Intuition XQ for PIs, POs, & First Responders

New York Times - U.S. Navy Intuition Study
Noetic SI Law Enforcement First Responders

Gut Feeling, Sixth Sense,
Premonitions, Vibes, Intuition[br]XQ

A Secret Advantage

Noetic Systems: an organization specializing in the phenomenon of Gut-Feelings and Sixth Sense, educates Government Agents, Law Enforcement Officers, Investigators, Fire Fighters, EMS and other brave first responders on the latest scientific findings about intuition. It addresses how to:

  • Recognize your own intuition
  • Apply it intentionally
  • Be aware of intuition as it is occurring
  • Maintain credibility through articulate official reports and at witness stands

Government Agents, Law Enforcement Officers, and Investigators are known to have strong Gut-Feelings or a Sixth Sense about situations and individuals. Officers utilize gut-feelings to question witnesses, maneuver through potentially dangerous situations, or even save lives. Intuition is also used by Fire Fighters, EMS, and other similar First Responders to assess a situation, stabilize, and execute a plan for the safety of all.

INTUITION IS A SKILL EVERYONE HAS BUT NOT EVERYONE IS WILLING TO TALK ABOUT

HAVE YOU EVER

  • Felt the presence of someone behind you without hearing or seeing them first?
  • Received critical information about a situation without knowing where it came from?
  • Knew to ask certain questions, without reasonable association, and got better results?
  • Called for backup regardless of what appeared to be a peaceful situation?
  • Felt the need to investigate a particular person or situation further even though it was unnecessary and acquired pertinent information?
  • Felt the urge to change plans, without necessary reason, and was glad you did?

Noetic SI Law Enforcement First Responders

  • Gone back to review information that didn’t seem quite right and found out your hunch was right?
  • Turned one way, instead of another, to investigate a situation further, with better results?
  • Readjusted team strategy in a hostage situation, without clarified reasoning, only to save lives in the end?
  • Double checked an area, with no plausible cause, only to find a weapon and/or drugs?

If you checked yes to just one of these, then you are a normal, intuitive person. Developing your gut-feelings with NSI will help you gain advantage in the field.

Testimonial – Private Investigator
“My XQ was my navigational tool”

I have used XQ on several occasions for personal situations. I wanted to get a feel for the methodology and application before applying to my case load. As a private investigator I have often found my intuition to be accurate. I was anxious to utilize the XQ to get an advantage in my findings and shorten my investigation time by pinpointing the intelligence I needed to close cases accurately.

The first case I used the XQ method was on an aggravated robbery. Once I got the basic intel on the case I utilized the XQ before I began the investigation to test the results later. In hindsight, my questions could have been better. But what I found was that even though the questions may not have been the greatest it still gave me the platform to work with. Some of the information I received didn’t make sense at the time, until they revealed themselves later. Some information was specific and an extremely useful tool in questioning and the investigation overall.

The look on the subjects face when I asked specific questions that no one would know was priceless. My XQ was my navigational tool; always in the back of my mind piecing the puzzle together to ultimately reveal itself as the key points in the investigation and/or confirming the findings. It was absolutely uncanny and incredible!

Investigator Zambrano (July2015)

The benefits of NSI XQ training:
  • Learn up-to-date scientific findings on intuition
  • Learn techniques and observational strategies to recognize your intuition
  • Learn preliminary questioning and interrogation strategies utilizing intentional intuition
  • Learn how to hone-in on specific intuitive signals for potentially dangerous situations
  • Discuss the awareness of intuition and its successful integration into reasoning
  • Learn proven techniques to harness intuition consciously and consistently
  • Learn how to apply intuition successfully without experience-based field knowledge
  • Understand how to maintain credibility through articulation in official reports and on the witness stand
Why is the sixth sense critical for first responders?

NSI describes intuition as a sort of integrated advanced warning system that can get Officers and First Responders out of dangerous situations. The sixth sense “is said to strengthen the police officer’s crime fighting prowess” (Worrall, 2013,p.306).

When the issues of risk and uncertainty are present in a decision-making process and there is little or no time, the unknown and the need for prediction rises. This is when the Gut-Feeling and Sixth Sense play a critical role in providing the individual with an immediate and clear solution that could be life-saving.

