Medium how do you know
Think about what you see around people. If you are a medium, you might see auras or symbols surrounding people. These images might just be fuzzy fields of color or physical symbols or scenes, like a lake or river. They are probably normal to your internal world, so pay close attention to how you perceive others. This is a large part of clairvoyance.
Understand how you feel around others. Do you know if someone walks into a room without seeing that person? If you hold an object owned by a person, you can sense deep emotions and experiences connected with that person through the object.
Remember your deceased loved ones. Your personal experiences surrounding death might reveal that you have a psychic gift. After someone you love dies, if you are a medium, you might experience odd occurrences. These could be as simple as unexplained slammed doors or strange sensations and feelings other than grief. Listen around you. Clairaudience, the ability to hear the voices of spirits, is a large part of being a medium.
They are internal voices. You might have a series of nagging thoughts or ideas that come to you from seemingly nowhere. Part 3. Take time to meditate each day. This can help you hone and understand your abilities as a medium. Try to meditate for around thirty minutes each day. Choose a quiet spot to be a dedicated area for your meditation. Light a candle to focus on while you meditate. After your meditation, write down the strongest impressions, feelings, or images that came to you during that time.
Look back on those notes at a later to date to see if a pattern emerges and to see if you can interpret meaning from them. These may be messages from the spirit world.
The more you meditate, the more you will be able to sharpen your focus. Cultivate your vision. Keep a journal. While meditation helps cultivate your understanding of the present, writing down your thoughts and days in a journal can help to stretch your memory, and in time, will help you see whether you can see past lives other than your own. Purify your thoughts.
Work to counter your negative recurring thoughts and focus on the positives. Ask your friends what you say to them. This will give you an idea of your abilities and how you come across to others. Write down what your friends tell you, so you can look back on it and connect it to other visions or feelings. Listen to your intuition. Doubt is one of the many inhibiting factors people face as they are trying to understand whether they are a medium and learn how to enhance their ability.
Allow yourself to explore the possibility of your ability. Listen to your gut feelings. Build up your spiritual knowledge base. This knowledge will help you to better connect to your own interpretive abilities and understand the symbols that you may already see.
Spend time with other mediums. Look online for reviews of reputable psychics and mediums in your area. Go see one and ask them to read you. While you are there, ask them how they knew they were a medium. Get a feel for their process, and look around to see what kinds of talismans they keep in their office.
What if I see the image of God everywhere? For example, sometimes in a tree, on a wall, or even in the sky. I've also dreamed of others' deaths or of just what people will do the next day. So who am I? Those are signs of your clairvoyance abilities starting to unlock. It's a sign of spiritual awakening of your psychic abilities. Not Helpful 1 Helpful One was that I had a lot of fear. I imagined my friends gossiping about me behind my back. I started to slowly understand that maybe this was a Gift and not a curse.
If you have ticked more than 9 as Yes, there is a strong possibility that you are gifted. Like I. Use It Well. If you have any questions and want to know more then reach out to me on info manmeetkumar. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. WhatsApp us. Skip to content. Am I a Medium?
You bet! What Just like all small children, I had many imaginary friends as a kid. Electronics go crazy around you sometimes. Think: flickering lights, fan speed, mobiles blinking on their own, radio starting on its own. Like I said, it is a gift and not a curse. Acceptance comes with embracing who you are — gifts and all. To help emphasize the importance of what it is you're saying, the overall design of Medium is minimalistic, featuring lots of white space and limited formatting options.
Want to change the header typeface to Comic Sans? You can't. Medium won't allow for such atrocities of design. But that's just one of many little nuances that come with the territory for Medium users. In fact, if you're just getting started on the platform, there's a fair amount to learn before you hit publish. Let's get into it Anyone who has a Medium account can write for Medium — there's no other vetting process involved.
