Intuitive Business
Intuitive Business
Have you ever wondered why some people seem to be so successful in life? Everything
flows just right for them. Whatever they touch turns to gold. They are the lucky ones. They
are the ones with the great job, great salary, perfect love, and ideal life. You may have
found yourself thinking, Why them, and not me.
One reason for success is the ability to make correct choices, and decisions. Successful
people do that consistently. They make the kind of choices and decisions that lead to
positive outcomes. It is based on information that goes far beyond what is learned and
involves accessing accurate information from seemingly nowhere. This ability is intuition
and highly successful people enjoy a higher degree of intuition than the average person.
Where most people base their decision making only on their accumulated knowledge,
successful people combine all they have learned together with what they sense with their
intuition. Their ability to gather information is way ahead of the rest.
Everybody is intuitive, but not everybody trusts their intuition when it comes to making
decisions. Most people dont even believe they have intuition, so, it doesnt even cross
their minds to use it for problem solving. Even today, there are those who are afraid of
their clairvoyant abilities. They have misconceptions about clairvoyance, think its taboo,
and something to suppress. Others believe they have it, have had experiences with it, but
never knew it could be a valuable tool for problem solving.
Intuition is actually a skill that can be developed and applied effectively for improving all
areas of life. It is not a gift that only a few have. This is a misunderstanding since
everyone has some degree of intuition. Those who are really successful love that they
have E.S.P., and they use it all the time since it gives them an edge over the rest of the
world they work with, compete with, and live with.
Your intuition has probably been a guiding force for you all of your life by having provided
you with information that helped you reach positive outcomes. This type of information
tends to come from hunches, inspirational thoughts, dreams, or visions. It can,
coincidentally, come from others, or from your inner voice. Often, it is an overwhelming
feeling deep in the pit of your stomach, your gut, or your heart. No matter how the
information comes to you, when applied, the outcome is usually positive, since it usually
helps you to move forward faster, helps you solve a problem or keeps you from making a
mistake.
Intuition is like reading. It is a skill that can be develop through time. No one is born
knowing how to read; yet most everyone has the potential of learning how to read. When
very young, we were taught the letters of the alphabet, and then the sounds those letters
represented. As time went by, the more we read the more skillful we became at reading.
With intuition, the more you understand, and use your intuition, the stronger it becomes.
Some people seem to have more intuition than others. Its probably because they had
positive experiences with it as they were growing up, and are now more comfortable with
using it.
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Having a keen sense of intuition is desirable in every area of your life, and although many
people dont advertise their intuitive ability openly in fear of being ridiculed, they use it all
the time. Every person can benefit from having, and using, intuition. To be able to make
correct choices and decisions in family, relationships, and business can add a tremendous
advantage in life.
Hill talks about how one inventor from Maryland, the late Dr. Elmer R. Gates, used this
technique to come up with over 200 patents. Gates would sit in his soundproof
laboratory equipped with a pad of writing paper.
He would shut off the lights and ponder on the known factors of the invention on which
he was working. He would remain in this position until ideas began to "flash" into his mind
in connection with the unknown factors of the invention.
On one occasion, ideas came so fast to Gates that he was forced to write for almost three
hours. When the thoughts stopped flowing and he examined his work he found that they
contained a minute description of principles that had no parallel among the known data of
the scientific world. Moreover the answer to his problem was intelligently presented in
those notes.
The greatest inventor of our time, Thomas Alva Edison, used a similar technique. Edison
was known for taking frequent naps in the middle of the day. It's likely that during these
naps he was entering the alpha level. He would often come out of these naps with the
solution to problems that had been bugging him. Edison was awarded 1368 distinct
patents and invented, among other things, the incandescent light bulb, the phonograph,
the film projector, and the first motion picture.
Edison was known to have said:
"Ideas come from space. This may seem impossible and
hard to believe but it's true. Ideas come from out of space."
For best-selling author Richard Bach, a Silva graduate, the idea came from a bird.
Bach said this in an interview quoted in the November 1972 issue of Harper's Bazaar.
"I was walking along one night, worrying about the rent, when I heard this voice say:
"Jonathan Livingston Seagull". But no one was there. I had
absolutely no idea what it meant. When I got home, I
suddenly had a vision of a seagull flying along, and I began
to write. The story certainly didn't spring from any conscious
invention on my part. I just put down what I saw."
