He always had time.
Or at least… that’s what he believed.
“Later.”
That was his favorite word.
Not because he was lazy.
Not because he didn’t care.
But because he thought he could always come back to things.
Start later.
Fix it later.
Handle it later.
And at first…
It didn’t seem like a problem.
Deadlines moved.
Opportunities waited.
People understood.
Or at least…
That’s how it looked.
He delayed small things.
Calls.
Tasks.
Decisions.
Nothing urgent.
Nothing serious.
Until those small things…
Started turning into big ones.
A missed opportunity here.
A delayed decision there.
A chance that didn’t come back.
Still…
He didn’t change.
Because nothing “bad enough” happened.
Life kept going.
And when consequences are slow…
It’s easy to ignore them.
Years passed like that.
Not failing.
But not moving either.
Stuck in the middle.
And the worst part?
He knew it.
He felt it.
That quiet frustration of knowing you could do more…
But not doing it.
Still, he delayed.
Because starting felt heavy.
Too many thoughts.
Too many “what ifs.”
So he waited.
For the right time.
The right mood.
The perfect moment.
But that moment never came.
Until one day…
Something changed.
It wasn’t work.
It wasn’t money.
It was personal.
He started feeling tired.
Not normal tired.
Something deeper.
Something that didn’t go away.
People told him to check it.
“Go to the doctor.”
“Just make sure everything is okay.”
He nodded.
“Yeah… I will.”
But he didn’t.
Not that day.
Not the next.
“Later.”
Days turned into weeks.
The feeling got worse.
But he kept delaying.
Because that’s what he always did.
Until one morning…
He couldn’t ignore it anymore.
His body forced him to stop.
He went to the hospital.
Finally.
Tests.
Waiting.
Silence.
Then the doctor came in.
Serious.
Too serious.
“You should have come earlier.”
His heart dropped.
“What do you mean?” he asked.
The doctor looked at him carefully.
“This didn’t start recently.”
Silence.
“It’s been developing for a while.”
His mind went blank.
“How bad is it?” he whispered.
The answer came slowly.
“It could have been simple… if you came sooner.”
That sentence hit harder than anything else.
Not because of fear.
But because of truth.
He didn’t just delay a task.
He delayed something that mattered.
Something real.
Something that didn’t wait.
He sat there.
Thinking about every “later.”
Every delay.
Every moment he chose comfort over action.
And for the first time…
He understood something clearly:
Time doesn’t wait.
Not for your mood.
Not for your fear.
Not for your excuses.
It moves.
With you…
Or without you.
That moment changed him.
Not in a dramatic way.
But in a real one.
He stopped waiting for the perfect time.
Because he learned the hard way:
The perfect time…
Is usually too late.
