What Conflict Is Teaching Me About Consciousness
The choice is ours: to dismiss what doesn’t fit—labeling it pathological, unscientific, or fringe—or to stay open, curious, and willing to listen to what these experiences might reveal.
Into Intuition
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The choice is ours: to dismiss what doesn’t fit—labeling it pathological, unscientific, or fringe—or to stay open, curious, and willing to listen to what these experiences might reveal.
A response to a materialist’s critiques.
Drawn to these edges of the paranormal, this non-territory of paradox, liminality, and transformation.
Those who have endured trauma, particularly as children, often report more paranormal experiences.
I am no longer tethered to intuition, not because it does not interest me, but because I see it within a shared space of bridges or thresholds.
There is a word that follows me these days – spaciousness. It is expansive and airy and ebbs and flows with breath.
Consider: the loosening of grip of ourselves, the forgetting of goal, the aimless wandering.
The alignment I feel exploring intuition is like a gathering of disparate pieces: simultaneously mundane and divine, quotidian and transcendent.
We all know the word intuition colloquially – perhaps informally translated to be some kind of ‘inner knowing.’ Of course, it’s deeper than that.
My story of this beginning.