The wrong question can sour the whole mood of a gathering with family or friends. Some questions are boring or intrusive or too ambiguous; others are meant to provokeâor are asked with no real interest in an answer.
And then there are those that hit it out of the park, lighting up the place and bringing everyone in it together.
âA good question opens the whole room,â says Priya Parker, author of The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why it Matters. âIt opens a pathway for connection, and creates the geography of conversation from which you can travel anywhere together. A beautiful question is the fundamental building block of conversation.â
The best questions, she adds, are those that lead to stories instead of opinions and invite specificity. Theyâre also energizing, make people want to engage, and are relevant to everyone in the room. âA great question is accessible, whether youâre 7 or 77,â Parker says. âIt doesnât feel like homework or labor, and everyone in the group is excited to answer itâand also really interested in hearing everyone elseâs answers.â
We asked Parker the best question to ask at your next social gathering.
The No. 1 question to ask
Parker thinks of her repertoire of favorite conversation-starters as âmagical questionsâ that transform small talk into real talk. One in particular is ideal for year-end gatherings with friends and family: âWhat three songs would make up the soundtrack of your year, and why?â
Part of the reason she loves this question is its cross-generational appeal. Imagine the conversations each personâs selections can ignite: Your grandfather might want to know who Tate McRae is, while your 6-year-old niece has never heard of Madonna. âA really good question has legs,â Parker says. Songs are so heavily influenced by personal and social factors that the question will âlead to so many other conversations.â
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Maybe your sister is in the midst of a bittersweet season and most relates to a Brandi Carlile song, while your cousin is in her lovey-dovey Taylor Swift era, and your resilient mom has I Will Survive on repeat. Youâll learn a lot about your companions, especially if you ask thoughtful follow-up questions: How long have you been feeling that way? What can we do to support you? Why that artist in particular? Have you seen them live? What other songs do you recommend by them? Plus, thereâs a built-in opportunity to reflect on your own year.
An added bonus: Youâll end up expanding your musical repertoire. âAn Indian grandfather might share Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, and itâs like, âWho? What?ââ Parker says. âSomeone else shares Glenn Miller, and then someone shares Scarlet Pleasure, and someone else shares Toni Braxton.â
Fortunately, music is easily shareable. You can blast each personâs songs on Spotify while youâre all together or even create a playlist featuring the entire groupâs selections that everyone can listen to. âIt creates a musical soundtrack for the rest of your time together,â Parker says. âItâs a generative question thatâs fun and accessible and has a rich afterlife.â
A less-musical alternative
If youâre not big music people, your group might appreciate this slight variation on Parkerâs favorite question: âIf your year was a book, what would its title and subtitle be?â
âA title forces brevity,â she says. âIt gives a vibe of your year without giving the full report.â Of course, by asking the right follow-ups, you can dive much deeper in depth.
When Parker has asked this question at gatherings, sheâs especially gotten a kick out of peopleâs subtitles, which are often laugh-out-loud funny. A book titled My Year As a Mother, for example, might have this subtitle: Poop, pee, and the best year of my life. Or maybe this one: A how-to guide to staying sane.
âTheyâre just being a little flippant, and itâs fun,â she says.
And if thereâs still time after dessertâŠ
Get creative when you think of questions that everyone at your gathering can have fun answering. Parker, whoâs been teaching her children the power of good questions, was delighted when her daughter recently asked this (potentially loaded) question at a family get-together: âWhatâs the naughtiest thing you ever did that was worth it?â
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âThe adults answered knowing that there were children in the room, but we heard so many stories,â she says. Then her son asked a different question: âWhatâs the meanest thing you ever did before the age of 15?â
âMy 77-year-old father, my daughter, and my son and I spent an entire lunch just answering and telling stories and kind of confessing to each other,â Parker says. âA really good question allows you to complicate the individual.â Everyone heads home feeling more connectedânot to mention, entertained and enlightened.
Wondering what to say in a tricky social situation? Email timetotalk@time.com

