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Curated Questions

Celebrating The Power Of Questions

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#84 Ken Woodward: The Long Tail: What Your Decisions Drag Behind Them

"The invitation is not to be right. It is to be willing." - Ken Woodward

The small decisions we make without examination carry consequences we never see coming. Ken calls this the long tail. It does not stay inside us. It speaks, votes, stays silent when silence enables harm, and over time shapes the people and institutions around us in ways no single decision can account for.

Drawing on Roald Dahl's collapse, a question posed by author Jason Pargin about what we would actually do in someone else's position, and a personal story from a church lobby that still lands hard years later, this episode explores the difference between a foundation and a position. A foundation is what you would sacrifice almost everything to protect. A position is a conclusion you have built on top of lived experience that you have likely never examined.

The invitation is not to abandon what you stand on. It is to know what you are standing on. And to have the courage to look when something challenges it.

This Curated Questions episode can be found on all major platforms and at CuratedQuestions.com.

Be sure to subscribe to the weekly Curated Questions Dispatch newsletter for more fun with questions and curiosity! (https://substack.com/@curatedquestions)

Keep questioning!

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tags: Ken Woodward, Curated Questions, long tail of decisions, unexamined beliefs, self-examination, Roald Dahl, personal transformation, examined life, foundations vs positions, intentional questioning, blind spots, bias and identity, decision making, behavioral change, implicit bias, storytelling and growth, curated questions, Kenneth Woodward, podcast personal development, racial justice journey, white privilege awakening, cognitive dissonance, moral courage, community and accountability, cost of change, identity and belief, questioning methodology, staying true to yourself, human condition, systemic impact of individuals, waking up from certainty, the examined life
categories: Community, Social Impact, Listening, Mental Wellness, Personal Growth, Equity, Imagination, Justice, Legacy, Mentoring, Relationships
Thursday 05.21.26
Posted by Kenneth Woodward
 

#53 Ken Woodward: Impactful Questions: Am I My Brother's Keeper?

"Am I my brother's keeper? Is answered in the daily work of showing up, being challenged, getting it wrong, being corrected, and showing up again." - Ken Woodward

In this solo episode, Ken Woodward explores one of humanity's oldest and most challenging questions: "Am I my brother's keeper?" Born from Cain's evasion after murdering Abel, this question continues to shape how we answer fundamental issues about immigration, homelessness, healthcare, and who deserves our care.

Drawing from his 101-week walk through every street and alley in Washington, DC, Ken reflects on how he spent 50 years answering "no" to this question while convincing himself he was answering "yes." He shares powerful conversations with Raymond Coates about the Sugar House in Charleston, encounters with a woman who demanded accountability, and the devastating costs of both saying yes and saying no.

This episode challenges listeners to examine their own complicity, confront inherited assumptions, and honestly assess who they've decided doesn't count as "brother." Ken offers four concrete takeaways to help transform this ancient question from theological abstraction into daily practice.

This Curated Questions episode can be found on all major platforms and at CuratedQuestions.com.

Keep questioning!

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tags: Ken Woodward, Curated Questions, am I my brother's keeper, social justice, racial equity, personal transformation, Cain and Abel, biblical questions, Washington DC walk, community responsibility, systemic racism, evangelical deconstruction, faith crisis, complicity, white privilege, brother's keeper meaning, moral responsibility, civil rights, Black Lives Matter, questioning assumptions, Howard Thurman, Isabel Wilkerson, personal growth podcast, difficult conversations, reparations, redlining, Jerry Colonna, accountability, generational change, American history, racial justice, curated questions
categories: Community, Community Service, Social Impact, Connection, Leadership, Listening, Personal Growth, Equity, Faith
Thursday 10.16.25
Posted by Kenneth Woodward
 

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