DECISION MAKING: FIREFIGHTER TIPPING POINTS
A quote from Fire Engineering.com

When someone says, “I just have a bad feeling about this,” that feeling is just a simply stated emotional response that comes to mind. In reality, there is a great deal of credibility in the scientific community for the position that intuition and other emotional responses play a key role in decision making.
De Martino, B, R Dolan, D Kumaran, B Seymore, “Frames, Biases, and Rational Decision Making in the Human Brain,”Science; August 4, 2006, (313): 684-687.

U.S. Navy Program to Study How Troops Use Intuition
The United States Navy has started a program to investigate how members of the military can be trained to improve their “sixth sense,” or intuitive ability, during combat and other missions…The scientists managing the program — which the the naval research office is calling “revolutionary” — commonly refer to this mysterious perception as feeling one’s “Spidey sense” tingling, after the intuitive power of Spiderman
New York Times, By CHANNING JOSEPH date published MARCH 27, 2012 5:09 PM

Gut-Feelings can help you detect invisible information.

Have you ever:

  • Felt the presence of someone behind you without hearing or seeing them first?
  • Received critical information about a situation without knowing where it came from?
  • Knew to ask certain questions, without reasonable association, and got better results?
  • Called for backup regardless of what appeared to be a peaceful situation?
  • Felt the need to investigate a particular person or situation further even though it was unnecessary and acquired pertinent information?
  • Felt the urge to change plans, without necessary reason, and was glad you did?
  • Went back to review information that didn’t seem quite right and found out your hunch was right?
  • Turned one way, instead of another, to investigate a situation further, with better results?
  • Readjusted team strategy in a hostage situation, without clarified reasoning, only to save lives in the end?
  • Double checked an area, with no plausible cause, only to find a weapon and/or drugs?

If you checked yes to just one of these, then you are a normal, intuitive person and, developing your gut-feelings with Noetic Systems will help you gain advantage in the field.

Officers Jacobs’ and Campbell’s intuition, authorities said, led to the arrest of Garrido, a registered sex offender who along with his wife, Nancy, now faces 29 felony charges in connection with the 1991 kidnapping of Jaycee Dugard
CNN News 2:26 p.m. EDT, Mon August 31, 2009. http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/08/31/missing.girl.officers/index.html

Being in Touch with the Sixth Sense Can Save Lives

I just felt led to dig’,

Newburgh police officer Brandon Rola approached one snow bank among several in the area and discovered a half-buried shovel that was “kind of sticking out of the pile,” he said. “I pulled the shovel out, and I definitely didn’t put it together then but just kind of decided to start digging,” Rola said on CNN’s “The Lead” on Friday. 

He said that even though he turned up nothing after four or five shovels full of snow, he kept digging into the 8-foot-tall pile.  He saved two young boys’ lives that had been buried in the snow for seven hours. 

http://q13fox.com/2014/11/28/officer-with-a-hunch-rescues-boys-buried-in-snow-for-7-hours

When there is no time to think

Accurate gut-feelings, or intuition prove invaluable in situations when a quick and sometimes life-saving decision needs to be made.
Situation example: When the mind of a well trained PO goes through the pre-programmed steps he/she was trained to do but the situation presents an anomaly, and a quick reaction is required to save lives this is when the sixth sense takes on a critical role. It provides instant:
● Detection of invisible information
● Integration of that information into the decision-making process
● Automatic best solution to the situation

Dodge (firefighter) sensed the severity of the situation and the need for a novel approach. He then acted on gut-feelings. Rather than continue to try to move away from the fire, . . . his hunch, based on past experience with fire but not a straightforward replay of past learning, proved wise. Dodge’s action saved his life, but most of the others who did not follow his directions perished.                                                            (2005, Miller, p. 23)

How does a gut-feeling happen?

Scientific findings reveal that intuition or gut-feeling is a combination of: life experiences, tacit knowledge, using our unconscious mind to gather information from a human’s energy field, and our natural ability to tap into future events. Intuitive insights are often times Not related to our knowledge base or experience (McCraty et al. 2004).

