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| shally |
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Posted: 11/7/2009 4:34 PM |
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Subject: Five Pathways to Listening to Your Inner Voice |
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WomanSaver MoFo
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Five Pathways to Listening to Your Inner Voice
Is your life out of sync with your priorities?
Do you feel like you‘re a hamster running on a wheel?
Have you forgotten who you are?
If you answered YES to any of these questions, read on. Learn to
listen to your inner voice - the essence of who you are - by following
these five steps:
- Check in with your heart.
Social conditioning teaches us to be logical and "use our heads". When
you only use your head, your experience of yourself and the world is
limited. You miss out on the vital information the rest of your body,
heart and soul is giving you.
Benefits: The same neurological tissue found in the brain is found
in the heart. The heart is a second "brain" and our emotional center.
Listening to your head and your heart is crucial to good
decision-making about your life, your business and your relationships.
New Focus: Put your hand over your heart and focus there - what is it telling you?
- Connect with your body.
Your body gives you a tremendous amount of useful information that you
may not be conscious of. For example, when your mother-in-law visits,
does your stomach tie up in knots? When your boss yells at you, do your
shoulders turn into stone? When you feel passionate and alive, does
your chest feel warm and open? When we ignore the body‘s message, we
lose out on valuable information designed to let us what works for us
and what doesn‘t.
Benefits: For many people, fear manifests as a tightness in their
chest. This is valuable information, especially if you aren‘t aware
that you are afraid. Your body alerts you to what makes feels
passionate and what doesn‘t. The body is a fount of wisdom designed to
tell you when you‘re on the right path and when you aren‘t.
New Focus: Notice the messages your body is giving you right
now. Try a self-massage to find areas in your back, neck or shoulders
that are tense or knotted. What other areas of your body feel tight?
Which ones feel relaxed and loose? Use this information as another key
to listening to your inner wisdom.
- Listen to your intuition.
Intuition is simply knowing something without knowing exactly how you
know it. Connect back to a time that you had a "gut feeling" about
something - the job that you knew you shouldn‘t take, even though it
looked good on the surface or the relationship that just felt right for
you. That‘s your intuition talking to you. Benefits: Gut feelings are a wealth of information. Remember, your
intuition is never wrong, although your interpretation of it may be
incorrect. When your intuition calls to you, trust it. Practice makes
perfect when it comes to using your intuition effectively.
New Focus: The next time you need to make a decision, check
in with your intuition. Experiment with trusting it. When you follow
your intuition, what happens? When you hear it and disregard it, what‘s
the outcome?
- Notice your self-saboteur*.
Each of us has our very own special saboteur. The saboteur is the voice
in your head that says, "You are not good enough." "Who do you think
you are?" "If you take this new job, everyone will find out what a
fraud you are." The saboteur‘s job is to "protect" you from taking
risks and making changes.
Benefits: Learn to distinguish between your voice and the saboteur‘s
mumbo-jumbo. Notice how the inner critic drives the choices and
decisions you make.
New Focus: Simply notice the negative voices playing in your
head. Notice the times when they crop up. Recognize that the voices
aren‘t you and they aren‘t true. Learning to separate your own voice
from that of the saboteur is a powerful and life changing tool.
- Identify limiting beliefs.
We each carry a set of beliefs that we live by. Certain beliefs you
hold consciously, while others are mainly unconscious. Beliefs develop
out of past experiences and our interpretations of those experiences.
Some of the conscious and unconscious beliefs that you develop limit
your ability to grow and move forward in your life. For example: One of
your goals as a successful entrepreneur is to make a lot of money. You
discover that you have a belief - a limiting one - that it‘s wrong to
make a lot of money. Until you begin to alter your beliefs about money,
it will be more difficult for you to achieve that financial success you
desire.
Benefits: Learning to notice a limiting belief allows you to become
conscious of it, and then change it. Releasing a belief that limits you
puts you back in the driver‘s seat of your life. You, rather than an
old belief, make the choices that are right for you and allow you to
fulfill your potential
Ways to spot a limiting belief:
- You tell yourself that you only have one or two choices in a situation, or "no choice" at all.
- Your inner critic expresses his or her opinion. The inner critic‘s opinion is generally based in a limiting belief.
- A decision may appear to be black and white to you, or an either/or situation.
- You have decided that "this is the way the world is."
- You make a decision based on fear.
- You feel constricted and notice that you lack clarity about a specific situation.
New Focus: How does a particular belief allow you to attract
what you really want in life? How does it prevent you from attaining
your goals? When you reach an obstacle in your path, make sure that
it‘s not an old belief in your way.
When important questions like "What do I want?" or "What‘s the right
choice for me to make?" surface in your mind, consult your inner voice.
You possess the answers you need to live a life that feels successful
and fulfilling. Listening to your inner voice can lead you on a path
that feels deeply satisfying. Your business and personal lives will
flourish with this new level of trust in yourself. 
*Based on the work of Richard Carson in Taming Your Gremlin.
Taken from - Five Pathways to Listen to Your Inner Voice
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