Living Matters - Human Design

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Episode 14 - Introduction to the Ajna Center

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Transcript

Hello, friends. All right. In this recording we're talking about the Ajna Center. So the Ajna Center is just below the head center. It's the triangle that mirrors the head center from the top of the chart. just below it, it is traditionally green in color, but it may be any color. Like I said, on your chart that you have.

It is a awareness center and it is also a center that processes and stores information. So, The population that has this center open or undefined is roughly 53%. And these are people who will be really open in their thinking. If they are living in alignment. It means that they take in new ideas and new information and they consider it.

They change their mind frequently when they gather new information or they have new insight, and they're open to doing that. They're not rigid in their thinking. you know, the world kind of says, well, you better commit to an idea and stick with it. But that's not really how technically most people are designed.

So if 53% of the population has this center open, think of how many people you know that are very rigid in their thinking and very stuck in their ways and will only think one way and are not open to new information. You know, it's not really living in alignment when we know that 53% of the population has this open.

How can the person with this center undefined or open see it as a gift? You know, the gift to be open-minded, the gift to take in new information and, and have new insights and awareness and create new conversation from it. It's, it's, taking in that information and coming up with new ideas, even. So having this open can feel like there's always, you know, you're looking for how things work out and, and how information comes together and is processed.

But by doing that, you can also affect the way that we do things. You show us new ways of doing things because you're taking in information all the time and processing it. It's important for you to learn that you don't need to be a hundred percent certain. It's okay to say, I feel or think this way. I think this way about this thing.

And then tomorrow if you get more information and your thinking shifts to say, you know what? I actually learned some new information and now I see this a little bit differently. Now I think this way. And tomorrow I might learn more information and my idea might shift again. And that's okay because that is how the world evolves.

We need people questioning why things are the way that they are and evolving. Okay, so now we're gonna look at the SNA center when it's defined. And so this is roughly 47% of the population. These are people who can tend to get stuck in their way of thinking, because what happens is they have a familiar pattern.

They have a way of processing information that is consistent within them. And so whenever they encounter a similar type of information, they kind of have already pre-processed a lot of it. They don't always stop to consider other people's ideas or points of view because they feel like they've processed this idea before and they kind of know what to do with it.

So that's one of the limitations is that they can get stuck thinking that they already know something before they've actually given the information, a fair shot of being explored to see what is actually there. It's important to try and be open-minded if you have a defined head center. So learn to ask those questions and say, Hmm, do I know everything I need to know about this?

Is there more information available to me? Do I need to look at how I'm viewing this and consider another person's perspective? You know, am I being rigid in my thinking?

Just because you can process information quickly and process a lot of information, doesn't mean that it's always correct. So it's important to pause and consider, am I being open in my thinking enough? that I can take in new ideas and really consider all the possibilities.