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Whatâ ™s in your Blind Spot?

We frantically search for our â ślostâ ť keys that are lying in plain sight on the kitchen counter. We donâ ™t we see the keys. Why not? Because we already decided â śthe keys are not there.â ť And once we make that decision, we create a blind spot in our awareness. The result is that we donâ ™t see the keys where we donâ ™t expect them to be.

If we miss seeing keys out in the open because we decide the keys arenâ ™t there, what else could we be missing because we decide itâ ™s not there? Could we be â śblindâ ť to other possibilities and opportunities that are right under our nose?

Whatâ ™s New, Pussycat?

A mind-blowing scientific experiment reveals how the early physical environment of kittens determines what they are able to seeâ ”and not seeâ ”as they grow up. Two-week-old kittens are placed in a room with walls painted with vertical stripes and kept there as they mature. Almost from the moment they are able to see, the kittens live in an environment of vertical stripes. Later, the catsâ ™ world changes. Theyâ ™re removed from their vertically striped surroundings and placed in a room painted with horizontal stripes. Surprisingly, our furry felines donâ ™t see the horizontal stripes. Bang! They run right smack into the walls painted with horizontal stripes, again and again. Why? Scientists discovered that because the cats donâ ™t have horizontal stripes in their environment as they grow up, the brains of the cats donâ ™t develop the neurons that recognize horizontal stripes. So when elements theyâ ™ve never been exposed to appear in the catsâ ™ world, their brains donâ ™t register the new elements in their environment. Yikes!

Whatâ ™d You Say?

Studies with babies reveal how the early auditory environment of babies determines what they are able to hearâ ”and not hearâ ”as they grow up. Research shows that young babies have the ability to hear the full range of vocal sounds produced by the speech of all the human languages in the world. But then, babies are raised hearing only the narrow range of speech sounds within their social environment. Eventually, because they hear solely the speech sounds found within one culture, babies lose their ability to distinguish the full range of vocal sounds found in all human cultures. This helps explain why, in everyday life, weâ ™re not able to recognizeâ ”or â śhearâ ťâ ”concepts that we werenâ ™t exposed to in our upbringing.

Casting a Spell of Limitations

We all grow up in families and societies where we are only exposed to a limited view of lifeâ ”like kittens only viewing vertical stripes and babies only hearing speech sounds from their social environment. Our â śstripesâ ť consist of a limited range of cultural patterns of sights and sounds.

Growing up in a limited environment has a comparable effect to being hypnotized. For example, when people are hypnotized, they can be told that certain elements exist or donâ ™t exist in their environment. With hypnotic suggestion, a person can be told that there are no red books in a bookstore. And, although many of the books are red, the person wonâ ™t see any red books. The hypnotic suggestion creates a blind spot, or filter, in the personâ ™s perception of the world.

Similarly, weâ ™re hypnotized by our parents and society to see certain aspects of realityâ ”and not to see other aspects of reality. Then, as adults, we only see the range of possibilities that we were exposed to as we grew up. We donâ ™t recognize any alternatives outside of the range of viewpoints presented to us in our youth. By the very nature of how weâ ™re raised, we develop blind spots. And these blind spots often prevent us from seeingâ ”and taking advantage ofâ ”options that are life-enriching and valuable to us.

â śThe Way Life Is?â ť

When weâ ™re young, we learn a lot about â śthe way life isâ ť by observing the adults in our lives. And, these adults can, for the most part, only pass along their limited views of life.

For example, did you grow up being instilled with the viewpoint that â śpeople work at jobs they donâ ™t like to pay the bills?â ť If you were exposed solely to this narrow perspective about work, you might not recognize the available option that â śpeople work at jobs they love that also pay the bills.â ť When you were young, perhaps you noticed that â śmany adults compromise and sacrifice in order to make a relationship work.â ť Spell-bound by watching this model of how partnerships function, you might not be able to see another viable alternative in which â śadults find ways for relationships to be easy, fun and mutual.â ť If all you saw as a child was that â śpeople become more stubborn and opinionated as they grow older,â ť then you wouldnâ ™t have it in your realm of possibilities that â śpeople become more flexible and allowing as they grow older.â ť

When our role models demonstrate that itâ ™s â śnormalâ ť to have jobs without passion or relationships without mutuality, we donâ ™t see other options when we become adults. When our elders arenâ ™t open and adaptable, we find ourselves accepting rigidity and narrow-mindedness as normal.

Unfortunately, the cats keep bumping into horizontal stripes for the rest of their lives. Likewise, many of us keep bumping into our personal â śinvisibleâ ť limits for the rest of our lives. But we donâ ™t have to.

Intuition Saves the Day

Thereâ ™s a way around the fact that our mind is programmed with limitations. Weâ ™ve got intuition! Using intuition, it doesnâ ™t matter that our brain doesnâ ™t see or hear new life opportunities. Only the mind is restricted by the narrow options of childhood. Only the mind is hypnotized. Our intuition doesnâ ™t have these limitations.

Using intuition, we have a natural ability to see into our blind spots. Although the brain doesnâ ™t develop neurons to recognize â śhorizontal stripes,â ť intuition can detect them. Although the mind is hypnotized not to discern red books, intuition can discern them. Not being brainwashed with limitations, intuition can see options the mind doesnâ ™t see. Intuition can lead us to options that didnâ ™t exist in our childhood environment.

If we truly desire to discover fresh options, our intuition will guide us all the way. There are lots of other fulfilling alternatives out there. We just donâ ™t see them. The more we stop looking with our minds and start looking with our intuition, the more opportunities weâ ™ll see for happiness and prosperity. Our intuition will help us find the harmonious and loving future we dreamed of when we couldnâ ™t wait to grow up!






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