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
harnessing schooldays
EXERCISE TWENTY TWO This exercise will set you off on your own personal trip back to your most formative years. Use class photos, old schoolbooks, trophies, and so on, to help prompt your memories. 1. Choose a location that conjures up a variety of incidental recollections, such as your old school itself. Find a specific starting point, such as a flagpole in the playground, the basketball court or the principal’s office. 2. Now climb inside this mental picture. How old are you? Who are your friends? What are you wearing? What funny or scary incidents do you remember? 3. Radiate outward from your chosen point. Can you picture your classroom and where you sat? Recall individual sounds, such as the school band practising, the cheering on the football field, the squeak of the chalk on the blackboard. Can you hear a teacher’s voice? What about smells – your locker or the cafeteria? Go through each of the senses in turn. 4. Now think about how you felt. Which classes did you like or dislike? Were your teachers strict or kind? Did you feel happy, anxious, bored? Carry your composite image of your school around in your head for a while, to see what other memories surface. releasing the past W hile positive recollections enrich our lives, negative ones can nag at our peace of mind in a way that is wasteful, and even destructive. Even though we know that we cannot change the past by dwelling on it, we may feel fettered somehow to our bad experiences, or our mistakes or regrets. How can we rid ourselves of such burdens? Intense emotional experience has the effect of fixing a memory – like a fixative that prevents paint from being smudged. If we can learn to divest a memory of its emotional charge, so that the emotion does not come flooding back with recollection, then the incident that plagues us is less likely to keep surfacing in our mind. We need to look at upsetting memories in a practical light. Letting go of a negative experience does not mean we have to wipe clean part of our consciousness in a deliberate act of repression, merely that we need a change of perspective. It helps to think of the past as an academy of practical wisdom, based on all our experience, positive and negative. A error of judgment, no less than a personal achievement, belongs in the archive of this academy, as a compass by which you have set future directions in life. It is not a matter of debit and credit – instead, picture all the archive files bound in covers of the same colour, chronologically. Bear in mind also that the past is a distant landscape, an unalterable vista, and we should no more wish to change parts of it than we should wish Himalayan peaks to be covered with trees. We do not live in the past: its incidents excite no emotion. Download 0.7 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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