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I am learning to trust the space between where I am and where I want to be, knowing that growth unfolds in its own time and cannot be rushed.

The Gap That Greeted Us This Morning
We woke to a strange restlessness today — that familiar tug between where we are and where we think we should be. The coffee was still dripping, the kitchen window slightly fogged from overnight rain, and already the mind had started its quiet audit: not enough progress, not enough change, not enough yet. A few of us noticed it right there at the counter, spoon in hand, sweetener dissolving. That gap. That insistent little canyon between “here” and “there.” It had been following us around for weeks, maybe longer, like a low hum we’d stopped consciously hearing but could still feel in our teeth.
So we sat with it. Not because we had a plan, but because we were tired of outrunning something that clearly had no interest in being outrun. The cushion was cool. The room smelled like rain and toast. And the gap — that anxious distance between now and some imagined future self — sat right down beside us, uninvited but undeniable.
What the Space Between Actually Felt Like
It’s funny how we talk about “the journey” in soft, inspirational tones, as though the in-between is some scenic overlook with a bench and a view. Today it didn’t feel like that. It felt more like standing in a doorway — one foot in a room we’ve outgrown, one foot reaching toward a floor we can’t quite see. The body registered it as a mild tightness across the chest, a slight holding in the jaw. Not pain exactly. More like the effort of waiting when every nerve is wired for doing.
We noticed the urge to fix it — to set a new goal, download an app, make a list, do something productive to close the distance. And that urge was kind, honestly. It was trying to help. But underneath it, a quieter voice asked a different question: What if this space isn’t a problem to solve? What if it’s the actual growing? That question landed softly, the way a leaf lands on still water — not with force, but with an undeniable little ripple.
When We Stopped Rushing the Bloom
Someone in our circle once compared patience to watching bread rise. You can’t open the oven every thirty seconds to check. You can’t knead it harder and expect it to prove faster. At some point, you just have to trust the yeast, the warmth, the quiet chemistry of time doing what time does. Today that image came back to us, and we almost laughed — because we had been opening the oven door on ourselves constantly, wondering why we still felt half-baked.
There was a softening then. Not a dramatic shift, not a heavenly choir moment. More like the shoulders dropping half an inch. A single deep exhale that had apparently been waiting in line for days. We didn’t arrive at some gleaming destination. We just stopped punishing ourselves for not being there yet. And in that pause, something unexpected happened: the gap stopped feeling like a failure and started feeling like soil — dark, quiet, full of things we couldn’t see yet but that were, unmistakably, alive.
What Patience Left on the Doorstep
By the end of our sit, nothing external had changed. The to-do list was the same length. The dreams were still distant. The bills hadn’t rearranged themselves. But something internal had shifted its weight, the way a house settles — imperceptibly, structurally. We realized that patience isn’t passive. It isn’t giving up or going numb. It’s a fierce, tender act of trust: trusting that growth is happening even when we can’t measure it, trusting the roots even when we can only see dirt. It’s the courage to remain unfinished and still call ourselves whole.
We carried that with us through the rest of the day — imperfectly, of course. The urgency crept back more than once, and more than once we met it with a small, tired smile and a breath. Not conquered. Just met. And maybe that’s the deepest thing patience teaches: that we don’t have to be done to be okay. We don’t have to arrive to be worthy of the walk. If you felt that same restless gap today, we hope you’ll let it breathe. It might just be the sound of you becoming.