Many people assume that intuition is something rare or extraordinary.
Some imagine it as the ability to predict the future, read minds, or possess unusual psychic gifts.
Yet in everyday life, intuition often appears in much simpler ways.
It may arise as a subtle feeling, a quiet insight, a sudden awareness, or an inner sense that helps us navigate people, situations, and decisions.
Within the Liminalis Method™, intuition is viewed as a natural human capacity that can be strengthened through observation, self-awareness, reflection, and experience.
If you have experienced any of the situations below, you may already be more intuitive than you realise.
1. You Feel Drained Around Certain People
Some interactions leave you energised and inspired.
Others leave you exhausted.
Highly sensitive people often notice these differences more readily than others.
2. You Sense When Someone Is Paying Attention to You
Have you ever turned around and discovered someone was looking at you?
Many people report these experiences, even when they cannot explain exactly what alerted them.
3. You Form Strong First Impressions
Sometimes you feel immediately comfortable with a person.
At other times, you feel cautious without knowing exactly why.
While first impressions are not always accurate, they can sometimes reflect subtle information that the mind has processed rapidly.
4. You Notice How People Feel Beneath Their Words
You may sense that someone is worried despite appearing calm.
Or you may recognise sadness behind a smile.
Many intuitive individuals are highly attuned to emotional signals.
5. You Experience a Strong Gut Feeling
At times you simply know that a particular choice feels right—or wrong—even before you can explain it logically.
6. You Sense Someone’s Presence Before Seeing Them
Perhaps you have noticed a familiar feeling when someone enters a room, even before you consciously become aware of them.
7. You Are Sensitive to Environments
Some places feel welcoming and comfortable.
Others feel tense, heavy, or unsettling.
You may be particularly aware of how different environments affect your mood and energy.
8. You Notice How Colours, Sounds, or Scents Affect You
Many highly sensitive individuals are strongly influenced by sensory experiences.
Certain environments help them feel calm and focused, while others feel overwhelming.
9. Certain People Energise You
Some individuals naturally inspire, uplift, and encourage you.
Others may leave you feeling depleted or emotionally overwhelmed.
Learning to recognise these differences is an important aspect of self-awareness.
10. You Have Ignored Intuition and Later Regretted It
Many people can recall situations where they dismissed a feeling or impression, only to realise later that it contained valuable information.
Experiences like these often strengthen trust in intuitive awareness.
11. You Notice the Emotional Atmosphere of a Space
Some rooms feel peaceful.
Others feel tense or chaotic.
You may find yourself responding not only to the physical environment but also to the emotional tone present within it.
Developing Intuitive Awareness
Experiencing one or more of these situations does not necessarily mean someone possesses extraordinary abilities.
Rather, they may indicate heightened awareness of subtle information that is often overlooked.
Like any human capacity, intuition develops through practice.
The more we observe ourselves, reflect on our experiences, and cultivate self-awareness, the more clearly we begin to recognise intuitive impressions.
A Liminal Perspective
Within the Liminalis Method™, intuition is not viewed as a supernatural gift reserved for a select few.
It is a natural aspect of human awareness that can become clearer as we learn to quiet mental noise, develop self-trust, and remain present to our experience.
The goal is not to know everything.
The goal is to become more aware of what we already know.
Final Reflection
Many people spend years searching for intuition while overlooking the ways it already appears in their lives.
Perhaps intuition is not something we acquire.
Perhaps it is something we learn to recognise.
And that recognition often begins with paying closer attention to the subtle experiences we encounter every day.

