cover of episode Listen to your intuition — it can help you navigate the future | Hrund Gunnsteinsdóttir

Listen to your intuition — it can help you navigate the future | Hrund Gunnsteinsdóttir

2024/11/7
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Hrund Gunnsteinsdóttir
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Hrund Gunnsteinsdóttir: 演讲者以自身经历为例,阐述了忽视自身福祉而过度专注于工作可能带来的身心健康问题,以及僵化的系统如何阻碍个人和组织的有效运作。她强调了从内部进行变革的重要性,并介绍了冰岛语中的“insæi”(直觉)这一概念,认为它可以帮助人们与内在联系,从而应对挑战。她深入探讨了直觉的本质、作用和培养方法,指出直觉是人类智能的基础,但它没有得到应有的重视。直觉帮助我们处理大量潜意识信息,从而获得洞察力,在创造力、同情心和创新中起着关键作用。压力会阻碍直觉的发挥,冥想等方法可以帮助人们提升直觉能力。关注自身感受和直觉反应,可以帮助人们更好地理解自身和周围环境。培养内在的直觉和自我意识,有助于人们更好地应对生活中的挑战。演讲者还以海洋探险家Enric Sala的例子说明了直觉在专业领域中的重要作用,以及经验和沉浸式体验如何提升直觉。最后,她总结了直觉可以帮助人们从三个方面应对气候变化等挑战:洞察全局、专注当下和提升创造力。想象力与直觉相结合,可以帮助人们创造和实现更美好的未来。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why did Hrund Gunnsteinsdóttir leave her job at the UN?

She felt the UN was serving the system rather than people and the planet, and she needed a change within herself to align with her sense of purpose.

What is the Icelandic word for intuition and what does it mean?

The Icelandic word for intuition is 'insaegi,' which means the sea within, referring to the ever-flowing unconscious mind.

How does intuition contribute to creativity and problem-solving?

Intuition plays a catalyzing role in creativity, compassion, mental agility, and innovation, as it allows for the integration of unconscious information processing.

What practices can help improve access to intuition?

Meditation and mindfulness practices can help regulate the nervous system and clear the way to intuition, providing clarity and self-awareness.

How has Enric Sala's intuition developed through his work?

Enric Sala's intuition has deepened with experience and expertise, allowing him to understand and address issues in ocean ecosystems more effectively.

In what three ways can intuition help humanity navigate the future?

Intuition helps see the big picture, grounds us in the present, and improves creativity and focus by connecting dots beyond man-made silos.

Chapters
Hrund Gunnsteinsdóttir discusses the importance of intuition and how it can help us navigate complex situations, drawing from her personal experiences and scientific research.
  • Intuition helps us process a massive amount of information unconsciously.
  • Research shows intuition plays a catalyzing role in creativity, compassion, and mental agility.
  • Intuition is fundamental to our intelligence but often undervalued.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

TED Audio Collective.

You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hu. Intuition. Today's speaker says it's something we all have, yet it isn't getting the attention it deserves, both individually and as a society. In her 2024 talk, sustainability leader Hrunt Gonsteyn-Dostein looks deeper at intuition and its power to help us connect with one another to navigate an uncertain future. Coming up after a break.

Support for the show comes from Remarkable, and I'm really excited to talk to you about my Remarkable Paper Pro. It's the latest and greatest paper tablet. It's a digital notebook, but it's designed to let you write by hand onto the notebook.

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It's a better way to money. See why at northwesternmutual.com slash TED. The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Support comes from Palo Verde Generating Station. As the largest single-power producer in the nation, innovating for clean energy future is at the core of Palo Verde's mission. But that's only one facet of their impact on the Southwest. Palo Verde provides thousands of high-quality jobs nationwide.

many going to veterans. They also provide an annual economic impact of more than $2.3 billion through taxes and salaries. It's clear that Palo Verde doesn't just generate energy, they generate positive change. Learn more at paloverde.com. And now, our TED Talk of the day. You all know that feeling, that sense of overwhelm when confronted with

with an urgent task, thinking, "If I only try better, work harder." And you put yourself aside time and time again because there are bigger things to think about. When I started working for the United Nations just after the war in Kosovo, it felt like walking into an open wound, and I was determined to give it all I had, knowing that the people who had suffered war were my priority, while my own well-being was not.

In early 2002, when I was traveling for work from Kosovo to Kazakhstan, I felt this terrible pain and I started to bleed. I didn't think much of it. I just took painkillers and continued with work. It was only years later that I realized I'd had a miscarriage. And instead of this being a wake-up call, I had just kept plowing on, deepening my disconnection with my body and my emotions.

Soon after, I was in the unique position of having a guaranteed job at the UN for life, which had been a dream of mine. But at the UN in Geneva, the heavy bureaucracy and hierarchy felt all-consuming. My sense of purpose got weaker, and I felt increasingly out of touch with the living world. So I left my job at the UN thinking we're a serving system instead of serving people

and the planet. And I thought something needed to change inside me. And I also felt our systems were out of sync, and maybe this feels familiar to some of you. Those of us who work in climate and sustainability work on transforming or changing systems. But systems don't change themselves, right? It's people like you and me that together change systems. But I don't think we can help big systems change in the long run.

unless we connect within, and the change starts from within us. And lucky for us, there's this beautiful Icelandic concept that can help us do that. My soul-searching brought me to intuition, which in Icelandic is called "insaegi."

