Intuition and Inner Knowing vs Avoidance: How to Tell the Difference
You’ve done the work. And you’ve probably noticed that there are two very different ways people talk about intuition and inner knowing—two modes that sound similar but produce completely different results.
This is the comparison that matters: Achieving vs. Returning.
Your body knows truth before your mind can articulate it. Intuition isn’t mystical—it’s your nervous system’s pattern-recognition running faster than conscious thought, filtered through the field of consciousness you’re connected to.
Understanding this distinction—not just intellectually but in your own practice—is often the shift that makes everything else start working differently.
See also: understanding intuition and inner knowing
Trying To Reach A Permanent State Of Intuition And Inner Knowing: How It Shows Up
This mode is more common than most people admit, even among those who’ve done significant inner work.
It looks like: understanding the principles, being able to explain them well, even experiencing them in peak moments—but not having reliable access to them in the texture of ordinary days.
It feels like: knowing what intuition and inner knowing should look like without quite being able to touch it when the situation is actually difficult.
The gap isn’t lack of intelligence or commitment. It’s that the approach assumes intuition and inner knowing is something to figure out rather than something to return to.
See also: a practice for accessing inner knowing
Practicing The Return To It, Moment By Moment: What It Actually Looks Like
This mode looks less impressive from the outside and feels more stable from the inside.
It looks like: brief, consistent, ordinary moments of returning to center rather than spectacular breakthrough experiences.
It feels like: catching yourself mid-reaction and choosing differently. Or noticing a thought spiral and stepping back from it before it runs. Or making a decision from a settled place rather than from noise.
The key quality is that it’s available—not just in retreat or in ideal conditions, but when things are hard.
See also: the body as truth-detector
The Pivot Point
The shift between these modes often happens when people stop trying to achieve intuition and inner knowing and start practicing the return to it.
Not achieving. Returning.
Every time you notice you’ve drifted and orient back—that’s the practice. That’s what builds capacity over time. Not the peak experiences, but the returns.
See also: distinguishing intuition from fear
What This Changes Practically
When the mode shifts from the first to the second, several things tend to follow:
Decisions get cleaner because they’re made from a more settled ground. Patterns become visible before they fully run, which creates the possibility of choosing differently. Work takes on a quality that’s hard to name but clients and colleagues feel.
This isn’t about being perfectly conscious. It’s about having enough access to intuition and inner knowing that it can inform what you build.
See also: CLARITI method for deepening intuition
If you want to develop the second mode rather than the first, the Abundance GPS Skool community is designed for exactly that—applying this work in the context of conscious entrepreneurship, with support. A trial membership is how you start.
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