I like to begin this post with a question:
Why am I here?
All my life, I have asked this question. I find it a mystery. Perhaps you have been there, you know?
Maybe, right now, you can ask yourself:
→ Why am I here?
→ Why was I born?
→ What is my purpose?
Perhaps you may want to read it again.
This time?
Do it slowly.
After every question, just pause for a second.
Ask yourself:
→ Why am I here?
[Pause]
→ Why was I born?
[Pause]
→ What is my purpose?
[Pause]
As you do that, you will begin to think deeply. You will notice your focus shifting. You can feel it right now.
Your eyes are already moving from one word to another. You have already begun wondering. And your attention has doubled.
And you know why?
Because your brain is now working in the background. As you have fed it with the right set of questions, this brain of yours is moving in a certain direction — looking for answers.
The best part? In a couple of days, or even weeks, you will see something new happening in your own life.
You will see miracles.
Newer opportunities.
Unexpected fun.
All this is going to happen.
That’s the power of asking the right questions.
But wait?
If you are a tough cookie, and you don’t believe in miracles, you are probably asking yourself:
“The f*ck is this dude?”
Either ways, you are questioning, you know?
And that’s important.
Like Neil Tyson, scientist and a media star, once said:
“People who don’t ask questions remain clueless throughout their lives.”
How true, right?
You see, as we grow older, we ask less.
We seek less.
And so?
We gain less.
Never be that kind of a person.
Always question.
Questioning leads to curiosity.
Which makes me wonder:
Not only did this post begin with a question…
It ends the same way too:
Why am I writing this?
And…
Why are you reading this?
Worth thinking, isn’t it?
Cheers,
Sid
Sid speaks wisdom :D
put pictures in ;)
You know, I was thinking should I or should I not.
Doing it now! :)
Thanks!
np
Sometimes when I feel plagued by emotions and deep thought, I feel jealous of those than can live life mindlessly. I must remind myself "the unexamined life is not worth living."
Definitely worth thinking!