Wednesday, December 31, 2025

How to Trust Your Intuition (Even If You Feel Like You Don’t Have One)



How to Trust Your Intuition (Even If You Feel Like You Don’t Have One)


A Personal Note

In 2026, I’m intentionally learning how to trust myself again.


After a year that required a lot of overthinking, emotional labor, and second-guessing my own instincts, I realized something important: I don’t need more advice. I need more self-trust.


This year, I’m choosing to listen to my intuition even when it’s quiet, even when it’s inconvenient, and even when it asks me to walk away from what’s familiar. This post is part of that process. If you’ve ever felt disconnected from your intuition or unsure how to access it, you’re not alone. I’m figuring it out too.


If you’ve ever said, “I’m trying to follow my intuition, but I feel like I don’t even have one,” you’re not alone.


Most people don’t lack intuition. They lack trust in it.


And usually, that distrust didn’t come from nowhere. It came from years of overriding gut feelings, explaining away discomfort, or being told you were “too sensitive” when your body was actually picking up on something real.


If you’re entering a season where self-trust is the goal, learning how to listen to your intuition is less about awakening something mystical and more about reconnecting with what’s already there.





You’re Not Intuition-Less. You’re Just Out of Practice

Intuition doesn’t disappear. It just gets quieter when it’s ignored.


Every time you felt:

- uneasy but stayed anyway

- drained after certain conversations

- tight in your chest, but talked yourself out of it


That was intuition.


Over time, logic, fear, and overthinking tend to speak louder. The result isn’t a lack of intuition, but a habit of second-guessing it.


Rebuilding intuition starts with recognizing that your first response is usually the most honest one.


What Intuition Actually Feels Like

Intuition is often misunderstood as a dramatic “aha” moment. In reality, it’s subtle and practical.


It shows up as:

- a sense of calm or relief when you imagine walking away

- a heavy or constricted feeling when something isn’t right

- clarity without excitement

- peace without explanation


Intuition is quiet. Anxiety is loud.


One of the biggest shifts you can make is learning to tell the difference.


The Body Is the Compass

Intuition lives in the body, not the mind.


A simple way to check in is to ask yourself:


Does this feel expanding or contracting in my body?


Expansion feels like ease, openness, or deeper breathing.


Contraction feels like tension, dread, or a tight chest.


You don’t need to analyze the feeling. Just notice it. Your body processes information faster than your brain ever will.


How to Strengthen Intuition (Without Overhauling Your Life)

Intuition is like a muscle. It grows through small acts of trust, not big, dramatic decisions.


Start with everyday moments:

- choosing comfort over appearances

- leaving conversations when your energy drops

- resting when you’re tired instead of pushing through

- saying “I need time to think” instead of forcing clarity


Each time you honor a small signal, you reinforce self-trust. Over time, intuition becomes clearer and easier to recognize.


A Key Distinction: Intuition vs Anxiety

This matters.


Intuition feels steady, even when the decision is hard.


Anxiety feels urgent, chaotic, and emotionally charged.


If something feels intense, obsessive, or confusing, it’s usually not intuition. It’s your nervous system reacting to familiarity or fear.


Peace is the indicator.


A Simple Rule to Live By

If you need to talk yourself into something, it’s probably not aligned.


Aligned choices don’t require convincing. They don’t demand justification.


They feel quieter, cleaner, and more grounded.


That’s intuition doing its job.


Trust Is the Goal

Learning to trust your intuition isn’t about becoming more spiritual or insightful. It’s about stopping the habit of abandoning yourself.


When you choose to believe your own signals, even in small ways, intuition becomes less mysterious and more reliable.


You don’t need to find your intuition.


You just need to stop ignoring it.

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