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- ^Tutorial 14 - Overcoming Absentmindedness\
-
- This tutorial suggests some simple systems which can be used to overcome
- absentmindedness. They are based on principles which you have already
- learned - ^Initial Awareness\ and ^Association of Ideas\.
-
- The definition of absentmindedness is staightforward - you are absentminded
- when you perform actions unconsciously, without thinking. If your mind is
- 'absent' while you are performing an action, there can be no ^Initial
- Awareness\ of that action.
-
- The solution to the problem of absentmindedness is equally straightforward
- and obvious - you simply have to ^think of what you are doing at the time
- you are doing it\. Of course, this is easier said than done - how can you
- be sure to |force\ yourself to concentrate on a simple, everyday action at
- the time you are doing it ?
-
- Think right back to Tutorial 1, where you learned that <Association\ can be
- used to |force\ >Initial Awareness\, and you have the answer to the problem.
- As Initial Awareness is the same as having something register in your mind
- in the first place, then forming an instant association when you perform an
- action ^must\ solve the problem of absentmindedness.#
-
- An example will make this much clearer. Suppose you are one of those people
- who freqeuently writes an important letter and then forgets to take it
- out and post it. What is the last action you perform before leaving your
- home ? Probably pulling the front door shut. So, after writing a letter,
- instead of saying to yourself 'I must remember to post this...' and then
- forgetting about it completely, do the following - associate <letter\ to the
- <action\ of closing your front door.
-
- As ever, the association should be as ludicrous as possible. Visualise
- yourself closing the front door, when millions of letters come flooding
- through the door, pulling the door off its hinges and knocking you over. If
- you make that crazy association, the next time you go to close your front
- door you will think of <letter\, and if you have left one inside then you
- will go back and get it.
-
- Of course, this will help you remember to take the letter, but you may still
- forget to post it and leave it in your pocket for a few days ! One way to
- avoid this is to associate the addressee of the letter to a post box. If it
- is addressed to someone you can visualise, picture that person's head
- popping out of a post box and rolling down the street.#
-
- The next time you notice a post box - which you inevitably will - you'll be
- reminded to take that letter out of your pocket and mail it. If the letter
- is addressed to a company or organisation, use a Substitute thought and
- associate that to a post box. If it's your football pools coupon, picture
- billions of footballs flying out of a mailbox.
-
- This simple idea can be applied to any action or item you wish to remember.
- Why spoil an evening out because you spend most of it worrying about whether
- you unplugged the iron, or switched off the oven ? Form the habit of making
- a quick association at the time you do these things. For example, as you
- unplug the iron, picture your fingers being sucked into the socket, giving
- you a violent electric shock. You might perhaps see your hair standing on
- end to make the picture vivid.
-
- Every time you switch off the oven, picture your head inside the oven, being
- slowly roasted ! Later, when you think about the oven, you will >know\ that
- you have switched it off.#
-
- Don't worry about the image you formed yesterday coming to mind when you
- think about whether you switched off the oven today. 'True' memory and
- <Initial Awareness\ will tell you the truth. If you haven't formed the
- silly picture of your head in the oven on any particular day, then you will
- <know\ that you haven't switched the oven off.
-
- Perhaps you are one of those people who frequently goes outside the house to
- the garage or garden shed, only to stand there wondering what you came out
- for ? Simply make an association the moment you decide that you need to get
- something from the garage. If it's a %hammer\, picture yourself opening the
- garage door and %millions of hammers\ tumbling out. Try this idea - it
- really does work !
-
- If you wear spectacles and are frequently forgetting where you put them
- down, try forming an association at the moment you put them down. If you
- place them on the dining table, picture them on a serving dish in the middle
- of the table, surrounded by a large salad. If you place them on top of the
- television set, picture the television |wearing\ a large pair of spectacles.
- The next time you think of your spectacles, you are sure to know where they
- are.#
-
- Always form the association at the $moment\ you are performing the action.
- If you put off doing it you'll forget to form the association and you'll
- forget where you put your glasses !
-
- You may feel that forming these associations is a waste of time. But, after
- trying the idea a few times you will find that the pictures are formed in
- next to no time. Even more important is that time and effort that you will
- be <saving\.
-
-
- ^Press Page Down to return to the Menu\.~