Being late does something to an early arriver that it doesn’t do to other people.
Other people who get stuck in traffic get annoyed.
Early arrivers who get stuck in traffic feel something closer to panic — a hot, sick certainty that they’ve done real damage, that the people waiting on them are quietly reconsidering them. So they make sure it can’t happen. They leave absurdly early. They pad every estimate. They’d sooner sit alone for half an hour than chance being the last one through the door.
The easy read is that they’re considerate — they value your time, they hate keeping people waiting, they were raised right. And for plenty of early arrivers, that’s the whole of it.
But for some, the size of the feeling gives it away. Running five minutes behind doesn’t register as a minor hiccup; it sets off a dread far out of proportion to a late arrival at brunch. And getting there early isn’t a mild satisfaction; it’s relief, the kind that means something was at stake. When the stakes run that high, the clock is standing in for something else.
It was never really about being on time

Underneath the habit, for these people, is a belief they’ve probably never said out loud: that being an inconvenience makes them harder to love.
Not consciously. They wouldn’t put it that way. But trace the panic of running late back to its root, and that’s what’s down there — a sense that taking up space, causing a problem, making someone adjust to them is the kind of thing that slowly uses up other people’s goodwill.
Lateness, in that framework, isn’t a scheduling slip. It’s evidence of being too much. And being too much is how you get left.
So the early arrival isn’t about the time at all. It’s a way of proving, over and over, that they’re no trouble — that they can be counted on to never be the issue, and are therefore safe to keep around.
Where the belief got its start
This usually goes back a long way, to a child who learned that their needs came with a cost.
The moments they asked for something — help, reassurance, a little more attention than usual — were the moments the people around them got tense, or went somewhere else in their heads. The moments they asked for nothing, things stayed easy.
That kind of childhood teaches a specific lesson about love — that it’s responsive to behavior, something you keep up rather than something you’re simply given. It plants beliefs that sound like “if I am seen as difficult, then people will reject me,” or “I’m not lovable enough as I am, so I need to cater to others so they will stay.”
The kid grows up, the beliefs don’t. They just go quiet and start running the show from underneath.
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Why the fear shows up around time specifically
Of all the ways a person can be “too much,” lateness is one of the most visible and least deniable. You can hide that you’re struggling. You can’t hide that everyone’s been sitting at the table for ten minutes waiting on you.
Being late puts the inconvenience right out in the open, with your name on it. For someone whose deepest worry is that needing anything makes them a liability, that’s a direct hit. So they handle it the way they’ve handled the fear their whole life — by getting out ahead of it.
Arriving early is the one move that makes it impossible to be the holdup. The fear underneath people-pleasing is that if they stop smoothing everything over, they’ll be abandoned and left unloved; early arrival is that fear. Each on-time appearance is a small renewal of the case that they’re worth keeping.
And the reassurance never sticks. The dread doesn’t get answered, only dodged, so it refills before the next thing on the calendar. They can spend a whole life this way — a cumulative month sitting in parked cars, ten minutes at a time, topping up a sense of safety that drains as fast as they fill it.
Nobody else was asking for this
The part they rarely let themselves see is that nobody in their life now is actually asking them to do this.
The friend at the restaurant would not love them less for being five minutes late. The host isn’t sitting there counting. The people who truly care about them never put conditions on it in the first place — there’s no rule about punctuality, no hidden point where being a little inconvenient cancels the whole thing out. The love they’re working so hard to earn was handed over free a long time ago, by people who’d be shocked to learn it was being earned at all.