Silva Instructor Wingate Paine told us the rest of the story during an instructor training
session in Laredo not long after the book became a bestseller.
Wingate said that Bach had written the first two-thirds of the book from a "dream-like"
experience where a big seagull appeared to him and said, "Take dictation, I have a story
for you." But the bird faded away before the completion of the story. Wingate said that
Bach told him he did not know how to get the bird to come back so that he could finish the
book, until he took the Silva course. Then he knew how to get to that "dream-like" level
and how to invite Jonathan Livingston Seagull to this creative level to tell him the rest of
the story. Bach said in a Harper's Bazaar article that even before taking the Silva training,
he'd come to assume that "there are certain 'hidden' capacities and powers which can be
taught. I think there is a terrifically pleasant principle behind existence - do what you love
to do and you'll be guided. It's a lot like flying a plane: You have to trust what you can't
see."
Jonathan Livingston Seagull was an immediate hit. The book was a bestseller, and the
movie based on the book was a huge hit. In fact, Jonathan Livingston Seagull and the
books that Bach wrote afterwards helped to bring about a spiritual awakening on the
planet, by helping people to understand and accept their own spirituality and intuition.
Note that the CEOs with the greatest profitability increases (100% or more) also had the
greatest number of correct "guesses" in intuition tests. 81.5% of them performed above
chance results. On the opposite end, of the CEOs with the poorest results, none scored
above chance in the intuition test.
Of CEOs with mediocre numbers the results were consistent with statistical chance
results.
typically not attributed to intuition. Therefore, Research & Development functions are
perceived to be more intuitive than Information Technology operations.
Another measure of Organizational Engineering theory is examined by comparing results
collected from a Customer Service population those of the general organizational
population. Customer Service is a very confined area, tightly bound by rules, well-defined
processes, and explicit procedures. There is less allowance for intuitive processing of any
kind; those scores when compared with the general population of the database in this area
should reflect this in their low levels of Organizational Engineering correlates to intuitive
behavior.
Chapter Four of this research displays charted results of the findings in the statistical
analyses of the five research hypotheses tested by this study. In all cases, the findings
were significant at the .001 level, beyond the defined level established by the SPSS
statistical program. Therefore, the findings are, at minimum, 50 times more powerful than
the standard acceptable level of .05.
The single unexpected finding encountered in Hypothesis 2 suggests the degree of
unpatterned method and action mode identified as Reactive Stimulator style does not
increase as individuals are promoted into leadership roles. A supplemental test, however,
demonstrates the absolute level of this strategic style preference systematically differs
between leaders and non-leaders at the .001 level. This suggests a threshold-level of this
capacity requires some degree of recognition for promotion into leadership rank.
However, leadership levels beyond this point provide less advantage for continued
promotions within the various leadership hierarchies.
Overall, the findings of this research create a compelling case for using Organizational
Engineering theory over the older psychological theories as an explanation of intuitive
behavior. The Organizational Engineering theory appears to be more succinct and has
greater theoretical rigor, while producing quantifiable results which far exceed the
standards typically employed in organizational development research.
or to watch the Dean Radin video what we released few days ago,
please click here http://silvalifesystem.com/online/resources/dean-radin
ACCURATE SCANNING
by Dr. Rudy Ledesma, MARCH 1991
My wife, Cecile and I took the basic course together in September 1989.
Initially, I was having problems with my visualization, so much so that I would more often
than not delegate my programming to Cecile, especially, when the technique MOM
needed to be used.
However, for one of my patients, circumstances forced me to render this service myself.
That patient was a middle-aged female complaining of abdominal pain. The primary
attending physician, thinking of acute appendicitis referred the case to me. The history,
physical examination, and laboratory work-up, however could not simply fit the diagnosis
of acute appendicitis. So I went to my level and scanned her. I visualized the appendix to
be normal. But there was a black spot in a portion of the large bowel above the appendix.
For the first few days, conservative treatment and watchful waiting were all that we did.
The pain, unfortunately, progressively increased in intensity which prompted me to open
her up.
In the operating table, I found that some appendices epiploicae in the ascending colon
were twisted and gangrenous, already. (Appendices epoploicae are fatty tissues which
project from the external surface of the large intestine.) True enough, the appendix was
normal. The patient had an excellent post operative course and was discharged in perfect
health.
Dr. Ruby Ledesma is a general surgeon practicing at the Cebu Community Hospital. He
just returned from a work stint in the United States