However, your post needs to adhere to Medium's content guidelines and rules. For instance, you can't promote controversial or extreme content on your Medium account. You can't facilitate buying or selling social media interactions, including off-platform. And you can't publish anything considered affiliate marketing content. For the full list of rules in regards to content, take a look at this post on Medium Rules. As a marketer, Medium presents an opportunity for you to reach a new audience with your content.
The platform is geared toward sharing longer-form, more well-thought-out content. But of course, given the open-to-all nature of Medium, that isn't the only type of content you find there. Whether you're looking into Medium for its publishing capabilities or you simply want to learn more about the platform before you set up an account and start exploring, you've come to the right place.
While it's true that anyone can view Medium content regardless of whether or not they have a Medium account , in order to publish and interact with folks on the platform, you need to have an account and be logged in.
Fortunately, you can create an account in less than a minute by going to Medium. From there you'll have three different sign-up options to choose from: Google, Facebook, and email. My recommendation: Sign up for Medium using Facebook. That way all of your existing connections from Facebook who are on Medium will automatically be following your account once it's created. This saves you the trouble of having to build up a new audience entirely from scratch. Regardless of the option you go with to start, you can always link your Twitter or Facebook to your Medium account later via the "Connections" tab in the Settings menu:.
If you sign up with Twitter, your profile page URL, by default, will be medium. But you're free to change it. From the Settings menu you can also control what email notifications you receive from Medium. You'll learn about what triggers these notifications in the sections to follow. The other main things to remember when it comes to setup?
Adding a profile photo and writing up a short character max bio for your Medium profile page. Note: If you sign up using Twitter, your Twitter profile photo and bio will be automatically synced to your Medium account. With a Twitter feed, the content that's surfaced comes primarily from the accounts of the people and organizations you follow.
With a Medium feed, the content that's surfaced comes not only from the accounts of the people and organizations you follow, but also from the publications and tags you follow. What's more, when you search for content on Medium, people, publications, and tags all show up in the results. Medium publications are collections of stories based around a common theme. Anyone can create them — yourself included — and the way they work is fairly straightforward.
As the creator of a publication, you're an editor by default, which means you have the ability to a add writers to your publication, b edit and publish the stories that are submitted by your writers, and c review the metrics for all of the stories that are part of your publication.
As the publication's creator, you'll also have the ability to appoint new editors so they can do all of that stuff I just mentioned. Tags are sort of like the hashtags of the Medium ecosystem. When you publish a story on Medium, you get the option to add up to three tags, which appear at the bottom of your story. Clicking a tag brings you to a page where you can see more stories with the same tag, as well as some suggestions for other tags you might be interested in.
The main benefit of following tags is that it can help personalize your Medium experience. Instead of surfacing content based solely on your social graph i. For example, if you're into baseball, you could follow the "baseball" tag. Into "small fluffy dog breeds"? Yep, there's a tag for that granted only one story has been published under it.
So far in this introduction to Medium, we've acted mostly as passive observers. We've set up an account, and started following some accounts, publications, and tags. In the next section, we'll dive into the more interactive aspects of Medium. The "Recommend" is the "Like" of the Medium world.
It's a way to show you that you appreciate the content that someone has shared. When reading a story on Medium, there are two places where you can recommend it: At the bottom of the actual story, where you see the clapping hand symbol In either case, you'll need to click on the clapping hand icon you see to recommend a story. Once clicked, the hands will change from an outline to solid green. To see the full list of people who've recommended a story, you can click on that little number you see next to the heart.
Note: You can clap up to 50 times per post, and you can clap for as many posts as you want. When you recommend a story, the writer, by default, will receive an email notification. But that's something you can control in Settings. The more recommends a story receives, the more likely it will be to get shared around the Medium network.
Stories that receive the most recommends within a given time period get featured on Medium's "Top stories" page. In the same two locations where you can recommend a story, you can also share that story to Twitter or Facebook by clicking one of the social icons , and you can bookmark the story for later reading by clicking the bookmark icon which turns solid once clicked.
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