How to Listen to Your Inner Voice
Five years ago, my husband Jake was training
for a triathlon. He had just purchased a new road bike and woke up one sunny
Saturday morning to take it out for its first spin.
As we were lying in bed, he looked at me and
said, “I don’t have a good feeling about this; I hope something doesn’t
happen.”
I suggested if he had a bad feeling, maybe he
shouldn’t go. He thought for a moment, his logical mind kicked in, and he
replied, ”Of course I should go, it’s fine. I need to train. It will be
okay.”
Fast forward two hours later when I got a
call from an unknown number. I answered with trepidation, knowing exactly what
this call was going to be. A man told he had just found my husband in the
middle of the road. He had an accident and the ambulance was on its way. He
would stay with him until it was there.
Turns out, he was lucky to have just broken
his femur and hip. Jake knew that morning that something wasn’t right. But
instead of trusting his intuition and listening to that inner voice, he went
anyway. It happens to all of us.
You often hear people say, “Go with
your gut”, “Trust your instincts”, “Follow your
intuition” and “Listen to your inner voice.” That all
sounds great, right? If only it were that easy.
With all the external noise and internal
conflict, how do we listen to our inner wisdom?
When you can tune in to that inner voice, you
can make better and faster decisions, solve problems with greater ease, and
live a more fulfilled and happy life.
But HOW?
I’ve worked with thousands of people over the
course of my career and have learned that while this inner voice shows up in a
variety of ways for each of us, we ALL have it.
In this article, I’ll outline some tips and
strategies for how to identify and listen to your own inner
voice. If you can find that voice and truly listen, it can save you a lot of
time, energy, angst….and perhaps even a broken hip along the way.
I understand this might be easier for some
than others. But regardless of who you are and how you’re wired, I just know,
in my gut something will work for you.
What
is our inner voice?
Call it Gut. Knowing. Insight. Soul. Innate
Wisdom. That’s the voice we’re looking for.
The dictionary defines intuition as, “the
ability to understand something immediately, without the need for conscious
reasoning.”
It’s a hunch. A feeling. An inkling. A sense.
In Malcolm Gladwell’s “Blink: The
Power of Thinking Without Thinking”, he explores the inner processes of
intuition and instinct, examining how we make snap decisions and judgments. He
has numerous examples of people having a hunch, feeling or intuition and how,
while there was no hard evidence to back them up at first, science and data
eventually backed up what they knew to be true.
Did you know that 95% of our brain activity
happens at an unconscious level? Studies from numerous cognitive
neuroscientists show that only 5% of our cognitive activity (decisions,
emotions, actions, behavior) comes from our conscious mind.
We are taking in information through all our
senses all the time – and processing it at an incredible speed. So that
intuition, hunch, inkling, sense, voice, is coming from masses of information
we can’t even cognitively or consciously process.
Then there’s cognition. “The mental
action or process of acquiring knowledge and understanding through thought,
experience, and the senses.”
This is more about understanding. Problem
solving. Discernment. Organizing.
This is the logical, thinking part of your
mind. Weighing pros and cons; coming to rational conclusions based on data or
other factors. These are the voices of reason which often try to override your
instincts.
But
I don’t hear ANY voice.
Your inner guidance and wisdom aren’t always
a voice in your head. Often, it’s a feeling, a sensation, image, energy or
emotion. You might notice it your body. There’s no one best or way to
experience your inner voice. The important thing is to identify when and
where you feel it.
Is it a feeling in your gut? This
is true for many of my clients and for me, personally. You may have heard the
gut being called our “second brain.” This is because of the enteric nervous
system (ENS). It can operate independently of the brain and spinal cord, and
the central nervous system. We really can think with our gut![1]
Celebrity therapist and pioneering
hypnotherapy trainer Marisa Peer has this to say: “The stomach is the
seat of all emotions and your feelings are the most real thing you have; so the
trick is to listen to your feelings. If something feels wrong, your inner voice
is saying it is not right for you. If you get the horrible lurch in your
stomach, your inner voice is telling you ‘this is wrong’.”
Perhaps it’s in your heart.
When
I asked a Jessie Gardner of HeySoul.com, a friend and colleague known for her
acute sense of self-awareness where her inner voice resides, she said, “My
heart for sure. Always my heart.” That’s no surprise, our hearts are very
intelligent organs.
“Most people don’t know this, but the heart
can feel, think and decide for itself. It has around 40,000 neurons and whole
network of neurotransmitters with very specific functions, which make it a
perfect extension of the brain. It’s automatic, almost instinctive, as if a
mysterious, primal voice were telling us that the center of our true being, our
conscience, is located right there.”
Maybe the voice is in your head?
When
I talked to my Dad about his inner voice, he balked at the idea of feeling it
in his gut or heart. Instead, he shared about the voice that comes from the
back of his head that talks to him not with him.
Try this: Look, Listen, Feel.
We experience inner wisdom in different ways.
