Tag Archives: Intuition

AWAKENING TO NEW WAYS

 “The important thing in science is not so much to obtain new facts as to discover new ways of thinking about them.”  William Bragg, Sr.

010 (2)

 How open are you to new ways of thinking?  When you discuss differences with another, are you sharing what you believe or debating to prove you are right?

There was a time when all thinking that was valued was rational.  Descartes said, “I think, therefore I am,” and the western world came to value rationality over all other ways of thinking.  Information became the basis for all decisions and anything not rational was considered rubbish.

Living By the Rational Or the Intuitive

As a woman with a few years of experience in life, I experienced many years when my “womanly opinions” were ridiculed and ignored.  In other words, if I responded to a situation with emotion or made a choice based on intuition, my idea wasn’t considered valid because it wasn’t arrived at through reason.  Even if my response proved to be accurate, it was discounted.

Dangers of Ignoring Intuition

In the last few years, I’ve had some pretty dramatic experiences that have led me to place great value on my intuition.  In one instance, all the evidence, the weather report and television reports and what I could see outside, indicated to me that it was safe to travel in the city after a snow storm.  I was looking for a new apartment, and I’d lost several good ones by not acting quickly enough. But my intuition told me very clearly not to go out.

At this point in time, the attention I paid to my intuition was inconsistent.  I usually listened to it, but in this case, I decided it must be my fear talking although it didn’t feel like fear.  I just decided to do what I wanted regardless of the warning.

Sure enough, the roads had been cleared and I arrived safely at the apartment.  The sidewalk in front had also been cleared so I stepped across it and peered in the window.  It looked good.  A neighbor came out of his apartment to warm up his truck and asked me if I’d like to look at his apartment.  I stepped back onto the sidewalk that appeared to be cleared.  For a moment I was in shock, suspended in the air, then I crashed onto the concrete.  I broke my left elbow, had two pelvic fractures, spent a month in the hospital and rehab, and nine months becoming fully mobile again.  There was a small sliver of ice on the sidewalk that I didn’t see—or I think there was.

Learning to Live More Deeply

After the accident I had a lot of time to think.  Why had I ignored my intuition when it had felt so strong?  I discovered that a part of me still didn’t trust that inner knowing so much.  So, I decided to test it out.  Part of the test was to practice becoming more mindful so that I could really hear that inner voice all the time.  I also made a commitment to follow my intuition unless I had concrete evidence that it was leading me astray.

With time, I discovered that my intuition didn’t mislead me and that, by following it, life went well.  Over the last four years, I have lived more in harmony with my inner self, and knowing I have that guidance to draw on has been very empowering.  I now not only have my rational mind to process concrete information, I have the inner resources of intuition which I consider part of spiritual guidance.  I have learned a whole new way of being.

Being Open to New Ideas

There are many experiences in life that offer us an opportunity to embrace a new way of thinking or acting.  Most are not as dramatic as my accident, but when we are set in our ways and stubbornly refuse to consider an alternative to what we think is right, we may be missing out on the opportunity to open our minds and change our lives in positive ways.

If we want to create peace in our lives and in the world, we have to be open to new ways of thinking.  We have to listen to others respectfully and not make every encounter with a different point of view a debate, for in a debate, there is a winner and a loser.  When we choose to share our thoughts and beliefs and listen respectfully to another, we create a bridge that may allow us to find some commonality.  But bridging these differences requires us to suspend our need to be right.

Learning to Respect Others Ideas

Last night I attended a very interesting discussion group where we discussed the aspects of quantifiable facts and intuition in making decisions and guiding our lives.  Some members of the group seemed to need to be right more than to understand.  It was, at times, very uncomfortable because some individuals began debating and discounting any ideas that were presented with what they considered insufficient data.  They presented their facts, insisting that only quantifiable information was useful and legitimate.

Not surprisingly, most of the women were pretty quiet.  Someone commented on this, and when they were called on to speak, most indicated that intuition was the main thing that guided their lives.  They all experienced an inner knowing.  They did not need data to support that guidance.  And I suspect the reason many were quiet was because they had had experiences similar to mine where their decisions were discounted.

