By Dr. Larry Dossey — 2009
Evidence suggests that the use of premonitions in business is widespread and is correlated with financial success. The favored term for this ability is not premonitions, however, but “business intuition.”
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Because I experienced so much financial instability in my early 20s, I work hard every single day on building a healthy relationship with money. No one really talks about how demoralizing it is to scrounge up quarters from your couch so you can afford a bacon egg and cheese sandwich at the bodega.
While trusting your gut can be scary and challenging at first, it’s an important skill for all entrepreneurs to learn so that they can confidently make the many decisions that will impact their business.
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A recurrent theme in our interviews with [these] award-winning entrepreneurs was the powerful role of intuition—or instinct, gut feeling, a “spidey sense.”
Richard Branson, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs have all said they use intuition for business and let’s face it, they have had quite a bit of success with it.
Our intuition, at least in part, is probably related to the experiences we’ve had and what we are doing is quickly processing an interpretation of a situation based on those experiences.
Entrepreneurs like Richard Branson, Steve Jobs,and Oprah Winfrey rely on their intuition to make decisions. You can’t argue with success.
If you’re an entrepreneur, tapping into your intuition can play a critical role in helping you reach your goals.
“For your husband, your illness may have made him acutely aware of not just your mortality, but also his own.”