Maybe you relate to one of my examples? Maybe you “see” a picture, vision or
image that comes up in your head. Perhaps you feel sensations in your body –
energy, emotions or feelings. As we go through examples of how to listen, pay
attention to how and where yours shows up.
If
this inner voice is so powerful and effective, why don’t we listen?
Logic
or reason takes over.
We often have a feeling or a sense of
something, just like my husband did, but very quickly, our logical mind kicks
in to try to understand and comprehend what we feel. This especially happens
when we don’t have data or information to back up our hunch or inner voice. We,
and of course, others believe it’s not valid if we can’t justify or explain
ourselves. So we push our instincts aside.
A recent client told me about how he ignored
his inner voice not long ago. He dropped off his 16-year-old daughter at the
mall. As she got out of the car, he thought, “I should tell her to make
good choices.” But, because her friends were in the car and he didn’t
want to embarrass her, he decided not to. His logic, reason and social graces
took over. A few hours later he got a call from the mall police. His daughter
had stolen a ring. “I knew I should have told her to make good
choices.”
We often override our instincts with logic,
reason, desire, and, in this case, societal pressure or social graces. But we
don’t have to.
We
don’t like the answer.
Sometimes we know what we need to do, but
don’t like the answer. This happens with clients all the time when I ask what
they sense they should do. They answer, but then reply, “But I don’t
want to do that!”
Once, a client told me the story of her
wedding, and a knowing that she simply ignored. As she walked down the aisle,
she knew that she should not marry the man standing in front
of her. Truthfully, she knew long before that day. But she didn’t want to hurt
his feelings, call off the wedding, let friends and family down. So, she went
through with it. Inevitably, that marriage ended in divorce – and this story is
all too common.
We
don’t know how to distinguish, hear or listen to it.
That’s what the following strategies are for!
Let’s dive in.
Here
are 9 different ways to tune into your innate wisdom and inner voice:
1.
Find Quiet.
“Be still. The quieter you become, the more
you can hear.” – Ram Dass
There are lots of ways to find quiet in the
busyness of life. Turn off the phone, shut off the TV. Get some time and space
to yourself.
You know what’s coming next, don’t you? Yes,
I’m going to recommend you meditate. I know meditation seems to have become the
panacea for everything that ails you, and there a good reason for that: it
works. It’s one of the fastest, easiest and most effective ways to tap into
your inner voice. Meditation aides us to connecting with our true self. Ma Jaya
Sati Bhagavati said “If you quiet the mind, the soul will speak.” I
completely agree.
Another great way to find quiet is to be in
nature. Why? Because there’s a connection. It’s grounding. You’re able to tap
into the “oneness” of everything. This can shift things energetically. Want the
double whammy? Meditate in nature.
You might find your quiet in nature,
meditation, yoga, exercise, prayer. Whatever it is, find your quiet.
2.
Push Pause.
Most of us are running a hundred miles an
hour in every direction. It’s hard to hear anything at that pace. Have you ever
been driving down the freeway with the windows down, listening to music, when
the person next to you starts talking. Can you hear them? Of course not. It’s
too loud. There’s too much going on. You need to roll up the windows, press
pause on the music and stop.
Our inner voice is speaking to us all the
time, but sometimes it’s just too loud or we’re too busy to hear it. Pressing
“pause” allows to tap into our innate wisdom.
When I was studying Neuro Linguistic
Programming (NLP), Mike Bundrant at the iNLP Center gave me a fantastic tool
that I share with almost every client. It’s called the AHA Solution.[3] It’s
often used to identify patterns of self-sabotage, but in this case, we can use
it to listen to our inner voice.
Next time you have a feeling, a sense, a
hunch or intuition, follow this protocol.
A. Aware: Be aware of
what you are feeling. Pay attention and notice.
H. Halt: This is the
pause button. Think about the ways you can respond to what you’re hearing or
noticing. You could listen to your inner voice, ask more questions and seek to
hear it further. Or, you could choose to ignore it completely and let your
cognitive mind take over and convince you it’s okay.
A. Act: Now
that you have options, decide which action you will take.
3.
Invite your inner wisdom to show up.
If you want someone to come to your house,
you’ve got to invite them over, right? Try taking this approach with your inner
voice. While it’s always running in the background, it may have taken a
backseat because it can’t seem to get through all the noise. It’s going to
speak up more often when it knows you’re open and listening. Take a moment now
and invite your inner wisdom to show up. Let it know you are ready and willing
to listen. Wait to see what happens.
4.
Ask your Body.
I love this one; our bodies are so dang
smart. They will tell us if we ask and listen. But too often we have
disconnected from sensations in our body to push through in the interest of
productivity.
A few months back I was working with a client
who came to our appointment with a massive headache. She stopped midway through
our session and asked if I would mind if she went and took a couple Advil. Of
course I said it was no problem, but asked if she was interested to understand
the cause of her headache first. She nodded.
