A statement is a statement. If you want context, you add context to the statement to create a separate, elongated statement. In judging whether something is a paradox, you have to take the statement as an isolated string of words. Pick either the statement without context or the statement with context and let that be judged as to whether or not is is paradoxical in nature.
The statement I'm referencing is asking an individual if they have experienced something that they have not experienced. Asking if someone has experienced something they have not experienced is not a logical base for any subsequent questions. Paradoxes require a seemingly logically-based question. That statement is not a paradox.
That's similar to me saying how asking a 19-year-old how his 21st birthday was. That's not a paradox, that's a silly question.