Don't Trust Your Intuition
/ “I’m just feelin’ it, so I’m going to go with it.”
“I’m just feelin’ it, so I’m going to go with it.”
 
 When the topic of intuition comes up, I find that people often fall into  two camps: either they don’t listen to or trust their intuition, or  they trust it too much. Interestingly, this realm of “intuition” seems  to be the province of women. Tapping into, listening to, acting upon, or  speaking about intuition is a gendered topic, perhaps because  “knowledge from the brain” is considered masculine and “knowledge from  the body” is considered feminine. Unfortunately, these gender  restrictions impair us all, as we all have inner wisdom ready to guide  us.
  
 I believe intuition reveals in layers, and the more we can gain deep  knowledge about ourselves, the more we can understand the nuances of our  inner voice. Intuition often shows up as a gut feeling and knowing.  Having a “feeling” about something may be your intuition. However,  patterned behaviors based on fears and past negative experiences can  also show up as a gut feeling. It may be an anxiety reaction or your ego  defending itself and needing to feel right. These are clearly different  in origin.
  
 I’ve found that my intuition is quite strong and accurate when I’m fully  present and aware in a situation, and when I’m in a state of  open-heartedness or compassion. However, if I’m feeling threatened  emotionally or one of my emotional triggers has been activated, I react  from defensiveness and hurt, not from intuition. It seems to be a  difference between being receptive or being reactive. Sometimes, it’s  hard to tell the difference.
  
 What can we do to develop this discernment? Research strongly points to  the practice of mindfulness meditation. Daily practices of sitting  quietly, with focus on breath, the present moment, and observing  thoughts and bodily sensations without judgment, develops an important  part of our prefrontal cortex. Creating more neural connections in this  brain area strengthens impulse control, awareness, insight, empathy,  and…intuition. I recommend starting with 10 minutes of quiet awareness  as a daily commitment. It’s pretty amazing that “doing nothing” can  offer all these skills! If you’d like more information on putting this  into practice, read "Learning to Trust Yourself" or visit the resources on the Mindsight Website.

 
                     
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
                