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Title: Joseph Sadony and Intuition Post by: Jitendra Hydonus on Aug 21, 2019 03:46 pm Kelly was fortunate to have had experiences with this man’s legacy;
Its real value, though, is in Sadony’s musing on intuition. He felt the human being was like a radio and could be tuned to receive a feeling that would stimulate the brain’s imagination to produce a thought. It requires not the use of some mysterious faculty you do not possess, but rather the suspension of the use of your “intellect” (verbal memory, reason, etc.) until after your feeling of intuition has clothed itself imaginatively. Then harness it by “logic and reason,” by all means, if you can. But you must first learn how to stop thinking at will. You must learn how to “deconcentrate” instead of concentrating. You must make no strenuous “effort.” You can’t “force” it. You can’t “play” with it. You can’t “practice” it. Spontaneity is its most essential characteristic. You can become a willing servant, however: The bargain that intuition seems to drive is that it will serve you if you serve it. You must obey your intuition to cultivate it, to develop it, and to retain the use of it. This is a voluntary act. In colloquial language, you have ahunch, and the hunch is an involuntary experience. Whether or not you obey it is up to you. If it is a real hunch, or intuition, you will inevitably regret it if you do not. These experiences will increase in frequency if you obey them, and if you don’t they will cease altogether. . . . One must recondition the entire system of reflexes that constitute habit, so that neither habit nor sensory stimuli nor the influence or suggestions of environments, thoughts, desires or purposes of other people can interfere with the function or execution of your intuition or your relation between your inner self and that universal “something else.” That must come before all else — “or else,” in the final transaction. Sadony also address prayer, which he refers to as the very life of intuition: Those who pray that the flame that envelops their entire house may be extinguished at once have been unbalanced by the shock of being caught unprepared. Prayer will not controvert common sense. Even God cannot help here, for God’s law was obeyed when the house caught fire. Why was it not prevented by the one in charge? Prayer is a reminder to “tune in,” so that you will take care of the matches and gasoline before they become instruments of a big blaze. Prayer is a comforter. It is a hope restorer. But if a man thinks that God is going to listen to him when he pleads on his knees in prayer to save his life at eighty, after having forgotten Him for seventy-nine years, he is entirely ignorant of the nature and function and purpose of prayer. But if one has been sincere and fair in all his dealings, he has been praying all the time, and his prayers are answered before he knows it. And he is pleased. And so is God. http://www.spiritualteachers.org/joseph-sadony/ Title: Re: Joseph Sadony and Intuition Post by: guest88 on Aug 21, 2019 05:53 pm thanks Steve, interesting thoughts.
Title: Re: Joseph Sadony and Intuition Post by: Jitendra Hydonus on Dec 12, 2023 02:41 pm https://www.searchwithin.org/joseph_sadony.htm
With the caveat that Sadony was disinclined to label intuitive qualities, four main elements or themes are apparent throughout the book: Feel Allow Obey Pray Let's take a closer look at each of these areas. Title: Re: Joseph Sadony and Intuition Post by: Jitendra Hydonus on Dec 12, 2023 02:45 pm You feel something
But what exactly is it we are feeling? The conventional idea of an intuition or hunch is that it solves a problem—a eureka experience that might even change the course of history. On a grand scale, such a description may hold true. But on a more practical level, intuition has a place in our everyday experience. A frequent reader of searchwithin.org describes intuition as "A direct knowing of a person, place, thing, or situation that comes of its own accord. When experienced, it fills the mind and spirit with a certainty that only comes with a direct experience of events. It comes in a flash—as a vision or a voice—and if we're caught up in illusion, we'll miss it." You've probably experienced something unusual in your own life but on a much smaller scale. Perhaps you have experienced a vague hunch about what to do or where to go at certain moments, not really understanding why but acting on it nonetheless. Often, such actions only become clear in retrospect. Or you might resonate with Sadony's description. https://www.searchwithin.org/joseph_sadony.htm —————————————————————————————————————— I recall once having the feeling I should take a different route than usual. It was through the woods instead off on the main highway. I was surprised to come upon a man sitting on a pail in the middle of the road in the freezing cold of winter. I stopped to ask him why he was there and he told me if I hadn’t stopped he would have freezed to death that night. It came to me because I was receptive to the radio waves of the universe and universal prayer waves. I just allowed myself time to do something different and went a different way, to describe it in simple terms. Title: Re: Joseph Sadony and Intuition Post by: guest633 on Feb 15, 2024 03:51 am I'm going to explore this thread at a later time. But I had thought it important to gauge what others think of this question... What is the difference between acting on intuition and acting on impulse? How do you know which is which, especially if your intuition is telling you to act? Thanks. :) |