Warning: The following post contains WTMI (Way Too Much Information). You’ve been warned.

Questions prevent burning powder. Those seem like random words, but they are oh so dom. What is dom you ask? Dom is the second half of the compound word random. The first half is ran which means “To move around in a hurried direction.” The second half is dom which means “A title prefixed to the names of some Roman Catholic dignitaries and Benedictine and Carthusian monks.” In other words, after you read this post “Questions Prevent Burning Powder” will make complete sense.

I’ve been jogging with a friend of mine. I always like jogging with other people better than by myself. It makes the time go by faster and it allows me to get to know someone better. Well, this particular friend started off the jog by telling me about Gold Bond Medicated Powder. He said that it feels really nice and that he used it after a shower. At first I was a little weirded out that we were talking about after shower powder, but then I started thinking about it. This guy is a runner. He runs races. Maybe he is on to something, and he’s just sharing his knowledge with me. Later that night I asked Monica to pick me up some from the store.

A few weeks later I had my very own bottle of Gold Bond Medicated Powder. I quickly learned that I should have asked more questions about this powder. I discovered instantly that…

  1. I don’t have a fat clue how to put on after shower powder. My bathroom looked like a winter wonder land exploded. Powder goes everywhere when you try to put it on.
  2. He didn’t tell me that it burned like Fabio holding a blowtorch and attacking a tub of I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter.

So now I have a quandary. Do I keep using this burning powder that turns my bathroom into the North Pole, or do I throw away an entire bottle minus one use? Or I could strike up the nerve to ask this friend about the powder and pray it’s not too weird of a conversation.

I often don’t ask the right people the right questions. I tend to learn from mistakes. I think it’s great to learn from our mistakes, but it is less painful to seek wise counsel.

The Bible says, “Who is wise? Let them realize these things. Who is discerning? Let them understand. The ways of the LORD are right; the righteous walk in them, but the rebellious stumble in them.” Hosea 14:9 (NIV).

Did you catch the end of that verse? If you find yourself stumbling, could it be that you are not asking the right people the right questions? When we seek out wise counsel and ask them the right questions we can learn to become wise.

I wish that I did this more. There have been many times when I am faced with a situation that I seek wise counsel. I believe with all my heart the truth in this verse, “Walk with the wise and become wise, for a companion of fools suffers harm.” Proverbs 13:20. When you seek wisdom you will find it. When you hang out with fools you will suffer harm.

Before you date someone, get married, have kids, take a job, move to a new house, or make any major or minor decision you should seek wise counsel. I wish I would have thought of this before my adventure with the after shower powder.

On a scale of 1 to 10, with 1 being never and 10 being always, if you’re honest, how good are you at seeking wisdom?