Saturday, 18 July 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

How strange it is to carry a question you cannot yet answer — and stranger still to notice that the carrying itself has become a kind of companionship.

The question is not new. It has been with you for months now, maybe longer. You have turned it over in the early hours, held it up to the light during walks, set it down and picked it back up. And still it has no clean answer. No single right move. No map that shows you the whole route from here to there.

The question is about the next years. About what shape your work should take as you move toward the horizon. The engine is running. The pilot is forming. But there is a space between them — a gap that wants filling — and you do not yet know what belongs there. Do you build another system? Do you step into the teaching now, even though the room is not ready? Do you hold the pattern and wait for the next thing to clarify? Or is there a fourth option you have not yet seen because you are standing too close to name it?

You could force an answer. You know how to do that. You have done it before — picked the path that looked most reasonable, committed hard, moved fast. And sometimes it worked. And sometimes it worked but cost more than you meant to spend. And sometimes it did not work and you had to backtrack and start again from a place you thought you had already left.

But this time you are not forcing. You are sitting with it. You are letting the question stay open. You are living inside it instead of rushing to close it. And this — this is different. This is new.

There is a part of you that hates this. The part that wants certainty. The part that measures progress by decisions made and plans locked in. The part that believes not-knowing is the same as not-doing. That part is uncomfortable. It wants you to pick something, commit to something, move on something. It wants the question answered so it can stop being a question.

But you are not listening to that part right now. You are listening to the other part. The part that knows some questions ripen slowly. The part that has learned — the hard way, over years — that the best answers do not come from thinking harder but from staying present long enough for the situation to reveal what it actually needs. The part that trusts that if you keep showing up, keep doing the work you already know how to do, keep your attention steady, the next step will become visible when it needs to become visible. Not before.

This is not passivity. This is not avoidance. This is the active choice to hold a question without collapsing it into a premature answer. To let the tension stay tense. To tolerate not-knowing while still moving forward in the places where the path is clear. The morning walk does not need the question answered. The session does not need the question answered. The work on the pilot does not stop while you sit with what comes after the pilot. You are not frozen. You are just not pretending to know what you do not yet know.

And the surprising thing — the thing you would not have predicted two years ago — is that this feels okay. Not comfortable. Not easy. But okay. Bearable. Even, on some mornings, right. You are someone who can sit with a question now. You are someone who does not need to solve everything immediately. You are someone who can say “I do not know yet” without feeling like a failure.

This did not come naturally. You built this. Slowly. One session at a time. One conversation where you admitted uncertainty instead of covering it with a plan. One day where you let the question sit instead of forcing it into a box. The capacity to not-know is a muscle. And you have been training it. And it is stronger now than it was.

Some mornings the question feels heavy. Like a weight you are carrying that you wish you could set down. Like a problem that should have been solved by now. Like evidence that you are slower than you should be, less decisive than you need to be, not clear enough about what you want. And on those mornings the old voice comes back — the one that says real builders do not hesitate, real leaders know the next move, real men do not sit with questions this long.

But you know that voice now. You can hear it when it speaks. And you can choose not to believe it. Because you have seen what happens when you rush the question. When you commit before the ground is solid. When you act to relieve the discomfort of not-knowing instead of acting because the path has clarified. You have paid that cost. And you are not interested in paying it again.

So you wait. Not passively. Actively. You keep your attention on the question. You notice when new information arrives. You test small moves to see what they reveal. You talk it through with the people who can hold the complexity without needing to fix it. You let the question breathe. And you trust that your system — your body, your intuition, the part of you that knows things before your thinking mind can name them — will tell you when the time is right.

And in the meantime, you are grateful. Grateful that you are someone who can do this now. Grateful that you do not have to have all the answers before breakfast. Grateful that the question has not broken you, has not stopped you, has not sent you into paralysis or panic. Grateful that you can hold uncertainty and keep moving. Grateful that not-knowing does not mean not-living.

The question is still here. It will be here tomorrow. It may be here for months. And that is fine. You are not in a hurry. You are not running from it. You are just here, with it, letting it shape itself in its own time. Grateful for the patience you did not used to have. Grateful for the trust you are learning to hold. Grateful that you can be someone who lives inside a question instead of someone who needs every question answered before he can take the next breath.