Three ways of knowing
Inside you are three quiet guides: your mind, your heart, and your gut. Each is wise about different things. The trick isn't to pick a favourite — it's to learn to listen to all three.
Thinks
Your thinking and working-things-out. It looks at the facts, makes plans, and asks “is this true?” Best for the what and the how.
Feels
Your feelings, your love, your sense of what truly matters. It knows who you care about. Best for the why and the who.
Senses
Your quiet inner hunch — the one that knows before you can explain it. Often the first to whisper “something's not right.” Best for trust and safety.
Why you need all three
Left on its own, each one can fool you:
- A mind with no heart can be clever but cold.
- A heart with no mind can be loving but lost.
- A gut that's ignored can leave you walking straight into things that hurt.
Together, they keep one another in check. Real wisdom is the three of them talking together — the gut sensing, the heart caring, and the mind finding the way.
When they disagree
Sometimes your head says one thing, your heart says another, and your gut feels uneasy. That isn't a fault — it's a meeting. Slow down, and ask each one what it's trying to tell you. You don't have to obey the loudest; you get to listen to them all.
One especially important rule: if your gut tells you a person or a place isn't safe, listen to it, and tell a grown-up you trust. That quiet inner alarm is one of your very best protectors — it is allowed to be louder than politeness.
How to get to know yourself
- Get quiet sometimes. You can't hear any of the three in constant noise.
- Name what you feel — it's how you hear your heart clearly (more on the big feelings page).
- Notice your hunches, and whether they turn out to be right. Your gut gets sharper with practice.
- Be honest with yourself, gently — even about the parts you'd rather hide. They lose their grip the moment you look at them kindly.
Your mind to think it. Your heart to feel it.
Your gut to know it.
Knowing yourself isn't a test you pass once — it's a friendly, lifelong adventure. And it's the first real step toward everything else, because you can't share gifts you haven't found, or steer a ship you don't understand.
Why bother knowing yourself? Three ways to see it
Why this knowing comes first is one truth you can hear three ways. Start with the warm one; open the others if you'd like to look closer.
A gentle way to see it
Knowing yourself isn't a test you pass once — it's a friendly, lifelong adventure. You can't share gifts you haven't found, or steer a ship you don't understand.
So get quiet sometimes, name what you feel, notice your hunches, and be honest with yourself the way you'd be gentle with a good friend. Everything else begins here.
The mind behind ithow the mind works
Your three guides aren't just a nice picture — scientists can find them at work. When you put a feeling into words, brain scans show the alarm part of the brain calming down: naming a feeling really does help tame it.
And that gut hunch is more real than people once thought — your gut and your brain are joined together by a big nerve, sending messages all day long, which is why a choice can feel “off” in your tummy before your mind can say why. Learning to read these inner signals is one of the most useful skills you can grow.
Going a little deeperan older, quieter idea
Over the door of an ancient temple, two words were carved: Know Yourself — and teachers across the world have pointed the same way ever since, saying the deepest things are found not far off, but by turning inward.
They spoke of a quiet light, a truest self, under all the noise and the ideas we borrow from others. And being truthful with yourself — gently, never cruelly — is its own small act of love: the same care you'd give a good friend, turned inward. Honesty and kindness aren't opposites; they're one cloth. You don't have to take any of this on trust. Get still, look honestly, and see what you find waiting there.
Questions to wonder
- Which do you trust most — your mind, your heart, or your gut? Which do you forget to listen to?
- Has your gut ever warned you about something before you understood why?
- What is one true thing about yourself you've learned this year?