The Search Of A Soulmate

Lately, I’ve started to believe that our search for a soulmate isn’t a quest for answers, it’s a quest for shared questions.

For centuries, we’ve idealized the notion of a soulmate as “the answer to all my questions.” Love songs, poetry, and stories tell us that we were born incomplete, carrying questions only our beloved could answer.

But what if we’ve misunderstood this narrative? What if the answers have always been there, offered by our friends, our family, or even life itself?

What if the essence of a soulmate lies not in answers, but in the questions they ask?

Friends, after all, satisfy our curiosity. They give us answers, clarity, and a sense of grounding. That’s why friendships endure; they fill gaps in our understanding.

A soulmate, however, is different. They are not the ones who settle your uncertainties, they are the ones who mirror them.

They ask the same questions that keep you awake at night.

This idea might feel unsettling, especially in a world where love is marketed as a solution. We’re taught to seek compatibility through shared goals, values, and intellectual pursuits.

We’re told to look for someone who “completes us” or “makes us better.”

But what if the true purpose of a soulmate is to stand beside us, equally lost, equally searching?

It’s not the answers that bind us, but the shared journey of questioning. To feel truly connected to another is to see your own confusion reflected in their eyes and to find comfort in that mutual uncertainty.

The idea of “completion” becomes irrelevant because the bond isn’t about fixing; it’s about exploring.

This is why relationships often falter when one partner “finds the answer.” The balance shifts. Suddenly, the partnership feels unequal. One leads while the other lags behind. In such moments, the relationship risks becoming an uncomfortable hierarchy, rather than the safe haven it once was.

A soulmate isn’t a wise teacher sent to enlighten you. They’re not the long-awaited guru with a roadmap to your life. They are, instead, your fellow wanderer.

The same goofy, clueless last-bencher who doesn’t have all the answers either.

Together, you stumble through life, laughing, tripping, and asking questions that may never have answers.

The real question, then, isn’t “Who is my soulmate?” but rather, “What are my questions?”

Have you sat with your doubts long enough to understand them?

Have you figured out what you’re truly searching for?

Because only when you understand your own questions can you recognize the ones who share them.

A soulmate isn’t a destination. They’re not an endpoint to your search. They are a companion who joins you on the journey, walking beside you through the uncharted terrain of life’s mysteries.

And maybe, just maybe, the beauty lies in the questions themselves, not the answers we once thought we needed.

Comments

2 responses to “The Search Of A Soulmate”

  1. Mandeep Thakur Avatar
    Mandeep Thakur

    Hi…well written and I do concur to the point of fellow wanderer else the equation shift to heirarchial question ( who s good or better 😊)
    Yes the life lies better in wandering with many questions rather than their answers …the quest itself shelters better in uncertainty…
    Ironically we deep down are faltered to look for certainty…
    👍🏻

    1. Neha Sharma Avatar

      Thank you Mandeep for your thoughts! We are wired to get answers and solutions and feel we would feel fulfilled if we solve the mystery of life before dying. While we can probably can’t tell right how satisfying that would be, what we can work on is making our journey worthwhile. And to have a good company while we search is a win in itself according to me.

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