If you are like many people, you may already have a good idea what intuition is and the role it plays in your life. Perhaps you have had experiences like these:
Look over the words or phrases listed below. If you have used them, you were
probably describing an intuitive experience.
| Hunch | Aha! | |
| Gut feeling | I had a feeling | |
| My heart told me | Sixth sense | |
| In a flash | Insight | |
| I saw the light | Knew instantly | |
| In the zone | An inner voice | |
| Insight | Felt one with life |
Even people who are very familiar with intuitive experiences find intuition and how it operates hard to describe. One helpful way to understand intuition is as direct knowing or an inner knowing without thinking it through.
There are many misconceptions about intuition that are important to clear up.
Actually, intuition is a normal human experience and is reported in cultures throughout the world. However most people don't learn about what intuition is and how to use it, so they are not aware how it works in their life. But all people have the capacity for intuition.
It is true that some people have more intuitive talent, or strengthen their intuition through practice, or are simply born into an environment that supports the development of intuition. These things can enhance intuition, just as practice and support enhance the development of just about any human attribute!
In reality, both men and women are born with intuition. However, in Westernized societies, women and artists have more permission to be intuitive than men do. Men often say that their intuition comes from a 'gut feeling.' Women are more likely to say, 'my heart told me.'
While
intuition is still a puzzle to scientist, researchers are beginning to
discover that people really can know (not just guess) a lot at first
glance. For example, recent 'thin slice' research finds that people can
predict in just a few seconds of watching a teacher whether they will
enjoy and value that teacher. These quick initial reactions generally
closely match their teacher evaluations at the end of the course.
While
it is true that the purest intuitive experiences are correct, most of
us have to learn to distinguish between pure intuition and wishful
thinking or projected ideas about people and situations. We simply need
experience before we can identify our pure intuition (almost all of us
haven't had much schooling on the development of our intuition).
Remember also that our "logical" conclusions are not always right either.
Yes. Basically, psychic experiences are a subset of intuitive experiences.
Intuition
describes a wide variety of ways you get information without using
known logical or rational processes. Here are a few examples from the
full spectrum of intuitive experiences:
| An aha! experience | I intuit a creative solution | |
| An instinctive knowing | My body intuits I need to do this | |
| In the zone experience | Our team intuits what to do when | |
| A psychic experience | I intuit what you are thinking |
Psychic
experiences are just one of the many ways some human beings intuit
information and knowledge. And many intuitive people don't experience
intuition in this way at all.
In her book, Hidden Channels of the Mind,
Louise Rhine, the wife of famous Duke University parapsychologist J.B.
Rhine, analyzed thousands of intuitive and psychic stories that the
public sent to her. She noticed that the psychic experiences occur most
frequently in emotional situations or where there are emotional
connections.
You
can also get a fuller understanding of intuition by looking how it is
experienced around the globe. Many cultures include intuition in their
childhood education, healthcare, social interactions, ideas about death
and the afterlife, and spiritual or spiritual traditions.
If you were a member of the Six Nation Confederacy or a member of the Iroquois tribe, you would believe that the tribe was one "long body." You would see the scouts your tribe sent out ahead of the rest of the tribe as acting like the tribe's eyes and ears and sending back intuitive pictures and sounds to tribal leaders just as your nerves send messages to your brain.
Many people throughout the earth
believe that their ancestors, who have died and entered the spirit
world, can speak to them and guide their lives through dreams and
visions. Can you imagine yourself being comfortable having inner
conversations with the spirit of a beloved person who has died?
If
you lived in one of these cultures, you might feel differently about
intuition. You could speak about your intuitive experiences with other
members of your culture as openly as you now speak about your ideas,
opinions, and logical conclusions in Western cultures.
Intuition
is understood in many cultures as fundamental to religious and
spiritual experience. Consider this: no one can point to God as a
material object or describe the physical dimensions of prayer [4]. Worship
is inherently an intuitive experience, a spiritualized dialogue among
people and what many call the divine.
However, it is important
to remember that people who do not believe in God or aren't sure of
God's existence can also have strong intuition but may experience it in
different forms.
One helpful way to understand intuition is as direct knowing or an inner knowing without thinking it through.
Intuition describes a wide variety of ways you get information without using known logical or rational processes. All people have intuitive capabilities, but some might not be aware of them.
Intuition is experienced in different ways around the globe.
Dauto, M., Bruchac, J. (1988). Keepers of the Earth. Fulcrum, Inc., Golden, Colorado.
Franquemont, S. (1982). Private conversation with Otino Ndonji, tribal affiliation Lou. Nakuru, Kenya. August, 1982
Neihardt, J. (1959). Black Elk Speaks. Washington Square Press, Pocket Books, NY, NY.
Krippner, S., Villoldo, A. (1987). Healing States. Simon & Schuster, Inc. NY, NY.
Krippner, S. (1992). The Spiritual Dimensions of Healing from Native Shamanism [5] to Contemporary Health Care. Frontiers of Consciousness Series, Irving Publishing, NY, NY.
Rhine, L. (1961). Hidden Channels of the Mind. William Sloane Associates, NY, NY.
Roll, W. (2005). Psi and the Long Body. Parapsychology Association Abstracts at www.parapsych.org/pa_abstracts_2005.html [6]
Williams, B. (2005). Pueblo Parapsycholgoy: Psi and the Longbody from the Southwest Indian Perspectiv. Parapsychology Association Abstracts at www.parapsych.org/pa_abstracts_2005.html [6].
© 2006 Life Science Foundation, used with permission.
Links:
[1] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/sites/default/files/files/images/xIntuition theme.JPG
[2] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/sites/default/files/xIntuition theme.JPG
[3] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/glossary/3#term4
[4] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/glossary/3#term31
[5] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/glossary/3#term35
[6] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/
[7] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/our-experts/sharon-franquemont
[8] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/interviews/interview-thomas-moore-0
[9] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/activities/-their-words
[10] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/activities/exercises-developing-your-intuition
[11] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/activities/refining-your-intuitive-skills
[12] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/activities/using-intuition-improve-health-and-wellbeing
[13] http://takingcharge.csh.umn.edu/activities/reconnecting-your-intuition