By Irfan Hassan | Source

In our rush-obsessed world, waiting feels like wasted time. Discover how to transform frustrating delays into moments of presence, surrender, and unexpected peace.

We live in a world that is obsessed with speed. We worship efficiency. We want our internet to be instant, our coffee to be ready the moment we arise, and our commute to be free of obstacles. In this hyper-efficient mindset, “waiting” is seen as a failure. It feels like a glitch in the system. When we are stuck in a line or halted in traffic, we treat those minutes as “dead time”: empty, useless moments that we need to rush through to get back to our real life.

Living as I do in Jammu and Kashmir, a territory in northern India, waiting is not just an occasional annoyance; it is a daily discipline. Whether it is standing in a long, winding queue at a government office to get a document stamped, or sitting in gridlocked traffic in the heat of the afternoon, delay is inevitable.

For a long time, I fought this. I would tap my foot, check my watch every 30 seconds, and let a knot of frustration tighten in my chest. I felt that if I was not moving, I was losing.

But recently, I began to wonder: What if we have been looking at waiting all wrong? What if these moments are not dead time, but a sacred pause?

The Myth of Dead Time

The anxiety of waiting comes from a single belief: I should be somewhere else.

When I am standing in line at the bank, my body is there, but my mind is already at the office. When I am stuck in traffic, my hands are on the wheel, but my mind is already eating dinner at home. This split between where our body is and where our mind wants to be causes suffering. We wage a mental war against reality, and reality always wins.

I remember a specific afternoon at a local municipal office. The unairconditioned room was crowded and stifling in the Indian humidity, the ineffectual ceiling fan was clicking rhythmically, and the line had not moved for 20 minutes.

I watched the people around me. Most were scrolling frantically on their phones, desperate to distract themselves from boredom. Others looked angry, muttering about inefficiency. I felt the same anger rising in me. I wanted to scream, “Hurry up!”

But then, I decided to try something different. I put my phone away. I took a deep breath. I looked around the room—not with judgment, but with curiosity. I noticed the sunlight hitting the dusty floor. I saw the tired but kind eyes of the clerk behind the desk. I realized that this moment was not “dead.” I was breathing. I was alive. The world was continuing to spin. The only thing making it unbearable was my own resistance to it.

Entering the Liminal Space

There is a concept called liminal space. It comes from the Latin word for “threshold.” It is the space between “what was” and “what is next.” Waiting is the ultimate liminal space. It is a doorway.

When we are forced to wait, the Universe is essentially hitting the pause button on our busy lives. Instead of fighting it, we can choose to view it as a gift. It is a rare moment where there is absolutely nothing we can do. We cannot fix the traffic jam. We cannot make the line move faster. We are stripped of our control.

This lack of control is actually a perfect place to practice surrender.

When we surrender to the wait, we move from the anxiety of “getting there” to the richness of “being here.” We stop trying to manipulate time and start inhabiting it.

How to Practice the Sacred Pause

So how do we turn a frustrating delay into a spiritual practice? It starts with simple shifts in how we pay attention.

1. Drop the Story

When you are stuck, notice the story your mind starts telling. It usually sounds like, This is a waste of time. I am going to be late. Why is this happening to me? Simply notice these thoughts, then gently drop them. Return to the raw data of the moment: the sounds, the sights, the feeling of your feet on the ground.

2. Meditate at Red Lights

When the light turns red or traffic comes to a complete halt, do not reach for the radio or your phone. Use the red light as a signal to check in with your body. Are your shoulders up to your ears? Is your jaw clenched? Use the duration of the red light to consciously soften your body. Let the car be a container of stillness in the middle of the chaos.

3. Find the Humanity

In a queue, instead of viewing the people in front of you as obstacles blocking your path, try to see them as fellow humans. They are also waiting. They also have places to be. They also have worries and hopes. This shift from competition to compassion changes the entire energy of the experience.

The Destination Is Here

We spend so much of our lives rushing toward a destination—a better job, a bigger house, or just the end of the day. We treat the present moment as a bridge we must cross to get to the “good part.” But if we are always rushing, we miss the life that is happening right now.

Waiting teaches us that the destination is not somewhere else. The destination is here.

The next time you find yourself stuck behind a slow-moving truck or waiting for a website to load, try not to fight it. Do not curse the delay. Smile at it. Whisper a quiet thank you for the reminder to stop. Take a deep breath and settle into the sacred pause. You might find that the peace you were rushing to find was waiting for you in line all along.