Thursday, September 16, 2010

A Nature Based Intuitive

It took me years to figure out scientifically what being an intuitive was all about. As a child and young adult I could just "know things" and do things and survive things that others might not.

So, now the way I can most usefully explain this is that every living cell, whether it be plant, animal or human is a transceiver. You might ask, "What is a transceiver?" Well, the easiest answer is to compare any cell to a cell phone that most of you have in your purse or pocket right now. So a cell (plant, animal, or human) communicates wirelessly all the time 24 hours a day with all other cells on earth in all plants, animals, humans, fish, birds, etc.

So, people who become intuitives become aware of some or all of this communication and benefit from it and pass this information (when useful) to friends, relatives, acquaintances or whoever to help them not be maimed or killed or to protect them in various ways for thousands and possibly even millions of years now here on earth.

I think it would be useful to say that most all spiritual teachers on earth that people still value now were both intuitives but were also for the most part also Intuitive Geniuses and in some cases simaltaneously intellectual geniuses as well. However, strangely enough being an intellectual genius is optional for a spiritual teacher. However, it can be very helpful.

What is most important is to have these "infinite cellphones" in the form of all cells on earth in all living things going 24 hours a day so  enough useful information can be processed to keep as many alive in each species as is needed here on earth.

So, one often starts out as a child and noticing that animals seem to love them and often trees seem to speak to them and even bears and deer might talk to them with their minds if this person is raised in nature. So, often this kind of person might not get a formal education. Or might just live out in the country in a developed nation and go to school but then spend a lot of time communing with nature.

However, people who can communicate with nature in this way often seem kind of scary to those raised in the city who just don't understand this way of relating to nature. And since there are more and more people raised in cities around the world and more and more forests and mountains, and plains and deserts and beaches are getting developed there might be less and less people who become natural nature based intuitives.
 
One who is naturally intuitive has to learn to develop ethics and compassion towards oneself and eventually towards all life in the universe. Otherwise, I don't really consider being an intuitive very useful to oneself or others. I guess the best way to put this would be "Absolute Power corrupts Absolutely" And beyond that if you are an intuitive without the trust of all life around you, life tends to end you and your life. This is a given for all beings here on earth, whether they be plant, animal or human.

So, I encourage everyone at every age to find out who you are and where you want to go physically and in consciousness. If all you do is follow someone's ideas who is either dead or who is a living dead person what good is that? So, whatever you choose let it be what you find in your own heart of hearts and not in someone else's. There is a saying, "To thine own self be true, then thou canst not be false to anyone." I agree with this.

So, as one grows older and if one is gifted in having a colony of cells (a human body) that communicate well with each other and all other cells in every living thing then one is moving towards being an intuitive as an adult. Intuitives  don't have to announce themselves but one often finds intuitives as ministers, counselors, doctors, nurses, psychotherapists, and in many types of teaching and healing professions. And for that matter in all professions everywhere.

I found the full quote from Hamlet which is as follows:
Polonius:
This above all: to thine own self be true,
And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man.
Farewell, my blessing season this in thee!

Laertes:
Most humbly do I take my leave, my lord.

Hamlet Act 1, scene 3, 78–82

from: http://www.enotes.com/shakespeare-quotes/thine-own-self-true

No comments: