A Crossroad in Your Life is Not a Problem to Ignore but a Question You Can’t Ignore
By Dr. Scott Zarcinas | Author, Doctor, Wayfarer
What’s in the article:
- How crossroads often begin long before a major decision is made.
- The questions that become impossible to ignore.
- Why the old answers sometimes stop making sense.
- The role of orientation when the way forward is unclear.
A Crossroad Is Not a Problem to Ignore
I’ve been reflecting recently on the idea of crossroads.
What strikes me is that most people don’t realise they are standing at one. They simply know that something no longer fits.
The work that once felt meaningful feels heavy. The future that once seemed clear has become uncertain. Success no longer feels the way they imagined it would. A relationship begins to change. A long-held ambition loses its appeal. Or perhaps there is simply a growing sense that something is missing, despite being unable to explain exactly what it is.
Often there is no crisis. Nothing has necessarily gone wrong. In fact, from the outside, life may appear perfectly fine.
This is why crossroads can be difficult to recognise. We tend to think of them as dramatic moments involving major decisions, obvious turning points, or life-changing events. Sometimes they are.
More often, however, a crossroads begins as a question. A question that quietly appears in the background and refuses to disappear.
The Questions That Follow Us
Over the years, I’ve noticed that these questions tend to sound remarkably similar.
- Is this still what I want?
- Why doesn’t this feel the way I thought it would?
- What happened to the person I used to be?
- Am I still on the right path?
- What do I really want?
- Why do I feel like something is missing?
At first, these questions are easy to dismiss. We tell ourselves we’re tired, stressed, busy, or simply going through a phase. We assume the feeling will pass once work settles down, the next project is completed, the holiday arrives, or life becomes a little less demanding.
Sometimes it does. Sometimes it doesn’t. What interests me is that certain questions seem to become stronger the longer they are ignored.
Rather than disappearing, they gradually become impossible to avoid.
When the Old Answers No Longer Fit
Perhaps this is why I don’t see crossroads as problems.
Problems generally have solutions. They can be analysed, solved, fixed, and put aside.
Crossroads seem different. The more I reflect on it, the more it appears that many crossroads emerge when the answers we have been living by no longer fit.
- The career that once provided meaning no longer does.
- The definition of success we once pursued no longer satisfies.
- The identity we built our lives around begins to feel too small.
- The assumptions that guided us for years start to lose their hold.
What makes this uncomfortable is that the new answers are rarely obvious.
We know something is changing, yet we cannot always see what it is changing into.
We find ourselves standing between what no longer fits and what has not yet become clear. Naturally, we want certainty, we want reassurance, we want to know where the road leads.
Yet life rarely reveals the entire path in advance.





