The question basically sums up philosophical questions about yourself, such as how should you live and what life or ideal should you live or die for? What is the meaning purpose of your life? What is the question?
It could be 'what would you do had you a week to live', 'can you live as if it were your last week', or 'can you make the world a better place, or 'can you justify your existence'. Most of the time the answer is no.
Anyway, I think one should always have a question. Questions create meaning; they make the stasis that is your life an on-going journey, a valiant pursuit, and if you're lucky, an epic quest.
Hopefully things don't make sense for you. When things make sense there aren't much questions and when there aren't questions all you're doing is being. Someone said ' to strive, to seek, to find, and never to yield'.
An unexamined life is not worth living - Socrates
In my opinion, you shouldn't look for the answers. Don't solve your questions. Unanswered they are open treasure chests of possibilities, and to solve it is to establish it; lock the chest. Sometimes I think life is wonderful because there is no meaning. It's a bit like unrequited feelings. If something never started, never was, then it can't end. 'It has endless potential'. <- that's rephrased from Sarah Dessen's novel.
When there is a question, you have the chance to be infinite, eternal. And death shall not be the end of you.
So..what's your question?
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