We can access our own unconscious at no cost.

We can access our own unconscious at no cost.
You can discover your deepest thoughts with eight words.
Me, Nature, Society, Shells, Networks, Pleasure, Financial, Manifestation.
List your options.
A question, eight words, and numerical answers is all you need.
You can learn what you actually want.
With your question in mind, score one to ten how each answer affects you.
How does a decision impact you personally?
How does a decision impact nature?
What effect will a decision have on society?
How does your choice affect shells (the space you are in)?
How are your networks affected by your choice?
What is the financial implication of your choice?
How does your choice rate as a manifestation of you?
You are the best judge of what will work for you.
What you actually desire generally surfaces.
You can rate criteria as you wish when making decisions.
Using a decisional grid can reveal what's only semi- or even unconscious.
The decisional grid is free.
The decisional grid can work for anyone.
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Published on June 07, 2013 03:52 Tags: decision-making, grid
Comments Showing 1-6 of 6 (6 new)    post a comment »
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message 1: by Mack (new)

Mack And still, sometimes I get the idea there is something in our nature that can never be boxed in to any grid ..

:-)


message 2: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Rose True. All this does is give you a proximate possibility which will be overruled if a deeper sense kicks in or if the situation changes.


message 3: by Mack (new)

Mack True, it is a great means to develop a perspective on decisions we take. It's a tool we can pick up, I just sometimes wonder whether people really take the time to do so, instead continuing to act on stimuli most often not their own.

Apologies for the perhaps somewhat all too negative tone :-) I've been rewriting an old story today along that line, it's left me a tad .. pessimistic on the human condition, for a bit.


message 4: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Rose Hey I appreciate your comment! Silence around here seems a mite deafening! Cheers, S


message 5: by Mack (new)

Mack No worries :)

Silence can also be enjoyed. Just do it with someone, or with something to do, that way it is never deafening!


message 6: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Rose Very true.


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