Intuition

How to Develop & Strengthen Your Intuitive and Psychic Abilities Using Your 7 Lost Senses

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How to Develop & Strengthen Your Intuitive and Psychic Abilities Using Your 7 Lost Senses

Unlock Your True Potential

Absolutely!
 

That’s the answer I gave to someone who was asking a question via Quora.

I believe intuition is a signal your brain sends to give information beyond your 5 natural senses. As an example, I can say that I have a strong “gut feeling” or intuition about an upcoming event or person. For you to be able to improve your intuition you may look at similar words that can give you the same function which is to give you information about someone or something beyond your natural 5 senses. Such words as premonition, precognitionextrasensory perception (ESP) are all words that can give a more broad spectrum of abilities which you can develop over time. I wrote a book in which i define 7 ways to help improve and enhance intuition and psychic abilities.

These senses are:
 
  1. The sense of imagination
  2. The sense of balance
  3. The sense of life
  4. The sense of voice
  5. The sense of movement
  6. The sense of warmth
  7. The sense of substance
Each of these expands on the minds ability to go beyond the 5 natural senses and develop and enhance your intuition. These are instruments just like your eyes and hears are except they give you access to information which is not available to your normal senses.
 
I would train someone to develop those and then help them practice so they excel at it in the areas in which they would need it best. Example doctor would be to increase their ability to perform a better diagnosis or tests by listening to their intuition or other senses. Medical intuitive is the term we use.


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themagicianinmindHow to Develop & Strengthen Your Intuitive and Psychic Abilities Using Your 7 Lost Senses

What Steven Spielberg Can Teach Us: Listen to the Whispers of Your Intuition

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What Steven Spielberg Can Teach Us: Listen to the Whispers of Your Intuition

Intuition: in a way, it’s like a super power. But unlike radioactive spider bites and magic hammers, this is one that is actually attainable to those willing to work to hone it. It can range from that prickle on the back of your neck that says “danger,” to that warm tingle that tells you you’re about to make the right decision. The ability to make split-second decisions based on your “gut feeling” can help guide you in everyday life, your career, tricky negotiations, and social situations alike.

Intuition is a hard thing for many people to peg down. Because it’s not very widely understood, many people make the mistake of believing that it is something that needs to be acquired, the way one would attend a class to acquire knowledge that they didn’t previously possess. This is a misconception, though that’s not to say that learning doesn’t come into the equation. The truth is that intuition is something that every person naturally possesses. To harness it, you must train your mind to listen to its own intuitive side.

Once you learn to listen to your intuition and use it to further your goals, you open up a whole world of possibilities. Problems that previously seemed not to have solutions are suddenly easily dealt with; options you never knew you had become obvious choices. How you perceive the world changes, and as a result you are empowered to change your life. But why take it from us? Let Steven Spielberg (yes, that Steven Spielberg) explain it himself:

In case you missed it, the whisper that Spielberg is describing is his intuition, which guides his creative process. And considering that he’s the most successful director in history, with two “best director” Oscars to his name and a plethora of spellbinding films in his repertoire, it clearly hasn’t steered him wrong. If you’ve been hesitant about developing your intuition, consider this an example of the kind of success a person can realise if only they listen to the whisper of their heart.

In the following clip, Spielberg describes his intuition in greater detail (it begins at the five-minute mark):

“[For] the first 25 years of our lives, we are trained to listen to voices that are not our own… And at first, the internal voice I needed to listen to was hardly audible, and it was hardly noticeable — kind of like me in high school. But then I started paying more attention, and my intuition kicked in. And I want to be clear that your intuition is different from your conscience. They work in tandem, but here’s the distinction: Your conscience shouts, ‘here’s what you should do,’ while your intuition whispers, ‘here’s what you could do.’ Listen to that voice that tells you what you could do. Nothing will define your character more than that. Because once I turned to my intuition, and I tuned into it, certain projects began to pull me into them, and others, I turned away from.”

What he describes here—the way that your intuition tells you what you could do—is essential to harnessing the gift that you already have. All you need to do is learn how to listen to that voice, and you’ll find that, just like Spielberg, you’ll be drawn down more lucrative paths, while being able to recognize that other paths will be fruitless for you.

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What Steven Spielberg Can Teach Us: Listen to the Whispers of Your Intuition

Situational Awareness – July 2016 Technique Of The Month

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Technique of the Month

—Situational Awareness—

Have you ever seen the film The Bourne Identity? For the unfamiliar, Matt Damon plays Jason Bourne, an amnesiac who slowly discovers that he is, in fact, a highly-trained CIA operative. If you’re wondering what this has to do with the technique of the month, just watch the clip below:

The skill that Bourne demonstrates in the diner—having intuitively analysed his surroundings and drawn conclusions based on that analysis—is called situational awareness. It has roots in military strategy and theory, where it often means the difference between life and death. But you don’t need to have military (or CIA) training to develop this skill, and it can be useful in everyday situations—especially in the world of business!

Testing Your Situational Awareness Take a look at the video below. Even if you think you know what to expect, watch it until the end—you may be surprised.

So, did you spot the gorilla? The transforming curtain? The departing player? This video demonstrates two important ideas in situational awareness: that focusing too narrowly on one detail can lead to making mistakes, and that you should never jump to conclusions without as much information as you can gather.

 

Situational Awareness in Business Situational awareness is vital to your success because it enables you to increase your consciousness and awareness of your environment, allowing you to hone your seventh sense: the sense of balance, which connects your inner world to the world around you. For leaders, situational awareness is the key to influencing and persuading people to get on board with you. Whether making a sales pitch, forging a new partnership, or negotiating a contract, the ability to read and judge what is going on in the room, and to act on the information that you’re receiving, will always work to your advantage.

Developing Your Situational Awareness

Though it’s a skill that almost anyone can master, developing functional situational awareness is not something you can do in a weekend. If you want to be the Jason Bourne of the boardroom, it’ll take practice, dedication, and learning to trust your intuition or “gut instinct.”

The first step is knowing what to look for and what to ignore. In any environment, there will be hundreds, if not thousands, of details screaming for your attention; your job is to tune out the information that doesn’t enhance your understanding of the environment and the people in it, and to focus on what does while remaining open to new information.

The next step is learning to establish a baseline; i.e. what is considered “normal” in a given situation. By understanding what is normal, you can free up your mind to look for details which deviate from expectation. Is the person you are meeting with unusually anxious? Does your prospective buyer keep checking their watch or phone? Learning how to spot and, more importantly, interpret and act on these signals will give you an edge in meetings, since you can adjust your own strategy to the situation at every turn.

Beginning Your Journey to Situational Awareness

You won’t become a master of situational awareness unless you start training yourself. The good news is you can train and practice anytime, anywhere—from your morning coffee run to the breakroom and even gatherings of friends and family, opportunities abound to hone your mindfulness, intuition, and sense of balance. The more you learn to observe, interpret, and act on what you see, the better your situational awareness will become!

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Situational Awareness – July 2016 Technique Of The Month