The answers for your next beginning are most likely in found in the questions you ask another. But how do we get better at asking truly great questions.
This week’s Inspire Me quote is from scientist and inventor Charles Proteus Steinmetz:
“No man becomes a fool until he has stopped asking questions.”
Research has shown that we tend to ask the most questions around age 4 or 5. As we get older, we form presuppositions about how the world works and begin to rely on those presuppositions rather than challenging them. Really great questions challenge our presumptions.
Great questions, of course, depend on the purpose of the inquiry. Three purposes that Leary and Armin discussed were to deepen relationships, to resolve a problem or to satisfy curiosity. To get better at asking questions, Leary and Armin suggested:
This week’s Challenge Me:
Think about someone you plan to meet with soon and intentionally design a couple of questions to go deeper with them. Leave a great question for us (either one you have asked or one that was asked of you) on our show notes at reinventure.me/49
Resources mentioned or related to this podcast that may be helpful to you: