Tuesday, 23 June 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

What does it mean to be someone who does not yet know?

The question is not rhetorical. You are living inside it. Not because you are confused, or lost, or waiting for clarity to arrive like a package you ordered. You are living inside it because the question is large enough to hold you, because it does not collapse into an answer when you press on it, because every time you think you have touched the edge of it the edge moves further out.

You do not know how to be a father to a teenage daughter. Not fully. Not yet. You know how to be a father to the daughter she was last year, and the year before that, but she is changing faster than your knowledge of her can keep up. She is becoming someone you have not met. She is confident in ways you are still learning to recognize. She asks questions you do not have answers for, not because you are unprepared but because the questions are hers, not yours, and the answers will have to be hers too. You can feel the gap between what you know and what is needed. You are not rushing to close it. You are letting it be a gap. You are sitting with not-knowing as the condition of the relationship, not a problem to be solved.

You do not know if the work you are building now will matter in five years. You have systems running. You have income arriving. You have clients who trust you and code that works. But you are also watching the tools change, the models improve, the landscape shift under your feet. What you are good at today might be obsolete by 2028. What you are learning now might be the foundation for the next decade, or it might be a detour you will look back on and shrug at. You do not know. You are doing the work anyway, not because you have certainty, but because doing the work is how you find out what the work is for.

You do not know what your father needs from you. He is upstairs, moving through his own morning, his own aging, his own private reconciliation with the shape his life has taken. You can guess. You can offer. But you do not know. He does not always say. Some mornings the meal together is enough. Some mornings it is not enough and you do not know what else to offer. You sit with him anyway. You show up anyway. You let not-knowing be part of what it means to be his son in this decade of his life, when the questions are different from the ones you asked when you were young.

You do not know if you are spending your attention correctly. The systems pull you one way. The children pull you another. The body asks for rest. The work asks for hours. The inner practices ask for stillness. The people around you ask for presence. You make choices. You allocate the days. But you do not know if you are getting it right. There is no right to get. There is only the choosing, and the living with what you chose, and the adjusting when the feedback comes. You are in the question. You are not pretending it has an answer yet.

You do not know what your son will remember. He is small now. His memory is still forming. He is learning to hold a spoon, to climb the stairs, to say the words for the things he wants. You are there for it. You are watching it happen. But you do not know which moments will stay with him and which will dissolve. You do not know if he will remember the park, the mornings, the way you lift him when he reaches for you. You are doing it anyway. You are showing up for the moments that might not be remembered, because showing up is not conditional on being remembered.

You do not know when the body will stop cooperating. It works now. The legs carry you. The eyes focus. The back holds the weight. But you are old enough to know this is not permanent. Something will break, or wear down, or simply stop working the way it used to. You do not know when. You do not know what. You are grateful for the body while it works, and you are not pretending it will work forever, and you are holding both of those things at once without needing to resolve them.

You do not know if the question you are living inside will ever close. Maybe it will. Maybe one day you will look back and see that the not-knowing was just a phase, a temporary condition, and clarity arrived and settled things. Or maybe the question will just get larger. Maybe not-knowing is not a phase but a posture. Maybe the work is learning to live well inside the question, to stop treating it as a problem, to let it be the shape your life takes instead of the obstacle your life has to get past.

This is what you are grateful for: that you are someone who can sit with a question. That you do not have to rush it shut. That you can let the gap stay open, let the uncertainty remain uncertain, let the not-knowing be part of the texture of the days instead of something to be solved before the days can begin. You are living inside a question about fatherhood, about work, about time, about what matters. You are not collapsing it into an answer. You are letting it hold you. You are trusting that being held by a question is its own kind of knowing.

The morning is quiet. The house is still. The question is still open. You are still here.