Have Trust, but no Patience.
Trust and patience are linked, but not in the way you think.
Hey, that rhymed!
You don’t need patience to trust, and you don’t need trust to have patience.
They can exist separately, but true trust makes patience irrelevant.
They’re linked in a way that one naturally follows the other.
Or... does it?
Sorry, I lied! The quote reveals it to you:
“Have trust, but no patience.”
Hmm… What would that quote be telling you?
That you don’t necessarily need patience when you trust!
Why? I’ll let you know why.
Trusting in the Universe, Divine Timing, Source, God — or whatever you wanna call it — is completely possible without patience.
You see, when we go about manifesting our dreams, the ultimate goal is the feeling our dreams give us.
You trust that it comes → You already embody the state (feeling) → No patience required, because you are already embodying the feeling.
Simple, right?
But why doesn’t it feel that simple?
Because we’re too focused on the thing instead of the feeling.
Most of us haven’t trusted (in this case) or felt like we had something already (by supplying the feeling) long enough for the manifestation to come to fruition.
We think we need to believe, plant seeds, have patience, and wait.
That version of spirituality — where you’re told to wait in silence until the universe catches up — that’s old spirituality.
It’s still a good message that comes from good hearts, but it’s also flawed, in a way that just doesn’t sit well with people.
We are wired for evidence (because of our programming).
Which means we’ll automatically focus on the physical thing.
This makes patience a struggle when we’re not met with the physical result fast enough.
Duuuuude (yes, I said dude in a blog post), I HATE WAITING.
It’s the thing that knocked me out of the trusting state so many times!
Never did I have trouble meditating, visualising, scripting, or wishing upon a star;
I always had trouble WAITING.
And I never developed patience — and I never will.
Not out of rebellion, but by choice.
Because I realised: I don’t need to wait if I already live as if.
Why develop patience for a world I’ve already created inside me?
That’s why trust is important, but patience is not.
It means you're willing to focus only on how you're feeling and what you're affirming, without needing the “evidence” in front of you.
And that is real power.
To live as if, with everything saying the exact opposite.
To dodge curveball after curveball, while trusting your inner world just because you want to feel good.
To label everything as positive, even while your unwanted circumstances are present and prevalent.
People who don’t believe in you — even you, who don’t believe in you.
But still, you decide: I will trust.
And it’s because of that trust that patience becomes unnecessary. As Dr. Joe Dispenza once said:
“If you are feeling the feelings of your future, you won’t go looking for it — because you feel like it’s already happened.”
Much Love and Trust,
Juliet.