Unleash
Your PowerZone:
Intuitive Intelligence – The Other IQ
(Excerpts
from Why Cats Don’t Bark)
"I
did not arrive at my understanding of the fundamental
laws of the universe through my rational mind. The intellect
has little to do on the road to discovery. There
comes a leap in consciousness, call it intuition or what
you will, and the solution comes to you."
- Albert Einstein
Unlike
traditional IQ, with a century
of research behind it, intuitive intelligence is a new concept.
It is a different kind of intelligence. In recent years,
it is gaining in respectability largely because psychologists
are recognizing it as a natural mental skill that helps
us make decisions, solve problems, generate
creative ideas and even forecast future events. We are beginning
to realize that intuition is not just a mysterious gift
or an accidental insight.
As
you get rid of the emotional cataracts and your vision becomes
clear, you will find the walk upon your path effortless
as you proceed with ease. Fears
will dissipate as you relinquish yourself to a greater cause
or your reason for being. You will feel
in sync, not out of touch. You will experience your work
as an extension of your “self”
or you very soul, feeling one with the process
of becoming.
You
will achieve a level of unconscious competence where excellence
and peak performance feels effortless as the energy is allowed
to flow through you. Perhaps
that is why Michael Jordan refers to this as being “in
the flow.” Other
sports use different buzzwords, although the experience
is the same. In golf, it is referred to as being “in
the zone.” Tiger Woods would qualify.
In the current world of musicians, Wynton
Marsalis seems to become one with his instrument, as does
any exceptional musician.
The
question is, can we all achieve this supreme level
of mastery? I believe the answer is “yes,”
if we are in sync with our instincts and we learn the mind-empowering
strategies that provide access to the inner unconventional
wisdom of our intuition and instinctual intelligence.
While
all living things grow into their nature with a supportive
environment, we also must
have the courage to be different to make a difference.
We must transcend from success to significance. As we gravitate
toward our own uniqueness, we must respect the direction
of our “future pull” which is our present
self becoming our future authentic self. Singleness
of purpose means avoiding exterior clutter like power, prestige
and possessions, which may interfere with the chief purpose
of our lives. Shakti Gawain, author on visualization,
explains,
“Every time you don’t follow your
inner guidance, you feel a
loss of energy, loss of power and a sense of spiritual
deadness.”
Activities
and life experiences, which derive from
our purpose, are not burdensome
because there is harmony between what we feel we are supposed
to do and what we want to do. Unfortunately,
we are often derailed and live in someone else’s comfort
zone other than our own. Our parents often
encourage and coerce us to manifest their own unfulfilled
wishes and destiny, which, if we obey, is a violation of
the soul.
Until
we do the work of excavating, claiming and expressing our
uniqueness, we run the risk of putting our life script into
someone else's hands. Joseph Campbell, in his book
Myths to Live By,
warns,
“The
world is full of people who have stopped listening to
themselves to have listened only to their neighbors
to learn what they ought to do, how they ought to behave
and the values are that they should be living for.”
Unfortunately, for many people, Campbell is right.
All
of us are far richer than we imagine. None
of us possesses a life devoid of magic, barren of grace,
divorced from power. Our inner resources, often
unmined and even unknown or unacknowledged, are the treasures
we carry, what I call our spiritual
DNA…the stamp of originality, which
is the blueprint of our unfolding.
Jack
Schwartz, renowned researcher and author, has a theory that
at the moment of indecision, there is simultaneously a solution.
However, it may take years for us to discover that awareness
and act on it, creating confusion
and learned helplessness, as we become victims of toxic
logic. Yes, “look before you leap,”
but sometimes we just have to take an intuitive leap and
trust that the net will be there. To be fully intellectual
beings and experience those “leaps in consciousness”
that Albert Einstein believed are necessary for bringing
solutions to us, we will need
to develop our intuitive abilities as well. |