There are dozens of ways to sort and filter questions depending on what page you are on, but from the /questions
page, there are 6 methods

- Newest simply orders the questions by age
- Featured shows all questions with bounties attached to them and they are sorted by the age of the bounty, with the closest expiring bounties listed first
- Frequent simply lists questions that are linked as duplicates (i.e. commonly asked questions)
- Votes lists all questions in decending order of score, and then by time from newest to oldest
- Active lists questions by most recent activity. "Activity" in this context includes editing, posting of an answer, deleting an answer. It does not include comments.
- Unanswered lists questions without accepted or upvoted answers in decending order of score and then by date from newest to oldest.
These 6 tabs also appear when filtering questions by tag, so you can get the same options when you filter the question list by tag or by tags.
Ultimately there is no way to bump a question to the top of most of these as they depending on criteria outside of your control, such as votes and age. You do have some influence on the "Active" tab as you can edit your question, which will push it to the top here. But when you edit your question, you need to make sure your edit is substantial. Tiny edits, just for the purposes of bumping your question are frowned upon by the community, which will only bring negative attention to your question, and if you do it enough, a moderator may ask you to stop.
As for finding your question within each of the lists. It is a relatively trivial process, once you know how the lists are sorted. But there is no way to do it automatically, you just need to go looking for it.
Ultimately, it looks like your entire question is about getting an answer to your old question. I would encourage you to read Getting attention for unanswered questions? on Meta.StackExchange. It describes the best ways to get attention to your question.
To quote the accept answer:
You can "bump" your thread by editing the question to provide status and progress updates resulting from your own continued efforts to answer the question yourself. I usually do that unless I really hit a dead end with no further clues to follow. Some times I eventually bring about enough understanding to realise the answer, and thus post a resolution to my own problem.
If you have at least 75 rep points, you can offer a bounty, promising to give some of your points to the person who correctly answers your question.
Do not post your question a second time, as it will be closed as a duplicate of your first question.