This year I’m committing to one daily practice: answering one meaningful question a day, writing my thoughts down, and sharing them here.

Recently, I realised I can stay busy forever. I can travel, work, plan, build, solve problems, reply to messages, book flights, organise meetings… and still avoid the most important conversations with myself.

The plan is to treat thinking as a skill that needs structure, not something I leave to chance. One question a day is my way of doing this to force myself to slow down and examine my reasoning. AND to keep myself accountable, I will plan my questions weekly. Not to control the answers, but to make sure I don’t avoid them just because they feel uncomfortable. When a question is written ahead of time, I can’t pretend it doesn’t exist. I also want to stay open and live with curiosity, so I’m allowing myself to question random topics. Sometimes a question will come from a book I’m reading, a conversation I overhear, a headline, or a feeling I can’t quite explain. I don’t want my thinking to become rigid or mechanical. Curiosity matters after all.

I plan to use this practice to question my past experiences too. Not to judge them, but to learn from them. What actually worked? What didn’t? What patterns keep repeating?

Writing and sharing them here are the non-negotiable part.

Thinking stays flexible. Writing is different. Writing is practice. It forces clarity, even when the answer is messy. And sharing is what makes it real. Sharing makes me accountable.

This practice isn’t about finding perfect answers. It’s about asking better questions, consistently. I want a life led by curiosity, but anchored by intention. Structure gives me stability. Curiosity keeps me alive.

I’m not just “having ideas” — I’m building a habit of honesty. Not for perfection. Not for validation. For discipline. This balance is what I’m building this year.

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