Waiting for the Train
Tuesday, January 3, 2012 9:56:01 AM
I arrived at the train station in Philadelphia both thrilled and a little bit exhausted after 2 presentations for Land America, a title company. I was headed to New York for the RIS Media conference. I had several pieces of luggage and needed assistance onto the train from a porter. I sat on a nearby bench as I waited for his signal to walk toward the train. I looked around and took a quick scan around the large hall. It was all but impossible not to notice a middle aged couple not very far away engaged in a long, passionate embrace. They caught my eye and held my attention, a bit longer than appropriate. To my embarrassment, the Porter witnessed me fixed for so long on the scenario and said “Stop looking, they should really get a room.” But I could not stop looking. It was something about their embrace. It was something about their outfits that made me imagine them as a couple from one of those movies with Mickey Rooney made years ago in black and white, like they're captured in time. Perhaps it was something about their age, their stance, and his disheveled hair. I was entranced.
The Porter told me that it was time to go. He took my luggage onto a cart and said “follow me”. I did. He proceeded to walk toward the couple and made a stop to aid the man. I noticed he was holding a stick. He was blind. The Porter took the man’s hand and fixed it firmly to his arm leading the way.
As we stepped into an elevator, the Porter informed me that the man had just gotten engaged that day. The man spoke up and said “That explains all the kissing.” I broke into a smile.
I said, “Congratulations! When’s the wedding?”
“January 19th,” he replied.
Calculating a fast 4 ½ month engagement period, I said “Boy, you don’t waste any time.”
He said “Well, we’re both widows. We actually don’t have any reason to wait.”
And in that moment I realized that there's almost never a reason to wait. It’s simply something that we are used to doing. We are used to waiting for something to happen, for the time to be perfect, or the tide to swing our way. We just sit and wait and keep living our lives the same way as always, hoping that someday something wonderful will happen.
Waiting. Waiting.
What a costly use of time. Are you still waiting? What exactly are you waiting for?
Kim Ades, MBA, President of Frame of Mind Coaching and JournalEngine™ Software, is one of North America’s foremost experts on performance through thought management. By using her unique process of coaching through journaling, she works with clients to unveil and switch their thought patterns to ignite significant change and life transformation. Visit www.frameofmindcoaching.com to sign up for your own free, secure, online journal.
The Porter told me that it was time to go. He took my luggage onto a cart and said “follow me”. I did. He proceeded to walk toward the couple and made a stop to aid the man. I noticed he was holding a stick. He was blind. The Porter took the man’s hand and fixed it firmly to his arm leading the way.
As we stepped into an elevator, the Porter informed me that the man had just gotten engaged that day. The man spoke up and said “That explains all the kissing.” I broke into a smile.
I said, “Congratulations! When’s the wedding?”
“January 19th,” he replied.
Calculating a fast 4 ½ month engagement period, I said “Boy, you don’t waste any time.”
He said “Well, we’re both widows. We actually don’t have any reason to wait.”
And in that moment I realized that there's almost never a reason to wait. It’s simply something that we are used to doing. We are used to waiting for something to happen, for the time to be perfect, or the tide to swing our way. We just sit and wait and keep living our lives the same way as always, hoping that someday something wonderful will happen.
Waiting. Waiting.
What a costly use of time. Are you still waiting? What exactly are you waiting for?
Kim Ades, MBA, President of Frame of Mind Coaching and JournalEngine™ Software, is one of North America’s foremost experts on performance through thought management. By using her unique process of coaching through journaling, she works with clients to unveil and switch their thought patterns to ignite significant change and life transformation. Visit www.frameofmindcoaching.com to sign up for your own free, secure, online journal.












