How Gut Feeling Controls Your Leadership Decision Making Process

How Gut Feeling Controls Your Leadership Decision Making Process [ad_1]
Have you ever wondered about your gut feeling and why it can have such a powerful influence over your decision-making? Have you ever thought about how your leadership decisions are heavily influenced by your gut feeling?

Your gut feeling comes from your brain. Now that might seem a contradiction but it works like this. In your brain there is a small almond shaped structure called the amygdala. In there all our emotions and experiences are stored. It seems that every experience to which we have an emotional reaction, is encoded in the amygdala.

Your amygdala is a very busy part of your brain because it is constantly signaling you about what you are feeling and experiencing at the time. Whenever you have to make a leadership decision of any kind, you get a message from your amygdala via your gut. Now what is really interesting is that your amygdala and it's related neural circuitry, are connected to your gut. This is how we can have a response, literally a "gut feeling" to the choices that we face.

Scientists have identified a complete nervous system in the human stomach and they have confirmed that intelligence is not housed in the brain alone. They have discovered that what ever is happening in the brain is also active in the gut and the central nervous system is connecting the two together. They can now confirm that our gut influences and activates key reasoning processes in our brains.

It's like your gut tells you things because there's a chemical reaction that is going on in your body. It is triggered by your mind and your gut seems to tell you that, "This does not feel right" or "Here is a great opportunity."

Studies have shown conclusively that people can sense intuitively in the first 30 seconds of an encounter what basic impression they will have of the other person after 15 minutes or even six months. For example, when people watched just 30 seconds of teachers giving a lecture, they were able to assess each teacher's proficiency with about 80 percent accuracy.

It is interesting to note that a recent study shown, 82 of the 93 winners of the Nobel Price over 16 year period agreed that "gut feeling" played an important part in their creative and scientific discoveries.

"Gut feeling" has sometimes been described as the sixth sense and has been related to intuition. However, there is growing number of researchers who suggest that "gut feeling" is the seventh sense. They are considering intuition as a more fundamental, deeply wired sense which is with us from birth. "Gut feeling", however, is a learned sense as the result of emotional responses to past, related experiences.

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Source by Peter L Mitchell

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