Thanks for sharing your experiences with intuition. My intuition 
tells me to focus on that more myself, and you reminded me.

a

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
[snip]
> I'm a big believer in intuition, and that intuition
> can be "trained."  That is, one pays attention to one's
> intuitions and tries to figure out the state of attention
> or the "feeling" that accompanied the moment of intuitional
> "seeing."  Then, if the intuition turns out to be correct,
> watch for that same state of attention or "feeling" in the
> future, and pay more attention to it.
> 
> I remember the first time I really had this work out for
> me.  I had been being trained in this process for some
> time by my teacher at the time (Rama), and had experienced
> a few intuitions that were accompanied by a certain "feeling."
> Each of them turned out to be factually, unequivocably true.
> 
> Then (I was unhappy with my current job) I looked at the
> paper one Sunday and saw a want ad for the then third
> largest software company in the world.  I didn't even
> have to read the text of the ad.  The "feeling" was there.
> This was "my job."
> 
> I applied.  They interviewed me.  Everything seemed to
> go well.  Then they didn't call.  For a week or more
> they didn't call.  I started getting worried.  Not about
> the job per se, because after all, a job is just a job.
> What I was worried about is that this "feeling" I had
> come to count on had been wrong.  So I called them.
> They said, "Oh, we're so happy you called.  We decided
> just after seeing you to hire you, but some twit in
> the personnel office lost your resume and no one here
> had your phone number."  It *was* "my job."  
> 
> I'd love to be able to say that I come to intellectual,
> reasoned decisions about the major decisions in my life,
> based on considering all the available options and then
> listing them in 'Plus' and 'Minus' columns and stuff
> like that.  But it isn't true.  I go mainly on intuition,
> as long as that "feeling" is there.  And it has never
> steered me wrong.
> 
> Unc




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