Finally, Savile offers a philosophy small enough to use every day. His words do not demand heroic serenity; they recommend a humble practice: when delay frustrates you, turn to the next worthy thing. Wash the dishes, finish the page, take the walk, make the call. Patience, then, is built out of ordinary substitutions.
Because of that, the aphorism feels both realistic and humane. It admits that waiting is hard, yet it declines to romanticize suffering. Instead, it teaches that time becomes bearable when filled with intention. In the end, doing something else is not avoiding life—it is how we keep living while time does its work. [...]