First of all, there is no such a thing as "turn to your spirit" in the Bible; it has "turn to the Lord", "God is a Spirit", "he that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit", so to derive "turn to your spirit", you have to make several connections that do not exist in the Bible, and strip away several semantic differences.
Then, we'll come back to this question later. Now, let's assume that it can and does, as claimed. Then questions are
a. How long does it keep you facing your spirit each time you call and turn? b. What is the time interval you should call and turn to keep facing your spirit 24/7? c. Any different parameter series under different situations?
Does your teaching answer any of those questions? If not, it's only a betting; meaning you call, then bet your way through, without knowing for sure what would happen, but with a learned habitual circle that you need to turn to your spirit again and again by calling on the name of the Lord, am I right?Mathematically speaking, if you turn to your spirit $X$ number of times, then you were turned away from your spirit for $X+1$ number of times, because:
a. For you to successfully turn to your spirit for the first time, you had to start from the position where you were turned away from your spirit. b. The fact that you need to do it again and again means you always turn away from your spirit after you turned to it.
Then my question is, why don't you look for a better way, which could keep you facing your spirit for at least a few hours each time you turn to it?
Now, let's get back to the question: Does it really make you turn to your spirit?
From our analysis above, even if it does, you still should look for a better way if your goal is to be stably facing your spirit—even to stay "in your spirit" as the Bible tells us—for an extended period of time. But if it doesn't, you really should be looking for another way.
Now, let's look at the Bible verse, which is the foundation of this saying.
1 Cor 12:3: "...no man can say that Jesus is the Lord, but by (Greek: ei mē en) the Holy Ghost (Greek: Pneumati)." — KJV
In this verse, the Greek translated to "but by the Holy Ghost" meant "unless in Spirit." Note here, it was the Spirit with a capitalized "S," not human spirit with a small "s". The vision this verse is trying to convey is that, unless you see what kind of overwhelming Being the Lord is through the Holy Spirit(a glimpse is enough), you wouldn't yield wholeheartedly with no other choice, utterly helpless, but without any reservation and say "Jesus is Lord!"
The causal relationship here is: 1. Being in the Spirit. 2. Saying "Jesus is the Lord." It is NOT the reversed sequence, where saying "Jesus is the Lord" forces you into the Spirit. (But since when did the capitalized "S" of the Holy Spirit simply equate to the small "s" of the human spirit in this context?)
Until here, you see its chain of reasoning is completely broken, but I will tell you one more thing.
There is a section in the human brain called the "Prefrontal Cortex," shortened for PFC, which is in charge of rationality. And there's another section called the "Amygdala," in charge of "panic mode." Once your Amygdala takes over your body, it takes your PFC, on average, 9 seconds to restart.
The time it takes you to say "Oh, Lord Jesus!" is about 3 seconds on average. Three times is 9—exactly the time for your PFC to restart and put your rationality back in control of your body. In other words, when you're furious and you call "Oh, Lord Jesus!" three times, or say something like, "Lord, I'm about to lose my temper, let me turn back to my spirit!", or just count from 1 to 9—as long as you can buy those 9 seconds for your PFC, it's very unlikely that you will be found in "panic mode."