When I first came back to the Church, my time in the Confessional was a bit longer than it should have been. Looking back on that time, I can see the (assorted) priests were spending more time with me, helping me feel comfortable and helping me make good Confessions. Because of that nurturing, I never get impatient while waiting in line. Ok, maybe once or twice for the really long waits, lol, but no I do try to be patient and accept the situation.
Also because of that extra care given to me, I am now in a position to walk into a Confessional, have some anxiety but not too much, confess my sins with clarity, be comfortable with the whole experience and not terrified. And unless my Confessor has something more to say, I’m in and out in a just a handful of minutes. I usually make a Confession once or twice a month now.
However…
There has been a time or two that a priest would be the one holding up the line. For example, I had a person open and close the Confessional door on me while I was confessing because we were taking too long. I think the Priest drew out the time even longer because of that. It was horrible. Anyhow, he talked and talked and talked and talked. He was a visiting priest with no parish of his own and didn’t have the opportunity to hear confessions as often as a Parish Priest.
I’m saying this to point out that we shouldn’t assume it’s the penitent. Sometimes it’s the Priest who is the one taking the time and drawing things out, for whatever reason.
When you see the lineups in Confession are long, and the time to hear Confessions dwindling, do you keep your place in line or move to the back of the line or go sit in a pew? If I know I have no mortal sins on my conscience and I can easily go to Confession again in a day or two, I now make it a practise to leave the line. You never know who does really need that time in the Confessional.