Summary
Highlights
The speaker, a forensic mediumship teacher, shares a student's experience about a little girl seeing a 'distorted' and 'bloody' woman on TV. The TV show portrayed this as demonic, frightening the child and the student. However, the speaker immediately intuited that the spirit was a woman who had been in a car accident and suffered burns, trying to communicate her experience. This highlights how easily fear and preconceived notions can lead to misinterpretations of spiritual communication, especially when influenced by sensationalized media like Stephen King stories.
The speaker encourages listeners to trust their intuition, emphasizing that everyone possesses it. She warns against discrediting intuitive feelings, correlating it with making poor life choices (like being with a narcissist) because we override our gut feelings. The little girl in the example, by being told the spirit was demonic, might grow up believing in harmful demons, rather than understanding spirits might simply be trying to communicate or seek help.
The video explains that spirits are not inherently trying to scare people but are often seeking help or attempting to convey information. Instead of reacting with fear, one can politely ask a spirit to present itself differently if its current appearance is frightening. The core message is that spirits are not trying to harm; they are trying to communicate. Taking a second look and pausing to understand the true nature of an experience, rather than succumbing to fear, is crucial.
Intuition, described as feelings like 'don't go down that road' or 'don't take that job,' originates from our soul. The speaker advises that when information comes in, instead of just processing it intellectually, we should drop it back into our soul for deeper understanding. Our human tendency is to overthink, leading us to override our soul's wisdom. The soul knows what is good and bad for us, and listening to this innate guidance is key to honoring ourselves. Many people fail to honor their intuition due to fear, specifically the fear of being wrong.