To be five minutes late is not really to be late. Late is when people start getting annoyed.
Being eight minutes late is not perceived as being late, and gives your host just enough time to sit down for a couple of minutes, gather their thoughts, and begin to look forward to your arrival.
Being late is a lack of respect and consideration for the people waiting.
Sometimes being late is acceptable for a good reason, especially because of something outside of our control.
The more formal the event, the less it’s acceptable to be late.
Being late insults others.
Being late undermines the person who is late, showing a lack of intelligence, planning, self-knowledge, willpower, or empathy.
Being late can also be a way for people with exaggerated calm and courtesy to show their anger through passive means, through (conscious or unconscious) resistance to meeting the reasonable expectations of others.
Self-deception: even if being late can tell “I am more important than you”, it can in fact be self-deception, a person may be late because he feels inferior or unimportant.
Being late could also be a form of resistance, a way of showing one’s disapproval for the purpose of the meeting.
Sometimes, being late can be the unconscious telling you that you don’t want to be there, or that it would be better for you not to be there.
“Why exactly am I late?”
“Because I’m too busy ?”
“Why I am so busy ?” Do I keep myself as busy as possible so as not to be left alone with my deepest thoughts and feelings ?
Source : https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/hide-and-seek/201406/the-psychology-of-lateness


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