Why do kids ask th best questions?
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What if the wisest questions aren’t asked in boardrooms or think-tanks — but in kindergarten classrooms, minivans, and sticky-fingered breakfast tables?
In this episode, Dr. Patti Fletcher, Dan Ward, and Lynne Cuppernull dive into one of the most delightfully disruptive prompts we’ve ever explored:
Why do kids ask the best questions — and why did so many of us stop?From “Why is the sky blue?” to “Why don’t grown-ups play more?” children constantly challenge assumptions, dismantle logic, and push adults into the kind of curiosity we forgot we needed.
Together we explore:
- What kids know instinctively about curiosity and wonder
- When adults begin filtering and performing instead of asking
- Why little-kid questions make us squirm (and what that says about us)
- What changes when we listen instead of rush to answer
- Whether curiosity might be a form of presence — and maybe, leadership
- How reclaiming childlike wonder could transform the way we work, parent, and connect
This episode is a sandbox of ideas — playful, profound, occasionally messy, and full of those “Wait… that’s a really good question” moments.
Bring your beginner’s mind. Leave your certainty at the door.
The world gets bigger and more beautiful every time we dare to ask like a kid again.
🎙️ Listening for the Questions — where curiosity isn’t childish.
It’s a superpower.
Listen now on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you wonder.
Listening for the Questions is where curiosity is our compass.