When we pray and most of us do, our praying can become like other things we do. We hurry. It is not a thing like leaving late and hurrying to arrive late, but embracing a pattern of prayer which makes us hurry to our intercessory prayer list. Make no mistake. Intercessory prayer is a good thing which is useful in the hands of God. Instead the question being posed is, "When was the last time we came to our time of prayer and soaked ourselves in a season of praise?"
If we wonder what this kind of praying might look like, or if we need some models to help us break with the way we have always done things, we might read the last six Psalms (145-150). A further suggestion would be to start with Psalm 150 and read backwards to Psalm 145. The suggestion is not to read them all at one time, but to allow these verses so full of praise to God to reveal a form for praising God in our prayers. And finally, this paragraph of suggestions might also include the suggestion that the praise be allowed to come from a stilled and unhurried heart.
One of the things which happens with this kind of praying is that it creates a different spiritual atmosphere. It might be likened to walking into a cooling shade filled with the evening breeze after a day filled with scorching heat and soaking humidity. It becomes a place that we do not want to leave. It becomes a place where our spirit is powerfully refreshed and renewed by being in the presence of the Holy. Once we arrive at such a place in our praying, the hurrying spirit is soon replaced by a spirit that longs to linger.