You never get ‘just what you wanted’ when you meditate on the answers to questions. You either get much less than you asked for, or as you have this time, much more. If you get less than you asked for, it means you weren’t asking the right questions. If you’re very new to this, then generally you just need more practice, but if you’ve been doing this for a little while then the divine starts getting a little reticent with it’s wisdom.
As you’re used to getting answers it’s going to process as weird, perhaps even a little off-putting. But it won’t totally shut off so you can eventually work out that it’s something you can fix if you think about it hard enough.
Getting too much is exactly the opposite problem. Having done this for a long time, I can say that there are really two reasons this happens. First, you could well be reading too much into it. I don’t think that’s the case here because you stated you feel “they are truth.” Just including this for completeness.
Second, It’s for you to take note of now as it will become important later. Our subconscious minds often need to chew on stuff for awhile before the conscious can really make sense of it, like a kind of digestion. This happens so often in my life I can just sense which stuff is for now and which stuff is for later. Many times I’ve thought back to the old stuff I didn’t understand the meaning of before, and suddenly had a rush of clarity concerning it. Invariably it puts a lot of things into context, not just the immediate thing the insight had concerned.
There’s an old canard out there, “everything happens for a reason.” It’s 100% true, but most people can’t handle that. Limited human minds can’t process cause-effect reasoning for literally everything that happens to them. So they decide that only some things have reasons, not everything. But exactly which things and which reasons, that responsibility is egoically assigned to the self and not to the divine.
Meditation eventually removes the selfish conviction of nihilistic materialism but presents a challenge in it’s place. A challenge to increase the amount of divine influence one has in their lives. Accept the challenge by recognizing divine wisdom as greater than your own. Not everything will make sense immediately, and that ultimately makes things better for you in the long run even if it confuses you to begin with.