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Amanda B. Hinton's avatar

What a great piece. As I was reading, I kept seeing a picture of a pendulum swinging, and it made me think about how in my own experience, whenever I have tried to learn a new (usually socialization) skill, my instinct has been to lean hard into practicing it, studying it, exercising it at every turn.

Inevitably, along the way, I would trip and fall over myself, much like a baby does when first learning to walk. (This cost me at least one dear friendship, maybe more.) Over time I've observed this same pendulum swinging in most people around me. It seems when we want to learn a new skill, it must become THE new skill and it is THE thing that we are focused on practicing and absorbing. Over time, though, the pendulum swings and we find the middle ground of expression—the tool becomes second nature and we are not quite so clumsy.

All this to say, I did this same thing with the concept of intuition, though I think the seed was first planted as an exercise in feeling feelings at all. I didn't understand that a "warm sensation in the middle of your chest" could also be understood as feeling "love." Was that lack of knowledge from trauma, or was that me just being autistic and not having any clear inner mapping of my outer life experiences? I'm not entirely sure.

Over time, I worked on my "intuition muscle" almost exclusively and it landed me in some really tough spots. Like you I feel the teetering between expert knowledge/studies/science and my lived experience/gut. With the help of a therapist, I realized that for me, in a healthy place, the wisdom of the mind and the wisdom of the body are in communication—and my work is to remind myself that one should never be allowed to clobber or silence the other. When I support that communication, things tend to have a steadiness I've found so elusive much of my life. But it is, of course, still a swinging pendulum much of the time. :)

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Kerala Goodkin's avatar

You pose some fascinating questions. If there's one thing I've learned in middle age, it's to listen to my intuition, much as I'm learning to listen to my anger. It doesn't mean my intuition is always "right," but it does mean my gut is trying to tell me something, and I would be well served to figure out what that is. As women, and particularly as working women, we are trained to suppress both our intuition and our anger. We can't live in either of these spaces, but we do need to value them and give them the attention they deserve!

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