Asking questions is unquestionably one of the most powerful ways to request and receive intuitive guidance. Asking questions of your Higher Self, your unconscious mind, deities, or whatever powers you believe in, will focus and hone your intentions to receive guidance, and throw open the doors of your mind to receive it.
When you humbly ask for help or guidance, you are asserting your desire for help and insight, along with your deep desire to receive it into your heart and mind. Asking for the specific type of help you desire sends a clearer, stronger message, making an answer easier to receive and increasing your sensitivity to whatever form that answer may take whether direct or symbolic messages sent to your consciousness, or hints, whispers, and metaphoric messages that manifest themselves in your outer world.
Nearly all living beings ask such questions internally from time to time, though seldom framing them clearly or believing that you will receive the answers you so desire. Do you ever find that your inner dialog contains questions and thoughts like these: “I wish I knew just what to do here”, or “Is this job really right for me?”, “I really want some help with this!”, and so on. If so, you are asking for guidance from your intuitive self. And you are already receiving answers, yet are not really in a receptive state, making you numb and blind to the help and answers you do receive.
Learning settings and practices that are most personally appropriate for asking your questions and receiving responses will profoundly affect the clarity of your asking and your sensitivity to the responses you receive in a profound way. Likewise, learning the best nature and form for your questions and queries is truly a key to the success of your asking, and refining such will optimize your intuitive potential. When you are more conscious of your questions, you invite greater focus and clarity, both to your current standing and perspectives, and to the guidance you invoke when you ask them.
The Intuition Zone program provides deep insight into the types of questions to ask when you seek this kind of inspired guidance, with specific guidelines, including frames of reference, settings for Yes-No questions, open ended questions that evoke broader answers, what practices and behaviors to avoid, and more, with specific examples. Click to learn more about Aine Belton’s Intuition Zone program.