I had her close her eyes, take a couple deep
breaths and ask her head, “What do you need from me right now?” The
answer? “I need rest.” She burst into tears. She was exhausted
but felt she couldn’t stop. She was leaving for a trip in a couple days, had
her son’s birthday coming up and felt completely swamped. However, when she
asked the question, her inner wisdom knew what she needed.
Try this at home. Next time you get something
that’s bothering you physically, stop and be still for a moment. Ask that
part: What do you need from me? What’s this about? Or What’s
going on? And then wait and listen for an answer. This might sound a
little out there, but trust me, it works.
5.
Put it in your ‘slow cooker’.
When my Dad has a big problem he’s trying to
solve or an important decision to make, he thinks about it before bed. I
realize this might go against all advice regarding thinking about stressful
things before bed, but that’s just the thing. He isn’t thinking about it or
trying to solve it. He just puts the problem in the back of his mind for the
night.
In the shower the next morning, solutions
start bubbling up. These are usually spoken to him as if someone is talking to
him. “What about this? Why don’t you do this?” It’s usually a
very simple answer he hadn’t yet considered. And his response back to himself
is frequently, “Why didn’t I think of that?” But he did!
This goes back to the 95% unconscious part
that’s running in the background. When he stops thinking, his mind stops racing
and puts the problem in the back of his mind, the unconscious part of him comes
up with all sorts of great solutions. A colleague of mine used to refer to this
as putting things in her ‘slow cooker’.
6.
Flip a Coin.
Have you ever flipped a coin, only to decide
to do the exact opposite of what the coin said? Flipping a coin instigates our
instinctive response because it gives us something to react to. When writing
this article, My 7-year-old daughter was sitting at dinner one night, deciding
who she wanted to put her to bed. She started doing the game, “Eeny, meeny,
miny, moe.” Each time she finished, she landed on my husband. So, she went
again. And again. Until six attempts later when she landed on me and
replied, “I choose Mummy!” When a decision is taken out of our
hands and happens to us, it gives us something to react to.
Try this with a decision you’re trying to
make. Flip a coin. Are you happy and ready to go with that answer? Or do you
want to go against the decision and try again? Well then, you already know what
you want, don’t you?
7.
Eat the decision.
I just had to include this one. I know it
might sound a bit odd, but bear with me. Years ago, I read about a CEO who made
all his big decisions this way. Let’s say he was considering acquiring another
company. He would sit down and imagine he was eating that decision. Then he
would stop and wait and see how he felt. Did he feel energized and alive or
sick to his stomach? I love this idea and have tried it myself. It allows you
to get out of your head and go into your body to make the decision. This might
not be for everyone, but maybe it’s for you!
8.
Take a step.
Sometimes you don’t know until you’re “in
it.” When you’re faced with two choices, make the best choice with the
information you have and what you feel is best, and then start moving. You’ll
know if that choice is really right for you as you’ll feel good as you move
forward. You’ll know it’s wrong if you continue to feel heaviness or
resistance. The more you move forward the clearer the signal will become.
9.
Get some help!
Whether it be a best friend (who knows how to
listen and ask the right questions), a coach or therapist. Having scheduled
time to tune in and having someone ask the right questions allows you tap in to
what you already know. You already have the answers within you, sometimes you
just need a little help to uncover them.
Now
what?
Like with anything in life, practice makes
permanent. It takes time to grow and nurture your inner voice, especially if
you’ve ignored it or pushed it to the side for some time now. The more you
listen and hone your skills, the better and faster you will become at hearing
and listening to your intuition, your gut, your innate wisdom.
Play with the strategies above and see what
works. Better yet, as you read through the ideas, identify which ones you felt or sensed would
be good to try. Try those first.
Practice on small things first, like what you
want to eat, what to wear or whether you want to attend that party Saturday
night. You don’t have to start with major life decisions, whether you should
buy that house or if you should take that job.
Then:
- Notice when and where your
feel your inner wisdom.
- Notice when you feel a pull, have a
hunch or instinct about something.
- Notice when you have that sense and
your mind tries to override it.
- Notice when you start talking yourself out
of something or start talking yourself into something.
Need more evidence that this will work for
you? Think about a time in your life
when you recognized and listened to the inner voice – what was the outcome?
Now, think about a time when you heard that voice, but for some reason, ignored
it or pushed it aside. What was the outcome then? You, know, that time when you
felt like you shouldn’t do something, but did anyway? Or had a bad feeling but
kept moving forward?
One
last thing…
Pay attention. Next time you have a bad
feeling, a sense that something isn’t right, an inkling or a pit in your
stomach, pay attention.
Following your inner voice will lead you to
the truth of what’s best for you. Tuning into your innate wisdom will help you
make better and faster life decisions, solve problems with greater ease, and
live a life of greater happiness, success and fulfillment.
In the words of Madeleine L’Engle, “Don’t
try to comprehend with your mind. Your minds are very limited. Use your
intuition.”
Tracy
Kennedy
https://www.lifehack.org/804051/inner-voice
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