, at the same time, figure out where I was trying to live the life of another. The creative business is hard work.
I’ve spent many evenings looking up into the night sky, trying to hear stars breathing because I did not have the inner muscle required to jump with both feet into the roaring fire of the creative business. With the wisdom handed down from my parents and grandparents, I now see that I just wasn’t ready. Through the miracle of what I will label Grace, I was protected until I was ready and able to accept the consequences of whatever it was I wanted to do.
A popular actress once said to me, (when she saw my yearning for creative success in conflict with my fear to do the work) “God’s delay is not God’s denial.” For the rest of my life I will send her blessings for her compassion.
Just like wearing make-up and high heels and perfume and nylons didn’t fit my psychologically state as a sixteen year old, the business of show business and the world of a creative professional was the wrong fit once upon a time.
There are those who will think my parents were too rigid, and on many other issues, they absolutely were. But on the issue of waiting until the right time, I can tell you that they were wise. I learned that time, inevitably, clears out the trash and shows you what you really want and who you really are. And how to get what you want with self-destructing.
Patience, process and the right time. Delayed Gratification sparkles.
“God’s delay is not God’s denial.”






Compassion. I think of blue-violet for spiritual strength and pink for the heart. Online dictionaries use more than 40 words to define compassion. My father used 12: never judge another man until you’ve walked a mile in his shoes.
Sagacious
“Before you say there is no love, stand at the mirror and face yourself.”
Where did I find those words? A tea bag? Fortune cookie? A friend? Maybe it was in a story I wrote? Something I read? I don’t know that it matters. In my heart, I’ve connected the phrase with this week’s word: Sagacious. The word reminds me of the amber color and stickiness of honey; the syllables coat the tongue while crackling with intention. “Sagacious” just sounds like something I want to be!
The word speaks to the power of discernment. Good judgment. Hmm. Wisdom. Um, right. Common sense and being able to see “what is.” Whew. Carefully observing before acting.
According to Merriam-Webster and other sources, a sagacious person is associated with many lofty attributes: far-sightedness; acute insight; wise decision-making, good judgment. A sagacious person is adept in managing the winds of change because he or she is an expert in reading the social, familial, or political signs of the road.
I still have on my travelin’ shoes.
I was looking for someone to throw down the gauntlet in my name, and the leaves did not or could not point out my poor judgment.
I am passionate about tea. A visiting friend once brought me a box of tea. The round container with delicate pastel drawings was filled with one of my favorite mixtures, hibiscus and rosehips. The tea bled red as blood into hot water. The heat from the cup was like the love I felt for the man I was seeing. The taste was as healing as the feeling of protection I had in his presence.
I once looked for discernment in tea leaves. The magic of tea is seductive. Tea warms the body on a cold day, sweetens the mouth, brightens the eye, and feeds the soul. Oh. Like being in love?
I was entranced by the Canadian reader’s graceful, tiny wrists as she twirled the
cup of jasmine flavored liquid this way and that. Finally, the swirling leaves settled in the bottom of the vessel. She set the cup before me.
“You have a loving heart.” (Okay.)
“You will travel a lot.” (I love meeting new people.)
“You will have three children.” (Music, books, and loving people!)
“You have a great love in your life.” (I thought so.)
“Learn to see everything clearly.”
The leaves did not tell me the man was deceptive. The leaves warned of, but did not point out, my poor judge of character.
The man could not throw down the gauntlet on my behalf, and I was forced to draw on something inside: wisdom and trust in the future—part of the recipe for becoming a sagacious person.
One does not become sagacious by reading about it. Some of the learning comes from parents; some from great educators or great spiritual masters. But truly, doesn’t becoming sagacious come from walking and listening, observing, and seeing what is? Darn. Some people seem to get it right every time.
I’ve still got on my travelin’ shoes.
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Posted in Writing from the heart
Tagged Commentary, Life Stories, Writing