Waiting can feel uncomfortable, even when you know something is likely to happen.
You may feel frustrated, agitated, impatient, restless, or strangely unable to settle. Sometimes this happens when you are waiting for something good. At other times, you may be waiting for something painful or difficult, such as a separation, divorce, medical result, house move, or important decision.
Either way, the in-between stage can feel harder than expected.
If you are drawn to reflections like this, you are warmly invited to join the Soulful Explorer community for gentle support with clarity, resilience, and inner steadiness. 👉 Sign up
Why waiting can feel so intense
Waiting unsettles the nervous system. Your mind keeps reaching forward, trying to work out what will happen, when it will happen, and how you will feel when it arrives.
This is why waiting for something difficult can sometimes feel worse than the thing itself. Even if what is coming is not what you would have chosen, part of you may still think, “I will feel better once it has happened.”
That does not mean you want the difficult event. It means you are tired of living in suspense.
Acceptance is not the same as approval
Acceptance does not mean liking what is happening. It does not mean you are giving up, agreeing with it, or pretending it does not hurt.
Acceptance simply means you stop spending all your energy resisting the fact that something may be coming.
If something good is on its way, allowing yourself to believe it can arrive may help your body relax. Instead of gripping tightly, you can begin to picture yourself receiving it and enjoying it.
If something difficult is coming, acceptance can build resilience. You can begin to imagine how you will handle it, what support you may need, and what the first few steps might be.
Making the unknown more manageable
The unknown often feels bigger than the truth. When something is vague, your mind can fill the space with fear, tension, and endless possibilities.
By gently accepting that the event may happen, it becomes less unknown. You begin to bring it into the field of what you can meet.
In this calmer, more attentive state, you also create space for inner clarity. Your quiet guidance — the subtle sense of what feels right next — can begin to emerge, helping you respond with steadiness rather than react from fear or impatience.
You may not be able to control the timing. You may not be able to make it arrive sooner. But by consciously managing your state, noticing your feelings, and responding rather than reacting, you make the waiting stage both more manageable and more clarifying.
🌱 Practice for the week

Name what you are waiting for. Name what you are feeling: frustration, fear, impatience, hope, dread, excitement, or uncertainty.
Then say quietly:
“This may be coming. I do not have to force it. I can meet it one step at a time.”
Notice whether this softens your body and mind. The quieter your internal chatter, the easier it becomes to sense your inner guidance and the next best step.
You might also enjoy
- How to Hear the Quiet Voice of Your Soul – Learn how to notice the subtle signals your body and mind give you when the future feels uncertain.
- From Overthinking to Inner Knowing – Practical guidance for turning restless thoughts into clarity and insight.
- When Life Starts Moving Again – Explore how to respond with grounded calm when the circumstances you’ve been waiting for begin to unfold.
✨ Final reflection
Waiting may not become easy, but it can become steadier.
By accepting the in-between stage, managing your feelings, and listening inwardly, you turn a tense period into one of inner clarity — giving yourself strength, perspective, and a sense of guidance for whatever comes next.




0 Comments