🌬️ “It Was Just a Feeling in the Air”

Preview

Theme: Language for Intuition, Vibes, and Sensing Things You Can’t Explain

The Lesson

You ever walk into a room and just… know something’s off?
Or you meet someone and can’t explain why—but you trust them instantly.
You don’t have proof. You don’t have evidence.
You just feel it.

This lesson is about that.
About how we describe those invisible things.
The things we sense.
The vibe.
The energy.
The feeling in the air.

In English, we have plenty of ways to describe these quiet, intuitive experiences. But they’re often subtle—soft around the edges, poetic even. Not technical.
Let’s sit with them.

You might hear someone say:

  • “I don’t know...something just felt off.”

  • “There was a weird vibe between them.”

  • “I can’t put my finger on it, but I don’t trust him.”

  • “It felt like the calm before the storm.”

  • “The tension was so thick you could cut it with a knife.”

  • “There was something in the air. I just knew.”

These are not phrases you study. These are phrases you live with.
You let them become part of how you experience the world in English.

Reflection

Think about a time you had a strong feeling about a situation or person—one you couldn’t explain.
What did it feel like?
What words would you have used in your native language?
Now try saying it in English—but don’t just translate.
Capture the feeling.

Try one of these sentence openers:

  • “I could feel it before I saw it: ___”

  • “There was something in the way they ___”

  • “I didn’t know why, but I ___”

Let the language do more than describe—let it sense.

For Coaching or Deeper Study

Bring this to your next session. Practice building a story around a moment of intuition.
You’ll focus on tone, emotion, and natural rhythm—not just the words.

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