By Anthony Chinedum
I
must confess that I love eating bread, but these days prefer protein bread. I
have never baked bread but love the idea. The first time I tried to bake a
proper loaf, I killed the yeast. I remember it clearly. On a cold morning
during the height of the pandemic, I stood in my kitchen with a bowl of flour,
yeast, water, and salt. The world outside felt like it was falling apart, but
inside that little room,
I’d
heated the water, eager for a quick result, and poured it in. My finger,
testing the temperature, jerked back. It was too hot. But in my impatience, I
shrugged and stirred it in anyway. I watched as the pale granules floated, then
sank, without a single bubble. They just died. No frothy, beer-like head, no
faint, alive smell. Just a still, tepid bowl of floury water. My haste had
sterilised the one thing that was meant to make everything rise.
It
was a perfect, quiet failure. And in that moment, standing in a silent kitchen
with a bowl of dead potential, I saw a familiar pattern. How many times had I
rushed a conversation and killed its meaning? How many projects had I
force-heated, only to find them lifeless? I had mistaken speed for progress,
and in doing so, I had missed the point entirely.
This
is what I learnt: patience isn’t about waiting. It’s about participating in the
process. Baking bread became my slow-living metaphor, a tactile education in the
art of allowing. It taught me more about navigating life’s storms than any
productivity hack or self-help book ever could.
The
Alchemy of the Wait
True
sourdough doesn’t start with a packet. It starts with a wild, unseen
collaboration. You mix flour and water, and you wait. For days, you tend to
this paste, stirring it, watching for no apparent reason. It looks inert. A
foolish pursuit. Then, on the third or fourth day, a few tiny bubbles appear on
the surface, like secrets rising to tell themselves. The smell shifts from flat
and floury to sharply sweet, like apples and earth.
This
miracle is the work of Lactobacilli and wild yeasts, microbes
present in the very air we breathe. They are everywhere, always. But they only
reveal themselves, only choose to work their magic, in the right conditions. A
2019 study on microbial ecosystems in food production, published in the
journal 'Nature', highlighted this incredible symbiosis. It’s not
one actor, but a whole community, a universe in a jar that thrives on consistency
and care, not force.
This
is the first lesson: Life’s most profound transformations are often invisible.
They happen in the quiet, unobserved moments. We live in a culture that
worships the visible outcome, the finished loaf, the promotion, the healed
wound. We forget the essential, unseen fermentation that must occur first. The
slow integration of a new idea. The quiet mending of a heart. The subconscious
untangling of a problem.
As
the Stoic philosopher Seneca, whose words have been given new life by writers
like Ryan Holiday, once said, “Every
new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end.” My beginning
with bread came from the end of my belief that hustle was the only currency of
value.
The
Feel of the Thing
You
cannot bake bread by recipe alone. You can follow the weights and measures with
scientific precision, but the true guide is your hands. This is the tactile
truth of it. A recipe will say “knead for 10 minutes,” but what it means is
“knead until the dough tells you it’s ready.”
At
first, it’s a shaggy, sticky mess. It clings to your fingers like fear or
doubt. You want to add more flour, to force it into submission. But if you
wait, if you keep working it with a patient, rhythmic push-fold-turn motion,
the alchemy happens. The proteins align into gluten, and the dough changes. It
becomes smooth, elastic, and alive. It pulls away from the bowl in a cohesive
whole, springy and responsive to your touch.
Pressing
a finger into it leaves an indent that slowly, surely, fills itself back in.
This is the “windowpane test”, stretching a piece of dough until it’s thin
enough to see light through without tearing. It’s a moment of pure connection.
You’re not following instructions anymore; you’re in a dialogue with the living
thing in your hands.
This
is the practice of embodied patience. It’s the opposite of scrolling on a
screen, of numbly passing the time. It is active, engaged participation. It
teaches you to read the subtle cues, to respond rather than react. James
Clear’s philosophy in Atomic Habits rings true here: you are
not aiming for a single perfect outcome, but for the identity of someone who
engages deeply with the process. You are becoming a person who listens, even to
dough.
