We use the word logical as if it settles everything.
As if one kind of reasoning gets to decide what is intelligent, valid, believable, or true.
But lived reality is not that simple.
There is detail logic.
There is big-picture logic.
There is coherence.
There is emotional and relational logic.
There is machine logic.
And there is the kind of knowing that comes through the body, pattern recognition, and lived experience before it can be neatly explained.
The problem is not logic itself.
The problem is that one narrow form of logic — usually linear, step-by-step logic — has been over-promoted as the gold standard of truth.
And honestly, it is overrated.
Linear logic is useful — but limited
Linear logic works well for sequence, proof, systems, and process.
It helps us track:
if this, then that
if A happened, then B followed
That is useful.
But life is not always linear.
Human beings are not linear.
Relationships are not linear.
Healing is not linear.
Meaning is not linear.
Sometimes something looks perfectly logical on paper and still misses the truth of a situation.
And sometimes something cannot be fully proved step by step, yet still carries a deep coherence the body, emotions, or wider pattern can recognise.
Logic tests the steps. Coherence tests the whole.
This may be the simplest way I can say it:
Logic tests the steps. Coherence tests the whole.
Logic asks:
Does this follow?
Is there contradiction?
Coherence asks:
Does this hang together?
Does this make sense as a whole?
A dream can be coherent without being logical.
A piece of music can be coherent without being logical.
An emotional truth can be coherent without being neatly argued.
That does not make it false.
It means it is operating through a different structure.
Big picture and detail both matter
Some people naturally see the whole field first.
They notice pattern, movement, themes, and the relationship between things.
Others see detail first.
They notice specifics, steps, wording, evidence, and exactness.
Both matter.
Big-picture thinking without detail can become vague.
Detail thinking without big picture can become narrow.
One sees the landscape.
The other sees the stones.
Real understanding usually needs both.
Emotional logic is not the same as irrationality
This is where people get lazy.
Emotional or relational logic is often dismissed as irrational, especially when it has been associated with women, sensitivity, or intuition.
But emotional logic is not nonsense.
It tracks:
tone, context, impact, motive, contradiction, relationship, and what is happening underneath the words.
It notices:
what was said versus what was meant
what is technically correct but relationally harmful
what the body knows even when the mind is defending itself
That is not a lack of intelligence.
Often it is a more layered intelligence.
Just because it is said confidently does not make it true
This is especially relevant now.
We live in a time of persuasive headlines, polished opinions, selective statistics, and confident declarations of what is supposedly true.
And yet the body may still register:
something is off here
something is missing
this may be partly true, but not the whole truth
this does not feel coherent
That matters.
Not because the body is automatically right about everything, but because confidence, repetition, and data can still be arranged inside a narrow frame.
Statistics can support a claim and still leave out crucial context.
An argument can sound tidy and still miss the deeper reality.
A person can insist they are telling the truth while the body detects contradiction, distortion, or omission.
So no, truth is not always settled by who says it most loudly, or by whose evidence appears most polished.
Sometimes the body detects what the argument leaves out.
What gets dismissed as superstition is not always foolishness
This is another place where modern culture can become smug.
Not everything dismissed as an old wives’ tale or superstition was nonsense. Sometimes it was:
- an intuitive observation that lacked modern language
- a pattern noticed over generations
- a practical truth wrapped in cultural storytelling
- an early form of knowledge waiting for better tools or better explanation
Of course, not every old belief was right. Some were distorted, incomplete, or plain wrong.
But modern understanding did not appear out of nowhere fully formed.
Very often, what we now call knowledge was built on earlier acts of noticing.
Observation came first.
Pattern came first.
Curiosity came first.
The mature response is not blind belief, and it is not smug dismissal either.
It is the deeper question:
Why is it so?
Older systems often read reality differently
Take Chinese medicine, one of the oldest recognised medical systems.
It was built through long observation of living bodies — pattern, pulse, tongue, season, function, symptom, energy flow, and the relationship between systems. It did not develop through the same dissection-based pathway that shaped much of Western medicine.
