29/08/2025
What if it can be done differently?
We kill curiosity early.
A child asks, “Why is the sky blue?” and we shut them down with, “Stop asking too many questions.”
They ask, “Why can’t we do it differently?” and we silence them with, “That’s how it has always been.”
And then years later, we wonder why adults can’t innovate.
Why people sit in jobs, businesses, and systems repeating the same patterns with zero imagination.
Why so many graduates can recite but can’t create.
Curiosity is the seed of innovation. But in many homes and schools, questions are treated as rebellion.
Children are trained to obey, not to wonder. To copy, not to think. To memorize, not to explore.
That’s how we breed what I call poverty of curiosity. A society that has everything but solutions.
A workforce that follows instructions but rarely asks, “What if there’s a better way?”
The tragedy is this: innovation doesn’t survive where curiosity is punished.
Every breakthrough we celebrate today, from technology to medicine to art, started with someone asking a question that annoyed everyone else.
If we want a generation that builds, not just borrows, that creates, not just consumes, we must stop treating curiosity like noise.
We must stop shaming kids for wondering and start rewarding questions as much as we reward answers.
Because the poorest mind is not the one without money. It’s the one without curiosity.