Lack of Immediate Impact is when something happens, but you don’t feel or see the change right away, it’s like waiting for a cookie to bake before you can eat it.
Imagine you have a piggy bank full of coins. One day, you decide to save money every week so that in a few months, you’ll be able to buy a toy you really want. At first, you only put in a little bit each time, it doesn’t seem like much. But over weeks and months, the amount grows. Even though you didn’t feel the change right away, your piggy bank is slowly getting fuller.
Bold key terms help us remember what’s important. In this example, saving money every week is the action, and buying a toy later is the result, but it takes time for that result to happen.
Sometimes, things work like that in real life too: planting a seed doesn’t turn into a tree right away, just like saving a little bit of money doesn’t give you a big toy overnight. That’s what Lack of Immediate Impact means, it's about small steps leading to bigger changes, but not all at once.
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See also
- Why Did the Roman Empire Fall?
- Why Do We Have Leap Years?
- How Does the Ancient Roman Calendar Work?
- How Did Ancient Civilizations Count Without Numbers?
- How Did the Pyramids Stay Standing for Thousands of Years?