The
Un-rushing of Time
Then
comes the bulk fermentation. The rise. You place the dough in a clear bowl,
cover it, and walk away. This is the ultimate test. You can’t accelerate it.
You can only create a warm, draft-free spot and trust.
I
used to peek. I’d lift the cloth, searching for proof of growth, and in doing
so, I’d let out the precious warmth and gas that was doing the work. My anxiety
for a result actively hindered the result. Sound familiar? We peek at our
investments, demand early results in our careers, seek constant reassurance in
our relationships, and in our panic, we disrupt the very environment required
for growth.
A
report from the World Health Organization has even highlighted the health
impacts of our 'hurry sickness', linking a chronic sense of urgency to
increased stress, anxiety, and burnout. We are, quite literally, making
ourselves ill with our impatience.
Baking
bread forces you to surrender to timescales beyond your control. A rise can
take three hours or eight, depending on the room’s temperature, the mood of the
yeast, the phase of the moon for all I know. You learn to plan your day around
the dough’s schedule, not the other way around. This is a radical act of
defiance in a world that promises instant gratification.
It
is a practical, daily lesson in the Stoic concept of the dichotomy of control.
You control the ingredients, the kneading, the temperature of the oven. You do
not control the rise. Your job is to provide the conditions and then have the
discipline to step back and let life do its work.
The
Fire and the Crust
Finally,
the bake. The oven must be fiercely, recklessly hot. Far hotter than you think.
You slide the risen dough from its proving basket, score its top with a razor
blade, a moment of brutal, necessary vulnerability, and get it into the inferno.
This
is the final lesson: patience is not passivity. It is not about avoiding the
heat. The long, slow rise culminates in a trial by fire. The dough could not
withstand this heat at the beginning. It would have just burned. But now, after
its long fermentation, it is strong. The air pockets expand, the sugars
caramelise, the crust blisters and cracks into a beautiful, rugged landscape, what
the French call la grigne, “the grin.”
The
fire is what gives it structure, flavour, and character. The wait made it
resilient enough to withstand the blaze.
We
go through fires. Loss, failure, heartbreak, fear. We want to avoid them. But
the metaphor of bread tells us that the waiting, the slow building of inner
strength, is what prepares us for these moments. The patience we cultivate
during the quiet times is the resilience that allows us to face the hot times
without turning to ash. We are tempered by time.
As
the poet and philosopher Mark Nepo writes in The Book of Awakening, “The pain was necessary to know the truth,
but we don’t have to keep the pain alive to keep the truth alive.” The
fire of the oven is necessary to make the bread, but it doesn’t last forever.
It gives us our form, and then we are stronger for it.
Breaking
Bread
The
last step is the hardest. You must let the loaf cool. If you cut it open while
it’s hot, the steam will escape, and the interior, the crumb, will turn gummy
and dense. The final act of patience is to listen to the quiet hiss of the loaf
on the rack, to smell the incredible aroma, and to walk away. To let it settle into
itself.
When
you finally slice it, the crust crackles. The inside is a mosaic of air
pockets, glossy and uneven. You spread butter on a warm slice and it melts into
the pores. You taste time. You taste care. You taste the invisible alchemy of
air and microbes, the strength of well-developed gluten, the caramelisation of
fire.
You
taste your own patience. And it is nourishing in a way a rushed loaf never
could be.
This
is the grounded truth I learned in my kitchen, amidst flour and failure. It’s a
truth echoed in the findings of think tanks like The Happiness Research
Institute, which consistently finds that activities requiring slow engagement,
like baking, gardening, or crafts, significantly contribute to long-term
well-being over passive consumption.
Baking
bread won’t solve all your problems. But it will teach you how to sit with
them. It will give you a tactile, visceral understanding that some things
cannot be rushed. That growth is silent, strength is earned through process,
and the fire itself can give you your form.
So,
find your metaphor. Your dough is waiting. It might be in the garden, in a
sketchbook, in the quiet minutes of the morning before the world wakes up. Tend
to it. Knead it. Wait for it. And learn to trust the slow, inevitable, beautiful
rise.
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