And in the company of some amazing colleagues, I've been able to practice research and interview scientists, spiritual leaders and artists from around the world, and I've discovered that we all have intuition, and it's up to us to tune into it, which can be quite a challenge in today's world. Intuition is fundamental to our intelligence, and I don't think we give it the attention that it deserves.

Unconsciously, we process a massive amount of information, sensory data, that our body picks up, including the brain. While this is unconscious, it still shapes our actions. Our very focused conscious mind can grasp only a tiny fraction of all this data processing. Intuition helps us tap into this information. It helps us read the room, come up with insights, and tune in to other people and the world around us.

Sometimes we dismiss intuition as an irrational impulse that we shouldn't rely on, or a voo-voo concept that hasn't been backed by science. But research shows the catalyzing role intuition has for creativity, compassion, mental agility, and the human genius. We actually need good intuition to reason well. And without intuition, there wouldn't be much innovation.

A research on a group of Nobel laureates showed the key role intuition played in their discoveries. And as they shifted between analysis and intuition, it led them to their big leaps. My search for answers brought me back to my roots and helped me see with fresh eyes the Icelandic word for intuition, "insaie".

Insight helps us reframe intuition because it brings together the scientific and the spiritual, the solid and the poetic. Insight means the sea within and refers to the ever-flowing unconscious mind. The sea within cannot be put into boxes because then it ceases to flow. Stress, work and financial pressures can block our access to insight.

And while we can't get rid of these pressures, we can learn how to clear the way to Insight when we need it. Meditation and mindfulness practices can help us do that as they regulate our nervous system and we gain clarity in mind. Intuition picks up information with all our bodies. So next time you feel something's off, you get chills down your spine or a gut reaction, ask yourself, "What is my unconscious trying to tell me?" Insight also means to see within.

to be self-aware. And one of the most powerful ways to see within is to pay attention to how you pay attention and document it. Attention journaling helps you witness how insight plays a role in your life and how best to harness it. And lastly, insight means to see from the inside out and has to do with how we navigate the ocean of life from within with a strong inner compass. Aligning with insight is the work only you can do.

And allowing insight to flow sometimes involves finding the balance between being and doing. And for many of us, it actually takes discipline to simply be and allow the world to come to us. And now back to the episode. One of the most powerful ways I've seen insight have an impact in the world is through the work of my dear friend, the ocean explorer, Enric Sala.

When we first met, he was introduced to me as the man who had left academia in order to spend most of his time in the ocean to help save it. I was intrigued. And I have since then interviewed him both for our film and my film and my book about the role Insei has played in his pioneering work.

Enric's childhood dream was to become a marine biologist, and after having spent seven years as a university professor, Enric felt as if he was writing the obituary of the ocean instead of providing a cure. So he left his job and he went on to found the National Geographic Pristine Seas Project, where he is able to immerse himself in the ocean and explore its ecosystems in a team of scientists and filmmakers.

Spending time in the ocean has helped Anrich enormously develop his intuition about what's wrong with the ocean and how to bring it back. Since 2008, Pristine Seas has been able to establish 27 of the largest marine protected areas in the world, covering an area more than twice the size of India. Anrich's story supports research that shows that intuition gets deeper and better with experience, knowledge and expertise.

Also, how we immerse ourselves in the world, consciously or unconsciously, shapes how we show up and how we navigate it. The world we live in is very much like the ocean. It's constantly changing, and we need to decide which direction to go. We're now midway into the decisive decade for climate change. We're taking stock, renewing our understanding and agency. As we wayfind and change systems, we also need to renew our focus and vision.

And I think Insight can help us in three ways. First, like Enric's story shows, it helps us see the big picture and how everything is interconnected. And secondly, Insight grounds us in the present, enables us to be more in charge of our own attention and therefore better prepared for the unexpected. And lastly, as we immerse ourselves in a given task and we connect dots beyond man-made silos, our creativity, focus and performance improve.

As we navigate towards new horizons, we need our vivid imaginations to set sails towards the possible. Grounded in InSight's innate understanding of planetary and human interconnectedness, imagination can guide us towards the futures that we dream of. It helps us see in our minds what we intuit to be possible.

Because if we can't imagine better futures, how on earth are we going to get there? Thank you. Support comes from Palo Verde Generating Station. As the largest single-power producer in the nation, innovating for clean energy future is at the core of Palo Verde's mission. But that's only one facet of their impact on the Southwest. Palo Verde provides thousands of high-quality jobs

Many going to veterans. They also provide an annual economic impact of more than $2.3 billion through taxes and salaries. It's clear that Palo Verde doesn't just generate energy, they generate positive change. Learn more at paloverde.com. Something about the way we're working just isn't working. When you're caught up in complex pay requirements or distracted by scheduling staff in multiple time zones,

or thinking about the complexity of working in Monterey while based in Montreal. You're not doing the work you're meant to do, but with Dayforce, you get HR, pay, time, talent, and analytics all in one global people platform. So you can do the work you're meant to do. Visit dayforce.com slash do the work to learn more.

That was Front Gonstein-Dost here at TED's Countdown Bloomberg Green Festival in 2024. If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines.

And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This episode was produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Autumn Thompson, and Alejandra Salazar. It was mixed by Christopher Fazi-Bogan. Additional support from Emma Taubner and Daniela Balarezo. I'm Elise Hu. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feet. Thanks for listening. PR.