“Your intuition and your prayers were never arguing. You just kept giving people chances after God had already shown you who they were.”
You keep wondering if you misheard God or if your intuition was broken, because the people you prayed about did not change. But your inner knowing and your prayers were not in conflict. You just kept handing out more chances long after you had enough truth to make a different choice.
There is a particular kind of confusion that comes from being both spiritually sensitive and deeply hopeful. You pray about a person, a relationship, a community, and you feel a quiet unease in your body. At the same time, you want so badly for things to work that you keep asking for one more sign, one more confirmation, one more reason to stay. It can start to feel like your intuition and your prayers are arguing with each other.
Most of the time, they are not. Your intuition is often the first language your nervous system uses to say, “Something is off.” Your prayers are where you bring that unease to God and ask for wisdom. The problem is rarely that the signals are mixed. The problem is that the answer you sense is not the one you were hoping for, so you keep bargaining with it instead of honoring it.
You notice the inconsistency in their words and actions. You feel the pit in your stomach after you share something vulnerable and they twist it later. You see the pattern of apologies without change. Somewhere inside, you know what all of this adds up to. Then you pray, “God, show me who they really are,” as if you have not already been shown multiple times.
This does not mean you are foolish or weak. It usually means you learned, early on, to doubt your own read on people and over-trust your capacity to endure. Maybe you were told you were too sensitive. Maybe you were praised for always seeing the best in others. Maybe leaving was never modeled as an option, only endurance. So when your intuition raises a flag and your prayers echo the same concern, you override both with one more chance.
Inner strength and self-trust in a faith context do not mean you never get it wrong. They mean you stop gaslighting yourself once you have enough evidence. They mean you treat your intuition as one of the tools God can use to guide you, not as an enemy you must silence. They mean you accept that sometimes the answer to your prayer for clarity is distance, not a more comfortable version of the same relationship.
Your intuition and your prayers were not working against you. They were working for you. Every time you felt that quiet tightening in your chest, every time a verse, a conversation, or a circumstance confirmed what you already sensed, you were being offered protection. The more you honor that, the less you will need God to repeat Himself through bigger and harsher lessons.