Posts Tagged ‘six senses’

12
Jan

I’m Thinking Of A Number

   Posted by: admin    in Childhood, Psychic Sense, Uncategorized

 

My youngest granddaughter (she’s four) and I were cuddling together and I asked her to close her eyes and think of a number one through ten.  I told her I was going to “guess” the number.  After a few ”guesses” I told her to close her eyes again and I was going to think of a number one through ten, and she was to “guess” the number.  Our time together resulted in laughs, hugs, love and last but not least, telepathic development.

Training, using all six senses, can begin at any age, but how fortunate are the children who have someone to start their education early.  Want to start teaching your children?  Once your child knows their numbers one through ten, this exercise is a fun way to share some time together and develop early telepathic skills.

Here’s how to begin:

Ask your child to close their eyes and think of a number one through ten.  Instruct them to take their time and ask that they imagine writing the number on a piece of paper.

Ask your child if they have the number.  Once they say yes, close your eyes and relax your breathing.  Imagine that your child is writing a number on a piece of paper.

Say the number out loud.

Variations on the same exercise:

Use a regular deck of playing cards.  As you look at a red or black card think on it and ask your child to guess the color.

Place a small object within a paper bag.  Concentrate on it.  Ask your child to guess the shape or color.

Things to remember:

It’s not how many times you get it right in the beginning.  You are both developing a skill that when you see the correct number it will feel a certain way inside your solar plexus.

The skill you two are developing is one of telepathy; communicating between two minds.

You will soon discover who is a better sender or receiver.

Begin a Development Journal, and keep score of your correct answers.  Start logging percentages of accuracy, along with markers, i.e., health conditions (sick/well; tired/well rested; emotional/calm, etc.), weather conditions, and external conditions (noisy/quiet).

Make it FUN and don’t ever press the exercise on an unwilling or reluctant child.

Let me know how you do.  Oh!  This same exercise works between adults as well.

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6
Jan

Oversensitive

   Posted by: admin    in Childhood, Psychic Sense, Uncategorized

 

Ever hear those words?  “You’re oversensitive.”  Or “As a child you were so sensitive.”

What determines oversensitivity?  And how does it relate to the early development of being defined as clairsentient?

Reflecting upon my childhood, I can only site examples for parents to watch in their own children.  It’s going to take exceptional listening skills and an open mind.

A Few Early Year Examples:

I was five and my teddy bear fell from my bed to the floor.  I felt Teddy land and instinctively said “ouch” out loud.

Coming home from school my mother often insisted that I go to my room.  I cannot adequately communicate the trepidation and fear I felt knowing that I had to go to my room.  Standing in my living room and looking up the staircase, which led to my room, I could hear “them” walking back and forth and hear “them” talking, waiting for me.  “Them” were past relatives who were in Spirit.  Scary stuff.   Scarier still was my mother saying, “Don’t be ridiculous, there’s no one there!”

Playing outside in the woods and seeing a Native American warrior emerge from a huge boulder and begin talking to me.

Having reoccurring dreams of being in a lush, tropical jungle and a giant flower bending down to swallow me.  Sliding down the inside of the stem I was deposited into an even more vibrant world of plant life where leaves were luminescent and the water had crystals growing in the lakes.  A stern voice telling me, “Do not drink from the water or you will forget this place.”

Loud noises made me a nervous wreck, to the point that my hands would lose all feeling rendering them absolutely useless to hold anything.  Hence an expression I still use today when my body reacts to fear, “My hands have gone to jelly.”

Hearing profanity hurt my ears so badly that it felt as if someone slapped me hard all over my body.

Capturing butterflies.  I started to pin a couple beauties on a board and could hear them say to me, “Please let me go.”  So I did.  The thought of capturing butterflies made me physically sick to my stomach after this experience.

Now these are only a few examples. 

Who protects the vulnerable child from the unseen?  What parents even know the musings of a child’s mind, let alone one who is sensitive to unperceived stimulus?  Have parents and adults been so far removed from their own memories of childhood that they have forgotten what it’s like to be a child resonating like a tuning fork to all six senses?  It’s not a belief system; the senses react and experiences happen in childhood regardless of the developed logic impinged upon them.

Children emerge from a spectrum of awareness as an inverse of the very aged submerging back to that source of awareness.

Celebrate your sensitivity.  Share your childhood experiences with your own children in support of helping them to open their worlds to you in a gesture of hope that the circle of sensitivity is acknowledged and accepted.

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