By Sally Kempton — 2012
At moments of decision, the ability to hear and work with inner guidance can make a huge difference.
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CLEAR ALL
I now realize that a framed piece of paper saying that someone is a doctor will never trump a gut intuition.
Perhaps you think psychics and intuitives are “woo-woo” gypsies who look at crystal balls and stroke crystals. But what if you’re an intuitive and you don’t even realize it?
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Whether you call it a "gut feeling," an "inner voice" or a "sixth sense," intuition can play a real part in people's decision making, a new study suggests.
As the world becomes more complex, making decisions becomes harder. Is it best to depend on careful analysis or to trust your gut?
We don’t have to reject scientific logic in order to benefit from instinct.
Years ago I read Living in the Light by Shakti Gawain and loved it. I gave the book to my mom who called me when she finished reading it and said, “That’s the way you live YOUR life!”
We live in a fear-based culture that obsesses on trying to control life.
It's not that I'm blind to life's fragility or the dangers around me. It's just that I possess a gift offered by many mistake-filled years: At my age, I have a pretty good idea what and whom to trust.
Intuition offers a direct line to your life force, and also, as I experience it, to a divine intelligence. We can't afford to remain deaf to intuition's messages. Its expertise is energy; its job is to know every nuance of what makes you tick.
Through the practice of yoga, you can learn to hear—and follow—your inner guidance.