Recently I accidentally stumbled across a fun and easy way
to build my belief in my own intuition and spiritual guidance: Sudoku
I’ve been playing Sudoku on an iphone app on my phone for
years. Not very much, I hasten to
say (lest you judge me as “one of those people” who play games on their phone
all the time). Actually, I wish I were “one of those people” who
play games on their phone because it might indicate that I had time to do
that. Sigh. But that’s a different blog post.
No. I am “one of
those people” who play games on their phone while I’m on an airplane or in a
location where I have no internet and can’t really work. And the game I play at those times is Sudoku. Over the years, I have worked my way up very slowly on
this little app from
“flash” level to “easy” to “medium” (where I stayed for the past two years) to,
very recently, “hard.”
On the flash and easy levels, I used the huge amount of
already filled in spots to give me easy clues to what number would go in a
particular spot. There was no guessing
really, it was a process of elimination, looking at what numbers were all
around it. By the time I put the number
in there, I knew it was right. For a fact.
But when I got to the “hard” level I realized that I either
could not or would not spend the time it took to determine analytically what
number went in each spot. Someone else
might be willing to do this. I could see how it could be done. But I didn’t
seem to want to spend my brainpower on it.
Almost always with this game, you can narrow down to 2 numbers that
could go in a given square. One of them
is right and one of them is wrong. Out
of sheer impatience, I started guessing--so I got a ton of answers wrong.
Then I started using a technique cribbed from something
called Access Consciousness* which I sometimes use to make difficult
decisions. I sit with the choices and
feel each choice and the choice that feels really light and spacious in my
chest when I think of it is the choice that will bring the most possibilities
and joy in my life – what Access would call the “light” choice but someone else might just
call the “right” choice. So I would
narrow down the choice to, say, numbers 4 and 8 and whichever felt lighter, I
would put in the box. And in this app,
unlike if you play on paper, you can immediately see whether the choice was right
or not. I noticed that 99 times out of
100, the choice that was lightest was right.
I think that defies the odds which should really be 1 in 2, but what do
I know?
After doing this like 30 times, I realized with a flash that
this game was an absolutely no stakes way to build my faith in my
intuition. You see what I’m saying? There is no earthly way that it matters
whether I get this wrong. No bank
account or relationship or emotion is depending on me to get the right
answer. And if I’m playing at a level
that is hard enough that its more fun for me to guess than it is to figure it
out with my earth brain then this actually becomes a more fun game for me: intuition
building through Sudoku.
See if I can use this with no stakes matters like Sudoku, I
can build the confidence to use it with low stakes matters like which
restaurant to go to or whether to say yes to a random invitation or
opportunity. And if I can use it with
those things, maybe then I can use it with the really big stuff: career and
finances and marriage and housing level stuff.
Let me hasten to point out the obvious: you don’t need to use either Sudoku or Access
Consciousness to do this test. Pick your
own game with right or wrong answers (I have no idea what that would be, but
I’m sure some exist). Pick your own test
of your intuition (some ideas include: muscle testing, another kind of feeling,
a pendulum, writing, or something else).
It strikes me that most of us do it the other way around—we
turn to our intuition only when desperate, when the stakes appear to be
enormous and we have absolutely no idea what to do. The great thing about the “hard” level of
Sudoku is that it is really a no stakes simulation of high stakes, right? It’s the “hard” level and there’s only one right answer. And if you pick the wrong numbers it will make a buzzing sound and you’ll
“lose” (by getting a low score). The
reptilian or mammalian brain interprets these queues as stakes and generates
some of the stress chemicals that real world decisions might activate—which is
why people like to play games. Why not
use this environment to build your own ability to handle what really matter to
you?
* Access Consciousness teaches some powerful techniques that
absolutely work yet indications are that it has some unhealthy business
practices and aspects that are sufficiently weird to give one pause. My approach with them is to take what I like
and leave the rest.
2 comments:
The Unbearable Lightness of Sudoku. Like it! Was going to spend time with my kids today but now I'm going to try this out obsessively!
Love this.
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