Threat Management - Instincts
Hopefully, you've decided to move through life awake rather than asleep. So, you're naturally observing what goes on around you. Still, sometimes you'll notice that something isn't quite right but you don't know what it is. Ignoring that sense of uneasiness is an unsound practice.
Though we are supposed to be civilized and rely on often-cited facts about our surroundings ("Well, did you actually see anything wrong?"), we should instead trust our instincts - this is not a sixth sense - this is our normal senses working together from years of evolutionary survival. You do not have to actually see a threat to know one is near. And, when you do notice this feeling of uneasiness, many times you can find the trigger for it through observation. When you arrive home and feel that something isn't quite right, is that from a light on that shouldn't be? Has something moved since you left? Walking down a street, are there suddenly several people nearby who all seem to take a more than casual interest in your movements?
Remember, most people are asleep, they will not be noticing anyone but themselves, if even that. The predators, though, are wolves and they are using their instincts to find prey. Trust your instincts. Be a wolf. By doing so, you can often get yourself out of situations where you'd be preyed upon - and, as you gain in your ability to trust your instincts, that will be projected out from you. The predatory wolves will notice and leave you alone. They want to attack a sheep, not another wolf.
Trust me - this works.
Though we are supposed to be civilized and rely on often-cited facts about our surroundings ("Well, did you actually see anything wrong?"), we should instead trust our instincts - this is not a sixth sense - this is our normal senses working together from years of evolutionary survival. You do not have to actually see a threat to know one is near. And, when you do notice this feeling of uneasiness, many times you can find the trigger for it through observation. When you arrive home and feel that something isn't quite right, is that from a light on that shouldn't be? Has something moved since you left? Walking down a street, are there suddenly several people nearby who all seem to take a more than casual interest in your movements?
Remember, most people are asleep, they will not be noticing anyone but themselves, if even that. The predators, though, are wolves and they are using their instincts to find prey. Trust your instincts. Be a wolf. By doing so, you can often get yourself out of situations where you'd be preyed upon - and, as you gain in your ability to trust your instincts, that will be projected out from you. The predatory wolves will notice and leave you alone. They want to attack a sheep, not another wolf.
Trust me - this works.


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