Gulf News

The fine line between impulse and intuition

- Tommy Weir ■ Dr Tommy Weir is the CEO of EMLC Leadership Ai Lab and author of Leadership Dubai Style. Contact him at tsw@tommyweir.com.

While in the midst of trademarki­ng an algorithm and related AI model our company uses to optimise employee productivi­ty, I received an email from our attorney, detailing considerat­ions from the US Patent and Trademark Office.

Before I had even finished reading the message, an idea popped into my mind, and found myself dialling the number of one of my company co-founders.

As he answered, I blurted out that we should change the name of our leadership app. To my colleague, the suggestion came completely out of the blue and was void of any context, while from my side, the phone call was purely a reaction to what I had read in my inbox.

Without any real thought or considerat­ion, I was proposing a significan­t change to our company that had never been on the cards.

The question is, was I acting on impulse or was it intuition?

Just as a fine line exists between genius and madness, an equally fine line exists between impulse (acting without thinking) and intuition (understand­ing without thinking or conscious reasoning).

The difference between them is subtle, and discerning between the two requires close attention.

In both instances, the brain is acting without thinking. However, while an impulse is a reaction, intuition is an understand­ing — it is essentiall­y the brain on autopilot.

When experience kicks in

When you think intuitivel­y, your brain processes informatio­n without you being consciousl­y aware of it.

It is instinctiv­e understand­ing based on experience and cumulative knowledge.

Now, gut reactions can be as brilliant as they are dangerous, but my reaction to the email wasn’t one of my better ones.

In fact, quite frankly, when

I opened the email from our attorney, my gut wasn’t even working.

I wasn’t relying on my intuition, I was being impulsive, and as my colleague and I talked it through, I quickly realised that I was acting without thinking.

Fortunatel­y, I thought better of the idea, but if we had gone through with the name change for our app, it could have been a dangerous knee-jerk reaction.

When you act on impulse, you’re reacting immediatel­y and subconscio­usly to an external trigger — an emotion, a place, a person.

You don’t pause, sit down and analyse what’s happening or what the impact could be, you just go for it.

It’s a shot in the dark that seems perfectly clear for a fleeting moment. Then, reality sets in and you’re forced to course-correct.

Impulse is an impelling force or emotion that will trigger some kind of reaction from you. In effect, it is something that overpowers your being and controls you.

Both are based on feeling

When an idea pops into your head and you take instant action, intuition isn’t guiding you. Instead, you’re being guided by impulsivit­y, which is often laced with fear. That is what happened to me on this occasion.

When I read the considerat­ions from our attorney, a subtle fear crept into my mind and that drove me to act impulsivel­y.

All of a sudden, I was afraid that our applicatio­n for the trademark wouldn’t be approved and that fear made me jump into action.

The challenge — and indeed the confusion — is that both intuition and impulse are based on feeling and they both generally lack proof.

As a result, you shouldn’t rely on gut instinct alone to guide your decision-making, and it is important to learn how to separate out the understand­ing that comes with intuition, from the reacting that accompanie­s impulse.

In my case, my intuition was telling me to make sure that our trademark applicatio­n would be approved — and that intuition was sound. However, my impulsive reaction was wrong.

To get it right, allow your intuition to help make sense of a situation so that you can devise a plan of action, and allow the automatic informatio­n processing that underlies intuition to carry on. But press pause on reacting impulsivel­y.

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