Hard to believe?

Here are a few compelling findings:

  • Skin reacts to an event 5 seconds before it happens (Radin, 1997)
  • Experiments on intuition using EEG to measure cardiac changes and relate them to specific cortical activity: the body responds to intuitive stimulus many seconds before the individual registers the activity. The EEG measurements demonstrated the heart triggers the reaction, not the brain
  • The study proved our body “is continuously scanning the future”. (McCraty et al., 2004, p. 133)
  • It is common knowledge in quantum physics that particles separated by a huge distance experience instant communication of data and that particles have the knowledge of the activity before it happens.
  • Sheldrake’s experiment on the feeling of being stared at comprised of 30,803 individuals with a very significant statistical indication that people are able to pick-up on the feeling of someone staring at them without knowing if a person is there or not (Sheldrake, 2003).
  • In another experiment with a male mongrel terrier dog, Sheldrake’s findings demonstrate that the dog was able to anticipate his owner’s return at least 10 minutes in advance in 27 out of 33 trials (Sheldrake & Smart,1997)
“Call it police intuition or I don’t know, but I knew something was off from the moment we arrested him,” Officer Williams said.  “I just had a real tense feeling about him.”

http://www.myfoxal.com/story/27644789/marta-police-release-video-of-suspected-serial-killers-arrest

Our Brain is NOT a Computer

There is a part of our brain that has been ignored: the unconscious. The unconscious has the natural skill to tap into and receive signals from human energy fields as well as future events, or nonlocal information. However, our society and educational system only focuses on the development of our conscious mind from which we develop what we call our intelligence. Yet the unconscious continuously feeds us with nonlocal information but the conscious mind has been trained to ignore it. Oftentimes when we do receive a strong gut-feeling or intuitive insight, we immediately wonder if it is true or not. This happens because the conscious mind rejects any outside information.

Noetic Systems has studied the gut-feeling phenomenon for over 20 years and offers a professional forum to:

  • Provide professional and scientific evidence of how intuition works
  • Offer XQ: a unique proprietary training method on how to develop this skill and maximize its accuracy
  • Continue research and development on the gut-feeling phenomenon
  • Discuss the latest findings in the area of gut-feeling and intuition
In the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin Dr. Pinizzotto who works at the FBI Academy states:

“Intuitive policing represents a decision-making process that officers use frequently but find difficult to explain to those unfamiliar with the concept.”

(2004, Pinizzotto et al., p. 5)

NSI
International Experts in Intuition & CRV

Where do we start? The change starts with the individual: Me. You.

If you are a law enforcement officer, a private investigator, or an individual working in other potentially dangerous situations, such as the fire department, or the military, Noetic Systems will provide you and your colleagues with professional training and guidance to develop this powerful, potentially life-saving, XQ skill.

Click here for more information on our tailored training workshops

Want to learn more about how
First Responders Intuition XQ Training can be
valuable to you and/or your organization?

References:

McCraty, R., Atkinson, M., & Bradley, R. T. (2004). Electrophysiological evidence of intuition: Part 1. The surprising role of the heart. The Journal of Alternative and Compelementary Medicine, 10, 133-143. Retrieved October 10, 2005, from ProQuest database.

Miller, C., & Ireland, D. H. (2005). Intuition in strategic decision making: Friend or foe in the fast-paced 21st century? Academy of Management Executive, 19, 19-30. Retrieved October 4, 2005, from EBSCOhost database.

Pinizzotto, A., Davis, E., Miller, C. (2004). Intuitive policing. FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, 73(2).

Radin, D. I. (1997). Unconscious perception of future emotions: An experiment in presentiment. Journal of Scientific Exploration, 11, 163-180.

Sheldrake, R. & Smart (1997). Psychic pets: a survey in North-West England. Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 68, 353-364

Sheldrake, R. (2003). The sense of being stared at. New York, Crown Publishers.

Worrall, John (2012). The Police Sixth Sense: An Observation in Search of a Theory. Southern Criminal Justice Association. American Journal Criminal  Justice DOI 10.1007/s12103-012-9176-0.

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