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Undistorted, Radical Clarity's avatar

This is one of the most grounded explorations of instinct I’ve read in a long time. We romanticize the binary because it makes us feel stable—like we’ve chosen a side that protects us from uncertainty. But real discernment doesn’t flatter the mind or the heart—it demands both be honest. The line about intuition being trained by repetition hit home. Integration is messy, slow, and often thankless… but it’s the only thing that holds up in real life. Beautifully said.

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Brian Gibb's avatar

Thank you for sharing your well-thought-out and heartfelt text. I would add two other variables. One is the locus of control. You located intuition within the person, their gut, which we should also note is comprised of microbiota that are non-human. As humans, we are embodied, and we are embedded in a culture and, of course, in the natural world. In my mind, my intuition arises from that intersection of my internal world and my existence in a reality that is beyond me. I don't think of it as mystical but rather as a manifestation of life forces that operate on a different scale, physically and temporally. Intuition, for me, is the communication between my embodied self and the larger world in which I am embedded. So, in a sense, my intuition is a manifestation of belonging to that world, an attempt to communicate a path or a decision that aligns better with that world. What I do with that communication is entirely up to me. The second variable is trust. Do you trust your intuition? I do. So for me, the rational and irrational modes play significantly different roles. In short, I allow my intuition to provide the direction, and I use my rational mind to draw the map and create the plan. So far, so good. I have a happy life.

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