In fact, during the discussion I commented that all things change, even facts.  Many of the ideas that quantum physics is proving to be true were once thought to be crazy.  A woman who is a biologist made a comment that supported my statement and added to it.  During the break, a man came up to me and pointed out that he’d read an article by a scientist that said there were no physicists who believe in quantum physics.  I’m sure he thought he was helping to correct my erroneous thinking, but the attitude that he needed to correct my thinking and that my beliefs couldn’t possibly be based on science was disrespectful.  He never bothered to even ask on what information I based that belief.

Unfortunately, that experience wasn’t the only time during the discussion that words were used in a disrespectful manner.  One person’s comment referred to people turning to spiritual guidance as a regression.  Language is a powerful tool.  I was shocked by this, but then had to laugh inside.  My spiritual development has only led me to rich and expansive thinking.

Creating a Bridge of Peace

If we can’t compassionately bridge our differences in small groups with people of a similar culture, how can we possibly create that bridge of peace with people who are ethnically very different?  Yet, that’s what we have to do.  Debating won’t work.  We have to learn a new way to communicate and be and release our fear of change.  Next week I will write about how we can communicate more compassionately.

May you all listen gently to one another.

© 2013 Georganne Spruce                                                     ZQT4PQ5ZN7F5

Related Articles:  Women’s Inner Knowing: Intuition, The Intuitive Leader, Honoring Your Intuition Through the Teachings of Eckhart Tolle

INTUITION – THE VOICE OF OUR SPIRITUAL CORE

“It is always with excitement that I wake up in the morning wondering what my intuition will toss up to me, like gifts from the sea. I work with it and rely on it. It’s my partner.”  Jonas Salk

Listening for Intuition’s Wisdom

 The longer I live, the more I rely on my intuition.  My journals are full of entries describing how I ignored it and the unfortunate consequences I experienced as a result.  The most difficult times to follow it are when it advises me to do what I don’t want to do.

In February 2011, writing and working intensely on the computer to set up a blog and learn to use Facebook, I foolishly ignored the warning my intuition was sending me verbally and through the tension building up in my back.  I woke up one morning with sciatica down the right side of my body. It was the most intense pain I’d ever experienced. It took about six months to recover with acupuncture to relieve the pain and physical therapy to correct my posture and strengthen my core.

In this case and in an accident four years earlier, my physical core was weak and out of balance despite the regular exercises I did.  The key to my physical recovery was building strength in the core muscles of the abdomen with daily exercises, and taking the stress off the lower back where the latest injury originated.

Strengthening Our Spiritual Core

 But more importantly, I needed to correct my spiritual core.  In both instances, I had allowed ego’s fears and needs to override my intuition’s advice.  In January, I had set a goal to have certain things done by the end of the month, no matter what! My ego, so much noisier than my intuition kept reminding me of this.

We have to remember that ego loves to feed off of what is negative.  It demands our attention.  So how can we develop the discipline and awareness to stay in touch with our core intuition?

 Ways to Stay in Touch With Intuition

Sitting in the silence is an important first step.  When we are centered in silence, we are most likely to hear Spirit speaking to us through intuition.  In those moments we are connected to Source, our loving partner, and its words are gentle.  When something starts pushing, it is ego.  When we feel fear, it is ego.  When we are being pushed toward an extreme or to the edge of endurance, that is ego.  The practice of listening in the silence teaches us to discern if the voice we hear or the physical response we feel is ego or intuition.

Secondly, we have to release our fear for it only feeds ego.  We can sit quietly and direct our minds to release whatever fearful thought has arisen.  As we make the statement, “I release this fear,” it is helpful to take a deep breath and in the body feel the tension of the fear release.  With the fear gone, there is space for our spiritual guidance to come through and for us to hear it.

I also believe intuition speaks to us in other ways: through the words of others, the ideas we encounter through reading spiritual books, through experiences in workshops and spiritual gatherings.  When we feel that “Ah, ha,” intuition is saying, “Listen, this is for you.”

So, during this next week, let’s find moments to listen to that partner inside that loves us enough to say, “This is for you.”  And let’s have the good sense to follow its advice.  Like Jonas Salk, let’s remember that what our intuition brings to us is a gift that is always good.

© 2011 Georganne Spruce

Related Readings:

What is Spiritual Guidance?

What is Intuition? Eckhart Tolle