Dear @san.kumars
That’s an interesting perspective, and I can see where you’re coming from—especially the emphasis on “who is this question for?” and the idea of moving beyond the ego. There’s definitely truth in the fact that excessive mental questioning can sometimes keep us looping within the same identity we’re trying to transcend.
At the same time, I feel questions like “What is this trying to teach me?” or “What part of me is ready to change?” are not necessarily ego traps—they can also act as bridges. For many people, awareness doesn’t arise instantly; it unfolds gradually. In that journey, such questions can gently shift one from unconscious patterns toward deeper observation.
Perhaps it’s not about the question itself, but the space from which it is asked. If it comes from restlessness, it may reinforce the ego. But if it arises from stillness, it can dissolve into the very inquiry you mentioned—“Who is this for?”
Also, the idea that we are here to “remember” rather than “learn” resonates deeply. Maybe both are just different expressions of the same process—what appears as learning at the surface may actually be remembering at a deeper level.
And yes, thoughts are powerful—but awareness of thought is even more powerful. That silent witnessing you pointed to… that’s where everything begins to shift.
and my all time fall back to is here
Appreciate you sharing this—it adds another dimension to the reflection.
Wishes and Regards
