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Home › Self Management › Innovation Skills
 

Use Your Intuition As a Valuable Tool for Change

 
Author: Paul McNeese

Heres a subject that we dont normally think of when we think about change. Yet, intuition can be a very powerful force for change if we honor it fully. So lets take four minutes to look at intuition. First well look at what it isnt, then at what it is, then at just how it relates to change in our lives.

Intuition is NOT a mystical power. Its NOT something special, a gift granted only to a select few (mostly women, if were to believe the folklore). Intuition IS a natural faculty. Every one of usmale or femalewas born with the brainpower to be intuitive, to detect the miniscule events, appearances, nuances of tone and of glance that send us unspoken signals that are often quite reliable. What happened to us as we grew up was that we learned how to ignore or dismiss these signals. In order to be used to its fullest potential, intuition has to be seen as a process, a skill that can be developed. Extensive research by Forbes Magazine and The Wall Street Journal has confirmed that most successful people are far above average when it comes to knowing how to recognize, trust and use their intuitive thoughts and feelings. Theyre able to tune into this information by noticing it, then they incorporate it into their mental decision making processes.

Intuition, then, is a process of broadening your attention to include the impressions that come from your imagination and from your emotions as well as from your intellectual senses.

For you personally, a fully developed intuitional skill will let you gather and process information you might otherwise missmaterial that can be valuable as you plan and execute changes in your life. Heres how you can improve your intuitional hit ratio.

First, before you act on something youre thinking about or planning, ask some questions, then mentally listen for the answers that come from inside yourself. Its a good idea to write down these thoughts and feelings as they come up.

For example, youre in a business situation that requires a rubber meets the road decision that could mean thousands of dollars of profit - or loss - to your company. Instead of blurting out the first answer that occurs to you, ask yourself questions like:

What long-term effects could this decision have?

How does this decision impact others in my life/company?

How would it alter our relative (relationship) positions customers, vendors, competitors, etc.?

Then stop and think about the impressions that come to mind. Concentrate on images, single words, feelings, even personal memories that might be conjured up by the questions.

As already noted, either write down or tape these impressions. And, by the way, dont edit. Put it all down or talk it all out. Then think about these impressions for a while. Its a little bit like dream interpretation...sometimes things arent absolutely clear, but when you string together all the impressions and sort them out like a puzzle, a pattern usually emerges, and that pattern is your intuitive response to the situation.

Once youve rounded up all the indirect answers and applied your intellect to your feelings, put it all in balance with a mental verification. Dont just act on your intuitive hunches. Align them with the practical realities of life. What youll have, in the aggregate, is a fully integrated decision making matrix, which will help you be very comfortable with whatever decision you make. Laura Day, author of a book titled Practical Intuition for Success, makes a very good point when she writes in Bottom Line Personal that ...intuition can help you uncover - and even anticipate - what others want and value.

The key to this is addressing these needs as you own so that you can use all of your senses and abilities to perceive the information you need. She calls this process the I Mode because it involves

Intuition

Integrity and

Identifying with the Other.

When dealing with someone else, put yourself in their shoes as you listen to what theyre saying. Playing the role of that Other Person, ask questions like:

What do I want -- and have -- to offer?

What do I need?

What difficulties do I face now?

Where are my opportunities?

Who are my best resources?

Whats missing?

What makes me say Yes?

and so forth.

What youll get from this is a sense-based, intuitive insight into the other persons processes. Itll truly surprise you. The significance of this is, of course, that the better you know others, the more enlightened youll be about how you relate to them and what needs to be changed to improve that relationship.

Next, why not take this intuitive process back into yourself? Laura Day suggests a couple of exercises, and Id like to outline them for you and to recommend them as great ways to uncover intuitive impressions about yourself - insights that can help you in your change process.

Starting with the notion that you are unique and have a lot to offer to the world, begin to look inside yourself for this real purpose or right work -- the Yogis of India call it "dharma." A great way to do this is to take the questions we just reviewed and related to others and ask them as yourself.

A wonderful, yet easy, way to build an intuitive map for yourself is to track your interests for a little while - a couple of weeks or up to a month. Every day jot down what youre doing and how you feel about it. Focus on whatever stimulates you. Clip articles and pictures out of newspapers and magazines and keep everything in an envelope that you carry with you. At the end of the allotted time, empty out your envelope, spread out your journal pages, and then start interpreting these materials, fitting things together as in a puzzle until the information falls together - which it will - to produce a picture of your goal. And isnt this the point of self-examination, after all?

Good luck on your intuitive journey.

Author Bio:

Paul McNeese

Paul McNeese, BS, CFP (Ret.), is a training professional with more than 25 years of experience in educating, motivating and inspiring individuals and groups. He has entered coaching by the ?back door,? having founded an online publishing company in 2001, where he discovered that many authors, both newcomers and experienced professionals, require coaching to bring out the very best writing they are capable of producing. But now that he?s in it, he?s in it! Paul is a member of the Phoenix, Arizona chapter of the International Coach Federation. He is also studying in Coachville?s certification program and is currently working as a coach to nine authors, a ghostwriter, and several promotional marketing writers. An honors graduate of Northeastern University in Boston, Paul holds a bachelor of science degree in marketing and has done graduate work in psychology, economics and public policy at UCLA. He held the Certified Financial Planner (CFP) designation between 1981 and 1994, when he retired (the first time around). He also holds a certificate in counseling from Cypress College in Los Angeles. Today, Paul McNeese combines his organizational expertise, marketing ?savvy,? communications fluency and interpersonal skills with an upbeat, entertaining public speaking style as he presents personal growth strategies in an interactive one-day workshop called ?Betterchange.? He developed the first ?Betterchange? workshop in 1994 as a vehicle for training the staff and management of not-for profit organizations, and he continues to refine it almost daily to better equip attendees to meet the future successfully. A second edition of his book, ?Salespower through Successful Seminars,? is scheduled for publication in early 2006 as an online publication in his OPA Publishing catalog, and he has begun work on another book, ?Betterchange: 12 Keys to Personal and Professional Growth,? which will see publication in mid-2006. He has also recently completed an audiotape/CD set based on his ?Betterchange? seminar/workshop.

You can search for this article using: tips on improving job creativity & innovation, innovation, definition of innovation, new innovations
 
 
 

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