
What are you curious about?
I’m curious about the quiet questions that shape who we become—how wonder, silence, and sacred moments help us remember who we truly are.
Rethinking the Question: “What Are You Curious About?”
Date: 2 August 2025
By: Johnbritto Kurusumuthu, Founder, Rise&Inspire
Quick Reference Summary
Central theme: Curiosity is not just a fleeting interest—it’s a deep, soulful compass guiding our purpose.
Unique angle: Curiosity is memory in disguise—a quiet return to our truest selves.
Tone: Reflective, aspirational, grounded in personal growth and insight.
Audience: Seekers of meaning, creatives, thinkers, and learners at any stage in life.
Index
1. Introduction: Why This Question Still Matters
2. Curiosity as a Return to the Self
3. The Difference Between Noise and Wonder
4. Reclaiming Childlike Intrigue in an Age of Overload
5. Questions I’m Living Into
6. A Final Thought: Curiosity as Calling
1. Why This Question Still Matters
We’ve all heard it before: “What are you curious about?”
It’s a staple icebreaker, a classroom prompt, a journal starter.
But when I saw this familiar question again today, it didn’t feel routine. It felt ancient. Like a whisper from somewhere older than my memory, calling me not to answer quickly—but to listen differently.

2. Curiosity as a Return to the Self
I’ve come to believe that curiosity is not a matter of the mind alone. It’s the soul remembering—a way we retrace the path toward who we were always meant to be.
Some people chase curiosity like a trail of scattered breadcrumbs. But perhaps, it’s not something we find—it’s something that finds us, each time we pause long enough to feel wonder again.
In my own life, what stirs my curiosity most are not abstract facts, but things that feel familiar and mysterious at once:
Why do certain places feel like home even if I’ve never been there before?
What is it about silence that speaks so clearly?
Why do some dreams echo long after we’ve forgotten their shape?
These aren’t questions I’m trying to answer. They’re questions I’m willing to live with.
3. The Difference Between Noise and Wonder
In a world overflowing with data, opinions, and headlines, curiosity risks being flattened into information consumption. But real curiosity has nothing to do with scrolling.
It’s not passive. It’s not entertaining.
It’s quiet but urgent.
It moves us toward depth—not distraction.
Curiosity, at its highest form, teaches us the difference between noise and wonder. It makes us more human. More awake.
4. Reclaiming Childlike Intrigue in an Age of Overload
Children don’t wonder about productivity. They don’t ask questions to monetise them. They explore because they must. It’s how they learn to be in the world.
What if part of adult wisdom is to return to that essential innocence, not by regressing, but by reclaiming the instinct to marvel?
This blog—Rise&Inspire—was born out of that very need. A desire to look again. To notice differently. To invite others into spaces where meaning hasn’t been stripped away by cynicism or routine.
5. Questions I’m Living Into
These are the questions I carry—not to solve, but to let them shape me:
What makes a moment feel sacred, even if it’s ordinary?
Can creativity be a form of prayer?
What is my life trying to teach me right now, in the quiet moments between deadlines?
How can I remain tender in a world that rewards efficiency?
What if being curious is the most faithful response to being alive?
6. A Final Thought: Curiosity as Calling
To be curious is not simply to want answers.
It’s to stay awake.
To remain open.
To refuse the numbness of autopilot.
And perhaps, that’s the very heart of the Rise&Inspire journey—to keep asking not what the world wants us to be curious about, but what our soul already knows is worth wondering.

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