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On the Value of Patience

An elaboration on the maxim 'Patience is a virtue' and its applications in life.

status: Notes

Status Indicator

The status indicator reflects the current state of the work: - Abandoned: Work that has been discontinued - Notes: Initial collections of thoughts and references - Draft: Early structured version with a central thesis - In Progress: Well-developed work actively being refined - Finished: Completed work with no planned major changes This helps readers understand the maturity and completeness of the content.

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certainty: likely

Confidence Rating

The confidence tag expresses how well-supported the content is, or how likely its overall ideas are right. This uses a scale from "impossible" to "certain", based on the Kesselman List of Estimative Words: 1. "certain" 2. "highly likely" 3. "likely" 4. "possible" 5. "unlikely" 6. "highly unlikely" 7. "remote" 8. "impossible" Even ideas that seem unlikely may be worth exploring if their potential impact is significant enough.

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importance: 6/10

Importance Rating

The importance rating distinguishes between trivial topics and those which might change your life. Using a scale from 0-10, content is ranked based on its potential impact on: - the reader - the intended audience - the world at large For example, topics about fundamental research or transformative technologies would rank 9-10, while personal reflections or minor experiments might rank 0-1.

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Citation
Yotam, Kris · Apr 2025

Yotam, Kris. (Apr 2025). On the Value of Patience. krisyotam.com. https://krisyotam.com/progymnasmata/maxim/on-the-value-of-patience

@article{yotam2025on-the-value-of-patience,
  title   = "On the Value of Patience",
  author  = "Yotam, Kris",
  journal = "krisyotam.com",
  year    = "2025",
  month   = "Apr",
  url     = "https://krisyotam.com/progymnasmata/maxim/on-the-value-of-patience"
}
Quote of the moment
I don't think that Python 3.0 is a bad thing. But that it's displayed so prominently on the Python web site, without any kind of warning that it's not going to work with 99% of the Python code out there, scares the hell out of me. People are going to download and install 3.0 by default, and nothing's going to work. They're going to complain, and many are going to simply walk away.
Christopher Lenz (http://www.cmlenz.net/archives/2008/12/py3k)
Kris Yotam
Kris Yotam
long-form stable essays
Updated
2026-05-12
Reading time
~1s

in Naperville, IL
Last visitor from Mitaka, Japan