A willingness to question everything, even things we are sure we are right about, can shake us out of complacency and reinvigorate our minds, opening us up to understanding people and perspectives that were once alien to us. This alone is a good reason to remain inquisitive, no matter how much experience we have or how old we get. In the Zen tradition, this willingness to question is known as beginner’s mind, and it has a way of generating possibilities we couldn’t have seen from the point of view of knowing something with certainty. The willingness to question everything doesn’t necessarily mean we don’t believe in anything at all, and it doesn’t mean we have to question every single thing in the world every minute of the day. It just means that we are humble enough to acknowledge how little we actually know about the mysterious universe we call home.
Nearly every revolutionary change in the history of human progress
came about because someone questioned some time-honored belief or
tradition, and in doing so, it revealed a new truth, a new way of doing
things, or a new standard for ethical and moral behavior. A commitment
to staying open and inquisitive in our own individual lives can lead us
to new personal revolutions and truths — truths that we will hopefully,
for the sake of our growth, remain open to questioning. (Daily Om)