That does not automatically make it wrong.
It means it was built from a different way of reading reality.
Western medicine learned an enormous amount by opening the body and studying its parts. That gave it one kind of detail and power.
Chinese medicine developed a different strength: pattern recognition in living systems over time.
One lens learned through structure and anatomy.
The other learned through function, relationship, and coherence.
Both reveal something.
But not the same thing.
Not all knowledge begins with dissection, measurement, and proof. Some knowledge begins with long observation, pattern recognition, and the patient question:
Why is it so?
Science is not pure logic either
Science is valuable. Deeply so.
But science is not some untouched realm of pure logic floating above human limitation.
It depends on:
assumptions, model-building, interpretation, pattern recognition, framing, and human judgment.
It is a disciplined method, but it is still a human one.
That does not weaken science.
It simply means it is not the only way truth can be approached.
Machine logic is even narrower
Machine logic usually works like this:
if this, then that
yes or no
true or false
That is useful for sorting.
But sorting is not the same as understanding.
Machines can classify something without comprehending the larger reality it belongs to.
That is why machine logic feels so limited when applied to living human experience. Life is full of context, paradox, mixed motives, symbolism, thresholds, and partial truths.
Reality is often both/and.
Machine logic prefers yes/no.
Spiritual knowing gets dismissed for the same reason
Spiritual or symbolic knowing is often treated as inferior because it does not always arrive through measurable proof.
It may arrive as:
pattern
metaphor
body response
image
dream
inner recognition
That does not mean it is automatically true. Discernment still matters.
But dismissing it simply because it is not linear is an error.
Not everything meaningful comes through what can be easily measured.
Some things are recognised before they are explained.
What this looks like in practice
In my own work, whether through a QSP reading, Soul Blueprint, or a Biosenetics healing session, information does not always arrive in a tidy linear sequence.
It may first appear as numbers, codes, touch points, or impressions that seem unrelated.
To the rational mind, that can look random.
But when those pieces are brought together, a deeper pattern emerges.
What looked disconnected begins to reveal coherence.
And often, that coherence tells the truth more accurately than a purely surface-level explanation ever could.
This is one of the reasons I place so much value on pattern, body awareness, and deeper forms of discernment.
Not because logic is useless.
But because not everything meaningful announces itself in straight lines.
A better question to ask
Instead of asking:
Is this logical?
A better question is:
By what logic does this make sense?
That question opens the whole conversation.
A person may be operating through:
formal logic
emotional logic
body logic
fear logic
power logic
relational logic
symbolic logic
If we judge everything by one narrow system, we miss what is actually happening.
Final thoughts
I am not anti-logic.
I use linear logic all the time.
What I object to is the assumption that only what can be traced in a neat linear chain counts as intelligent, valid, or true.
Linear logic is a valuable tool.
It is not the throne of truth.
Not everything true is linear.
Not everything meaningful can be reduced to yes or no.
And not everything dismissed as “illogical” lacks intelligence.
It may simply be operating by another logic altogether.
Related reading & next steps
If this post resonates, these will deepen the thread (without more “spiritual pressure”):
• Emotional Accuracy — because embodiment starts with telling the truth about what’s actually happening in your body and field.
• Manifestation as Moral Law — on the trap of turning outcomes into a spiritual report card (and the Root-level reset that actually helps).
• Meet the Pixie Universe Emotional Intelligence Crew — Pixie, Oliver, Asha, NOPE, and the Phoenix: practical lenses for discernment, nervous system reality, sovereignty, and clean rebuilding.
https://evolvecourses.shamarie.com.au/pixieuniverse
With steadiness and wonder,
Shamarie Flavel | Field Explorer & Mystic Interpreter of Living Patterns
Join me in exploring how energy, awareness, and daily life weave together to create a sanctuary of coherence and calm. 🌿
Connect with me on Facebook and Instagram @ShamarieFlavelEnergy,
listen to my podcast Journeys Beyond with Shamarie on Kajabi
or on Apple Podcasts