You Have A Healing Superpower… Here’s How to Use It

You Have A Healing Superpower… Here’s How to Use It

Did you know that you have the ability to understand your health and potentially heal it? Have you ever relied on your “gut instinct”, a hunch, or your intuition? 

I think we tend to shy away from this type of information or approach because there are preconceived notions that go along with intuition and the other words that cause us to imagine a palm reading tent at the boardwalk carnival.

But what if we could attach hunches, intuition and gut instincts to science? What if we could use that science within our medical systems so doctors and nurses could tune into patients in entirely new ways? What if the diagnosis became more of a conversation with the body? What if you could also practice this, with your own body? 

Are We All Superheroes? 

All of these questions (and plenty more) were answered by Wendie Coulter during a recent conversation about the built-in superpowers we all have but don’t use. Wendie is a Certified Medical Intuitive Practitioner and the Founder and CEO of The Practical Path. She has spent her career using medical intuition to create pivotal programs that are bringing sustainability and longevity to health through a very different lens. 

Think about this: Trusting your gut, in essence, is trusting intuition, but we tend to shy away from this because it sounds so woo-woo and up in the air. Removing this barrier opens up a whole new world of seemingly super-abilities to tune into your body and hear it when it is trying to talk to you. Here’s how to break it down.

  • Intuition is a knowingness of what people don’t understand. You know something. You don’t know why you know it. But you have certainty in this unseen hunch. 
  • Medical intuition is a method of using that understanding to view your physical body in a brand new way. 

Let’s Talk About COVID

I know we are all tired of this pandemic, but there is something very important being overlooked while we wait for testing and vaccines and treatments: our individual responsibility. There is an emotional toll on top of the daily life choices we make for ourselves and it’s important to create a more resilient approach to deal with this. The world is still on its literal axis, but figuratively, the axis has been shifted and people are - well, literally off-axis.. Our greatest responsibility in many ways is to do the right thing for our own health so that we are not infecting other people or being a burden. 

[EXTRA] Take care of yourself first. Part of this process is intentionally tuning into your body and finding a way to center, balance, and focus. This can be done through easy 5-minute meditations or a powerful activity called Grounding- where you visualize yourself connecting to the Earth. 

“People want to know more about what their bodies are trying to tell them when they are not well. We are finding a lot of accuracy and success in this process… and it needs to be practical because that’s the only thing people want to deal with. We worked with a group of 67 diverse people in blinded sessions with no prior health information. We found 94% accuracy in the medical intuitive accurately locating and evaluating the subject’s primary health issue.” -Wendie Coulter

Let’s Get Skeptical, Skeptical 

Skepticism is healthy, normal, and even useful in life- because it allows us to discern, to really be objective. In the same way, we can use skepticism to let us know when something isn’t aligning, we can use intuition to let us see the unseen. As human beings, we have this built-in toolkit that has the ability to guide us, to balance us, to protect us, and even heal us. 

Skepticism lends to practicality in some ways because it can ground us and mentally place us where we are asking the questions that really matter: How do I feel? What is working? How does my body respond? How does my energy respond? 

“That mind, body, spirit connection is real and being acknowledged more now than ever before in the healthcare field. When I speak to doctors, what I’m finding is that even in what we call traditional Western medicine, most of the time, a traditional doctor or a Western medicine doctor is looking through the lens of their education. In their training, believe it or not, there was discussion about what a gut feeling is, what a hunch is. The excellent doctors, the doctors that you recommend to your friends and family, are those doctors that you think have a little bit more than the other doctor, and they are relying on these additional instincts.” -Wendie Coulter

If you enjoyed this article, hear more about this topic in this episode of The Conscious PIVOT Podcast


Adam Markel

Resilience & Workforce Futurist, Keynote Speaker & Researcher | WSJ Bestselling Author of Pivot & Change Proof | TEDx & Podcast Influencer | Attorney & Investor | Co-Founder/Chief Researcher at WORKWELL

4y
Like
Reply

To view or add a comment, sign in

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics