A Whisper of Wholeness
Sometimes a question isn't looking for your quick answer. It's rather inviting you on a long adventure.
We have a reflex with questions. They arrive and we immediately reach for an answer. As if the question is a problem and the answer is what makes it go away. We've been trained for this since childhood — in classrooms, in meetings, in conversations where the fastest response wins. And so we run the race. We cross the finish line as quickly as we can, filing the question away as handled. But some questions weren't built for speed. Some questions are not even looking for resolution. They are looking for you. They want to know if you're willing to stay with them long enough to be changed by the journey they are offering.
Think of a question that has followed you for years. Not one you answered and moved past. One that keeps returning. Maybe it wears different clothes each time. Maybe it finds you in a quiet moment when your guard is down. That question hasn't been haunting you. It has been inviting you. And every time you tried to answer it too quickly, you may have closed the very door it was trying to open. What if the answer was never the point? What if the adventure was always in the wandering — in letting a question walk beside me without demanding it tell me where we're going? The most important questions of my life have never been resolved. They have simply taken me further than any answer ever could.
For further reflection
What is one question that keeps finding me — and what might happen if I stopped trying to answer it and simply let it lead?