Go Down the Rabbit Hole — A Love Letter to Curiosity Without a Map

by | May 20, 2026 | Beautiful English Expressions

Congratulations. You went down the rabbit hole.

And honestly? That’s one of the best things you can do with your brain.

To go down the rabbit hole means to pursue a subject or investigation so deeply, and through so many unexpected turns, that you lose track of where you started. It’s the internet spiral that begins with one documentary and ends with you reading about 18th-century Venetian glass-making at midnight. It’s the conversation that starts with one question and leads you through history, philosophy, biology, and somehow back to the original question — transformed.

The origin is obvious and glorious: Alice in Wonderland. Lewis Carroll’s Alice follows a white rabbit down a hole and enters a world that is disorienting, surreal, alive with nonsense and meaning in equal measure. The rabbit hole is not a path with signs. It’s a fall into the unknown. And on the other side? A world that operates by different rules, where questions multiply faster than answers.

Carroll gave us more than a fairy tale. He gave us a perfect metaphor for curiosity itself.

Because here’s what going down the rabbit hole really is: it’s the natural behavior of a genuinely curious mind. One question doesn’t stay one question. It branches. It reveals that beneath every answer is another question, and beneath that one, another. The more you know, the more the territory of the unknown expands. That’s not frustrating — that’s the most beautiful thing about knowledge.

Rabbit holes are how expertise is born. The historian who intended to read one book on ancient Rome and ended up learning Latin. The programmer who started debugging one thing and ended up understanding an entire system architecture. The chef who asked why a certain sauce works and ended up in the chemistry of emulsification. These aren’t distractions. These are the moments when knowledge stops being surface and starts becoming real.

There’s also something important about the surrender required to go down a rabbit hole. You have to let go of the direct path. You have to accept detours. You have to be comfortable not knowing where you’re going — which, in a world obsessed with efficiency and productivity, is actually quite countercultural. The rabbit hole says: slow down. Follow the strange thread. Let curiosity lead.

And the people who allow themselves this — who follow the rabbit even when there’s no practical reason to — often turn out to be the most interesting people in any room. They’ve seen things the straight-line thinkers haven’t. They’ve made connections no one else thought to make.

Here’s what I love most about this expression: it honors the digression. It says the wandering is the point. The destination, if there even is one, matters far less than how richly you traveled.

Here’s your question: What’s the most unexpected rabbit hole you’ve ever gone down — and what did you find at the bottom?

Leave it in the comments. I promise to read every one. Follow the rabbit.

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