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Mr. E. Monkey wrote:Wee drop is NOT a dinosaur with a mind-control hat. Wee drop is NOT a dinosaur with a mind-control hat...
goofygurl wrote:Wee is a fire breathing dragon???


vyadmirer wrote:Call me the paranoid type, but remember I'm on a post apocalyptic website prepared for zombies.

DarkAxel wrote:I think people are confusing situational awareness for gut feelings. Situational awareness lets you know when something looks or sounds wrong. A gut feeling is a feeling that something is wrong even if everything looks OK.
Krustofski wrote:Dude, you're an open system which has energy pumped into it at least once a day. Entropy doesn't stand a chance. Plus, all living things are thermodynamically unstable anyway, we're held together by pure kinetics. You're not special. Um... what I'm trying to say is: Happy Birthday.

Spd164 wrote:Not to be flip, but join the service and select a combat arms MOS. Get deployed.
Or, sign on with a police department with some not so nice neighborhoods to patrol. Even just signing on as a reserve or whatever will give you a better idea of how to keep your head on a swivel when everyone around you considers you to be the bad guy.
Practice s/a as a lifestyle. Live your life the way some professionals in the above mentioned professions do. Always on guard, always looking for the threats, checking for exits, being paranoid. It's a difficult skill to develop without proper motivation (ie: people who are actually out to do you harm) being thrown in the mix. Unfortunately, experience is definitely the best teacher for the types of lessons you are looking to learn.
ETA: can't go wrong with "be polite, be courteous, but have a plan to kill everyone you meet".

wee drop o' bush wrote:For me it has always been noticing when something and/or someone looks out of place. Don't ask me what the correct 'place' is because I probably couldn't tell you, it's an ingrained habit.

squinty wrote:What? Damn I thought this was match.com. No wonder my profile didn't get any hits....

RickOShea wrote:wee drop o' bush wrote:For me it has always been noticing when something and/or someone looks out of place. Don't ask me what the correct 'place' is because I probably couldn't tell you, it's an ingrained habit.
Kinda like pron?......"I can't define it, but I know it when I see it."
Mr. E. Monkey wrote:Wee drop is NOT a dinosaur with a mind-control hat. Wee drop is NOT a dinosaur with a mind-control hat...
goofygurl wrote:Wee is a fire breathing dragon???


DarkAxel wrote:I think people are confusing situational awareness for gut feelings. Situational awareness lets you know when something looks or sounds wrong. A gut feeling is a feeling that something is wrong even if everything looks OK.
Like Doc Torr said, hyper-vigilance will fuck you of long term, that's why I think we developed the instinct, or gut feelings. They let us know when it's time to amp up or awareness to hyper-vigilance. I think it's genetically hard-wired behavior that we've grown unaccustomed to using thanks to modern advances in the sciences, and short of being thrown into a do or die, life or death situation, I can't think of a way it can be tapped at will.
Neville wrote:I agree, there is a difference between gut instinct and situational awareness. *snip*

Spd164 wrote:Neville wrote:I agree, there is a difference between gut instinct and situational awareness. *snip*
You're missing the point, brotatoe. What some of us are saying is that "gut instinct" is your body being physiologically aware of a perceived threat even though you haven't processed the information that you have automatically observed yet. The point isn't to develop some magical sixth sense, it is to strengthen the link between your body's natural inclination to protect itself through observation (instinct) and your conscious decision making process. One you incorporate that heightened level of awareness into your OODA loop, you are starting to merge your instincts and your learned behaviors, resulting in even more effective situational awareness.
I guess what I'm trying to say is thy just because you didn't consciously realize you observed something, doesn't mean that you got sent a psychic message from a higher power. Your body observed the something, you just aren't self aware enough to process the information that's tickling the back of your neck or giving you that feeling in your stomach. Developing your gut instinct revolves around training yourself to figure out what caused these instinctual signals and eventually learn to process the information quickly enough that you identify what your body is observing immediately.
I feel like I'm not making much sense, but I'm having a hard time explaining what I mean. Sorry for that, I usually am pretty good at describing my point. Not so in this case I guess.
Neville wrote:
I'm not missing anything.
I know about situational awareness and OODA and all that, and will concede that there is merit in what you say. I'm also saying, there's something more at work. Go make a study of Jung. I don't mean, read a Reader's Digest version of his greatest hits, really make a study of Jung's work. Then I think we'll have enough common ground to extend the conversation further.


knightoftheroad wrote:I have often heard about how people have a "spidey" sense or they got a hunch that something was not quite right...and this may have saved their life or saved them a great deal of hardship.
Has anyone ever tried to develop their intuition or learned how to pay more attention to it?
I imagine with possible future marauding zombies it would greatly help if you could sense disturbances in the force that might increase your reaction time to harm coming your way.


RepoMan73 wrote:You should read "The Gift of Fear" by Gavin de Becker. It talks about how people use that "funny feeling" to their advantage. There is no silly talk about physic powers.![]()

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