What makes you psychic




















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No need for a crystal ball — these gifts are already embedded deep within your spirit. Working with psychic skills requires patience, practice, and lots of self-love. For many of us, the first step in tapping into our extrasensory abilities is divorcing this concept from deception. While there are definitely many charlatans who either exaggerate their skills or make them up entirely, these individuals are not psychics: They are con-artists who use fear tactics to pray on gullible or vulnerable individuals.

In most cases, pretending to be psychic is just one of many exploitative schemes for these imposters. Psychics, on the other hand, are simply individuals who are able to see, hear, feel, sense, taste, or have intuition beyond the boundaries of the physical world.

After all, we are conditioned to believe that our perception of reality is fairly concrete: We assume that everyone knows the sky as blue or can detect when someone is in a cranky mood. But as we continue to expand this sensory spectrum, we quickly realize that certain senses become increasingly less common among our peers. It is through this awareness that many of us become aware of our unique, inherent psychic gifts.

Fundamentally, psychic skills are defined by an innate ability to process sensory data — both tangible and intangible stimuli — on an extremely deep emotional, physical, or spiritual level.

Of course, this is a rather broad definition. To visualize this range, imagine four friends meeting for dinner.

Shortly after, the second friend enters the restaurant. The host is gracious and welcoming, and the second individual is immediately relieved. The host leads the second individual to the table, where he sits down, greets his friend, and proceeds to review the menu. The third friend enters the restaurant. His energy is arrogant and abrasive, and his young children appear both embarrassed and afraid.

Will they grow to adopt his behavior, or will they reject it and become soft and docile? Once she arrives at the table, she immediately shares her observations with her dinner mates.

Finally, the fourth friend walks into the restaurant. Had there been a fire? He tries to shake off these experiences, but they continue to linger throughout dinner. From the above example, friend one and two demonstrate a relatively standard range of sensitivity, while friend three and four exhibit more extreme extrasensory abilities. Consider your own experiences: How much stimuli do you absorb on a daily basis? Psychic abilities can often sit quietly, then suddenly emerge when we're not focused on them.

Now comes the funny part: Let's say your strongest flashes of insight arrive when you're relaxing with a glass of wine. Specifically, if you drink two alcoholic beverages within, say, a minute period, you just seem to "know" accurate information about people without their having told you.

That's a strong indication that you may be psychic, which you may dismiss, believing that you're just a little tipsy and overemotional. I have to admit that before I fully understood my abilities, I was already aware of this phenomenon. When I was in college and would have two drinks, I would actually tap into my heightened psychic abilities to pick up cute boys.

Nothing works like starting a conversation by telling a guy all sorts of specific details about his life you couldn't possibly know. And yes, one guy did stare at me open-mouthed and ask if I was a stalker, but I laughed and told him I was "just a little psychic. Then stop drinking. The effects, in my experience, slow down after three glasses.

This is often because they are experiencing synesthesia, a condition in which senses are swapped. Have you ever met a new person whom you associated with a color, a flower or a landscape?

Have you ever heard musical notes surrounding someone? These flashes of sensory perception take place internally, and when they happen, are very clear— most people, though, don't talk about them, for fear that doing so would sound too weird.

From a young age, I experienced synesthesia and often saw people in colors. In time, I began to understand that this different way of perceiving people was nothing to be alarmed by, but that it was, in fact, a helpful tool. For example, I came to understand that if a person appeared "blue" to me, he or she was a natural healer or teacher and I would feel very comfortable around the person's energy. If I saw someone as "red", I understood that this was a person who was experiencing stress and anxiety and was often short-tempered—a sign that I should steer clear.

Around especially vibrant people, I would also hear a delicate music, like a crystal wind chime being clinked together. This synesthesia still happens for me today, and I still use it. If it's happening to you, embrace it, and notice the information it's conveying to you. Or perhaps you've had a strong urge, while driving, to avoid a certain way home Most of us have had these gut feelings—also known as intuitive pulls.



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