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5 big questions kids ask that leave parents speechless

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Feb 15, 2026, 10:38 IST
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1/5

Where was I before I was born?

This one usually comes out of nowhere. You’re brushing their hair or tucking them in, and suddenly they look at you very seriously and ask, “Where was I before I was born?”
And you freeze.
You can talk about biology. You can say they were in your tummy. But that’s not what they’re really asking. They’re asking about existence. About whether they were somewhere. With someone. Waiting.
Some parents say, “You were in our hearts.” It’s sweet. But even as you say it, you know it’s not a real answer. Because the truth is, none of us knows. And kids sense that. They’re not looking for textbook facts. They’re trying to understand where they fit in this big, confusing world. And sometimes the only honest thing to say is, “I don’t really know. What do you think?”
That answer feels uncomfortable. But it’s real.

2/5

Why do people die?

This one hits hard. It usually comes after a pet dies. Or a grandparent. Or even after they see something on the news you wish they hadn’t.
They’re not satisfied with “because they were old.” They want to know why old bodies stop working. Why sickness happens. Why life ends at all.
And you realize you don’t actually have a clean explanation. You can talk about the body wearing out. You can mention illness. But the deeper “why” — the reason behind death itself — that’s something humans have been wrestling with forever.
So you sit there, choosing your words carefully, trying not to pass on your own fear. And maybe you admit, gently, that death is part of life. That it’s sad. That it’s natural. That it’s okay to feel confused about it.
Because honestly, most adults are still confused about it too.

3/5

Why can’t I do whatever I want?

This question usually comes during a meltdown. They want ice cream for dinner. They don’t want to go to school. They want to stay up all night. And when you say no, they look at you like you’ve personally ruined their life.
“But why?”
You start explaining rules. Health. Safety. Society. And halfway through, you realize how strange it all sounds. We follow invisible systems. We live by schedules. We say no to ourselves all the time.
And when a child questions it, it exposes how arbitrary some things feel. Yes, there are real reasons. But there’s also a lot of “because that’s how it is.” Which isn’t very satisfying
Sometimes you just have to say, “Because my job is to keep you safe.” It’s not perfect. But it’s honest.

4/5

What does love look like?

This one is softer. It might come after a hug. Or after a fight. “How do you know you love me?” they ask.
You can say, “Because I feel it.” But feelings are invisible. Kids want something they can see. Something they can hold.
And you realize love shows up in packed lunches. In sitting through boring school functions. In saying no when it would be easier to say yes. But try explaining that to a six-year-old in a way that makes sense.
So you tell them love looks like showing up. Like listening. Like staying.
It still feels incomplete. But maybe love is always a little bigger than words.

5/5

What happens when the world ends?

Sometimes they ask this casually. Sometimes with wide eyes at bedtime. And you’re not prepared.


You can talk about science. About the sun burning out billions of years from now. But that’s not really the point. They’re asking if everything they know can disappear. If you will disappear.
And you don’t have control over that. None of us do.
So you pull them close. You say the world isn’t ending anytime soon. You say right now we are safe. And maybe that’s the only answer that matters in that moment.
Because here’s the thing. Kids ask questions that don’t have neat endings. They ask about life, death, freedom, love, existence. Big stuff. The kind philosophers write books about.
And as parents, we don’t always need perfect answers. Sometimes we just need to sit with the question. To admit we’re still figuring it out too.
It’s humbling. But it’s also kind of beautiful.

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Copyright © May 26, 2026, 12.57PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service