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 number-shape system
T he modern world is full of numbers intended to make our lives easier. We have to remember PIN numbers for our bank cards, security access codes for the buildings in which we work, and parental censoring numbers for our televisions – let alone the phone numbers of our friends, family, colleagues and clients. If we leave our personal organizer or address book at home – or worse still, lose it – we feel totally lost. Time to reinstate the only personal organizer that we can never lose: our brain. The problem with memorizing numbers is that to those of us without a great passion for arithmetic they provide little inspiration. They are static, inexpressive and impersonal. On the face of it, they relate only to the logical part of our brains. To make them more memorable, we have to give them appeal for our creative side too. One of the most popular methods is the number-shape system in which each number between and including 0 and 9 is turned into a particular item that relates to the numeral’s written shape. For example, 0 (zero) may be seen as a golden ring or a football; 1 may be a candle or a pencil; 2, a swan or a snake; 3, lips in profile or a pair of handcuffs; 4, the sail of a yacht, or a flag; 5, a seahorse or a hook; 6, an elephant’s trunk or a golf club; 7 a boomerang or a diving board; 8, a snowman or an hourglass; and 9, a balloon on a ribbon. You can choose your own associations – try to make them relevant to your life by including items from your favourite hobbies and so on. Once the associations are made, we can create stories by which to remember sequences of numbers. For example, if your bank-card PIN number is 4291, you might imagine that to get to your bank you have to sail (4) down a river, passing a swan (2), which holds in its beak a ribbon on the end of which is a balloon (9). Tied to the other end of the ribbon is a pencil (1) – you take it to sign your name. For longer sequences, try using the journey method (see pp. 102–7 ) combined with the number-shape system. So, if the first three numbers in a sequence of 12 are 8, 0 and 3 and our journey is one along a golf course, we might imagine a snowman at the first tee (stage one in the journey); a golden ring glistening at the bottom of the tin cup of the first hole (stage two); a golfer trying to swing a club while wearing handcuffs at the next tee (stage three); and so on. Download 0.7 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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