I’ve always believed that curiosity is one of the most underrated forms of intelligence.

Not surface-level curiosity.
Not questions for the sake of questions.

But the kind that sits just beneath what’s being said.

The question behind the question.

It’s easy to accept what’s presented.
To solve the problem that’s named.

But the real leverage is usually somewhere else.

Why is this the problem we’re focused on?
What’s actually driving this?
What’s not being said?

At its best, curiosity isn’t about collecting answers.
It’s about uncovering what matters.

It’s how you see patterns earlier.
It’s how you connect things others don’t.
It’s how you move from reacting to actually understanding.

For me, it’s been less of a skill and more of a way of moving through the world.

It’s the thing I trust most when something doesn’t quite add up.

It’s why the question mark is my favorite symbol and guides everything I do.

On Curiosity

The question behind the question and why it’s always mattered to me