You Can Learn to Remember: Change Your Thinking, Change Your Life pdfdrive com
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@miltonbooks You Can Learn to Remember Change Your Thinking, Change
the interview journey
EXERCISE TWENTY ONE One of the most stressful environments in which we find ourselves is an interview. When we feel judged, the pressure of needing to do well can weigh heavily upon us. We forget key points that will help our case, and we might also forget what we are told about the job. The following tips will focus your mind for an interview and help you succeed. 1. Breathing or meditation exercises before the interview can help to put you into a more relaxed state of mind. 2. Use memory techniques to fix in your mind 10 key points about yourself – positive qualities that equip you for the job under discussion, as well as key questions you want to ask. You might find the peg system is more appropriate than the journey method, because you will have no control of the interview’s agenda. 3. When you ask questions, concentrate fully on the answers. Try to visualize each key piece of information you are given – perhaps linking it with a memorable surreal image. After the interview, note down what you remember. You may be called for a second interview, where this information could be useful. time travelling A fter practising memory techniques over a long period, we become adept at storing and retrieving new information. But what about all those memories that have gone before? The past is an important part of our character: it defines who we are. Time travelling, or pulling back the curtain of lost time, is one of my favourite memory exercises. Its purpose is to return us to a particular time and location in our past, so that we remember the experience as richly as possible. We start with a single detail and work from there, gradually building up a picture by exploratory, step-by-step association. If we open up our minds, in a suitably quiet, comfortable, dimly lit room, we may be able in time to conjure even sounds, textures, tastes, scents and emotions. For example, try to remember individual sounds – a squeaky chair, a door creaking, a crackling fire. Work from a detail that is clear to you – let’s say a loudly ticking longcase clock in your grandparents’ entrance hall. Think of the sound of the longcase clock as it chimed. Any visitor to the house would have passed by this clock. What would it have felt like walking up the path to the front door, entering the hall, and looking up at it as a child? What emotions did the clock evoke? As you imagine it, are the hands set to any particular time? What did your grandparents routinely do at that hour? You might attempt a Mind Map of your childhood (see pp. 112–13 ), starting with the homes you lived in and your relatives’ homes. Probe others’ memories too – just one recollection from another witness can spark a whole chain of new associations in your own mind. Download 0.7 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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