

Have you ever noticed how often we turn outward when we feel lost? We ask friends for advice, scroll through articles that promise ‘5 steps to clarity,’ or wait for some external sign to tell us what to do next. But here’s what I’ve learned through years of working with clients on their well-being journeys: the discomfort you’re feeling isn’t because you don’t know the answer. It’s because you haven’t truly listened to yourself yet. You are not broken, you are not lacking in wisdom, and you simply need better questions. Asking questions to unlock your own answers is a guide to self-inquiry.
Self-inquiry, the practice of asking yourself questions that unlock your own inner knowing, is a skill anyone can develop. It’s not reserved for monks, therapists, or people who have it all figured out. It’s a tool for anyone willing to get quiet enough to hear themselves. This guide isn’t here to give you answers. It’s here to give you questions. Because you are the only person who truly knows what’s right for you.
There’s nothing wrong with asking for advice. Mentors, friends, therapists, and coaches all play valuable roles in our lives. But when we rely exclusively on external wisdom, we create problems:
We encounter conflicting guidance. One person says follow your passion. Another says be practical. Who’s right? Both, perhaps. Neither, for you specifically.
We become dependent. The more we look outside ourselves, the less we trust our own judgment. Soon, we can’t make even small decisions without consulting someone else.
We ignore our unique context. No one else lives in your body, with your history, values, and circumstances. The “right” answer for someone else may be entirely wrong for you.
We miss the whispers. Your body, intuition, and deeper self are constantly communicating with you. But if you’re always listening to external voices, you can’t hear your own.
External guidance can illuminate the path. But only you can walk it.
Not all questions are created equal. Some questions close doors. Others open them wide.
Powerful questions are open, not closed. “Should I quit my job?” is a yes/no question that demands a verdict. “What is my job teaching me right now?” invites exploration.
They invite curiosity, not judgment. Compare “Why am I so bad at relationships?” with “What patterns do I notice in my relationships?” One attacks. One investigates.
They focus on “what” and “how” rather than “why.” “Why did this happen?” often leads to rumination or self-blame. “What can I learn from this?” moves toward growth.
They create space for multiple truths. Good questions don’t assume there’s only one right answer. They allow complexity, nuance, and the possibility that you don’t know yet, and that’s okay.
Bear in mind questions you ask yourself shape the answers you’ll find. Choose them carefully.
Here are five types of questions that consistently unlock deeper knowing. Use them when you feel stuck, confused, or disconnected from your own wisdom.
You know more than you think you do. Often, the answer is already inside you, but buried under doubt, fear, or the noise of other people’s opinions.
Try these:
These questions bypass self-doubt and access the wisdom you’ve been dismissing. The part of you that “just knows” has been there all along.
Tip: When you ask these questions, write down your very first response, even if it seems wrong or scary. That unfiltered reaction often holds your truth.
Your body is constantly sending you information, but most of us have learned to override it in favour of logical thinking. We ignore the tightness in our chest, the sinking in our stomach, the lightness we feel when something is right.
Try these:
Your body doesn’t lie. It responds to truth and misalignment before your mind can rationalise or explain it away.
When logic creates confusion, values create clarity. Your values are your non-negotiables, the things that matter most to who you are and want to be.
Try these:
Values-based questions cut through the noise of other people’s expectations and reveal what’s truly important to you.
Make a list of your top five values (examples: freedom, connection, creativity, security, growth). Reference them when making decisions.
We all carry invisible assumptions and beliefs we’ve never questioned, rules we didn’t consciously choose. Sometimes the thing blocking you isn’t a lack of answers, but an unexamined assumption.
Try these:
Assumptions create invisible cages. Questioning them reveals possibilities you couldn’t see before.
Sometimes we’re too close to our current situation to see clearly. Borrowing perspective from your future self creates helpful distance.
Try these:
Future-focused questions connect you to your deeper knowing and help you see beyond immediate emotion or pressure.
If you read books, confided in friends, attended workshops or even listened to a self-help podcast, but the needle hasn’t moved, working with a professional could be a good option for you. In my 1:1 coaching and consulting, I guide women in designing sustainable strategies for both their lives and their businesses after adversity. Contact us today.
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Eunice De Campi is a multi-passionate founder and creative dedicated to helping women rebuild their lives and businesses after adversity. Based in the UK, works internationally.
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