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- ^Tutorial 21 - Impressive Memory Stunts\
-
- This tutorial suggests some 'amazing' feats of memory you can perform, using
- the systems you have learned throughout the Memory Master course.
-
- When reading how to perform these stunts, bear in mind that they are really
- only ^suggestions\ for memory demonstrations that you might like to try out
- on your friends. If you can think of ways to adapt or expand these stunts
- to suit yourself, then so much the better.
-
-
- >Press Page Down to proceed to Stunt Number 1\#
-
- ^Memory Stunt Number 1 - 'Missing Numbers'\
-
- Get someone to number a piece of paper from 1 to 100, and tell him to circle
- or highlight any five of the numbers, at random. Then tell him to call out
- all the remaining numbers one by one, and to cross them out as they are
- called. The numbers should be called out randomly, not in any numerical
- sequence.
-
- You don't of course look at the paper while he is doing this. You could be
- blindfolded, or sitting with your back to him. When all the numbers except
- the circled ones have been crossed out, you tell your friend exactly which
- five numbers he originally circled !
-
- Difficult ? Not at all, provided that you know Peg Words 1 to 100 really
- thoroughly. As your friend calls out the numbers, you simply picture the
- Peg Word for that number, and mentally ^'deface'\ the picture. Suppose the
- number 5 (Peg Word |law\) was called. Think of your mental picture for
- |law\ - a policeman, and ^deface\ it. Perhaps the policeman has been
- stripped of his uniform, and is wearing nothing but his underwear and his
- police helmet.#
-
- If the number 20 is called, see a |bleeding\ nose. For 14 you might see a
- |punctured\ tyre; for 73 a comb with teeth missing; for 97 a book with its
- cover torn, and pages missing; for 30 a mouse without a tail; and so on.
-
- When all the numbers have been called out, go over the Peg Words from 1 to
- 100, and any one that has not been 'defaced' in your mind ^has\ to be a
- circled number.
-
- The process of 'defacing' your mental pictures of the Peg Words will become
- easier and quicker to do as you practice doing it. There are two reasons
- for this - you'll get to know the Peg Words better and better as you
- practice, and once you picture a 'defaced' Peg Word, you'll use the same
- picture to deface it every time. The defaced picture will become an
- instantaneous image in your mind.
-
- If you don't feel confident with handling a hundred numbers, then you could
- start with fifty, and increase the number each time you perform the stunt.
- When you are completely confident with the Peg Words, and your friend calls
- out the numbers quickly, this really is a most impressive demonstration of
- 'memory power'.#
-
- ^Memory Stunt Number 2 - 'Memorising a Magazine'\
-
- A really impressive feat of memory is to memorise the highlights of every
- single page in a magazine. To do this, you simply associate the Peg Words
- for each page number to the outstanding stories or pictures on that page.
-
- If there are more than a hundred pages in the magazine, you can make up Peg
- Words to fit. Using the Phonetic Alphabet, there is literally no limit no
- the number of Peg Words you can create.
-
- This stunt probably works best with a magazine that you are actually
- interested in, such as a hobby magazine for your favourite hobby. However,
- it will work well for any magazine. Once you have made all the associations,
- you should be able to describe the highlights for any page number called.
- You will probably find that you know the positions of the pictures, without
- making a special effort to remember them.
-
- Each association will conjure up for you a mental picture of the whole page.
- This is one of the closest things to a 'photographic' memory. Try it for
- yourself, with any magazine, and you'll be surprised how effective it is !#
-
- ^Memory Stunt Number 3 - 'Thought Transference'\
-
- This stunt relies on you having one or more friends or relatives who are
- prepared to occasionally accept a strange phone call, and who understand the
- rules of the Phonetic Alphabet.
-
- It works like this. Tell a group of friends (or your 'audience') that you
- know someone who can read thoughts over long distances. Before you begin
- the 'demonstration', give one of your audience the phone number of your
- 'medium' friend.
-
- Next, ask someone to jot down a six-digit number on a piece of paper. Your
- audience then have to look at the number and concentrate on it very hard.
- You then ask someone to dial the telephone number you gave them earlier. As
- they are dialing, you say 'Ask for Thomas Smith'. When your friend answers
- the phone, he tells the caller that the number you are all staring at is
- |130031\, and he will be dead right !
-
- How is it done ? Well, you have >told\ your 'accomplice' that the number is
- 130031, via the name Thomas Smith, which phonetically translates to 130031.#
-
- Of course, the name you tell the caller to ask for will be different each
- time, because it depends entirely on the six-digit number. You will have
- told your assistant beforehand that the number will always be six digits, so
- he or she will ignore any phonetic sounds in the name $after\ the first six.
-
- For example, if the six digits were 926329, you might give the name :
- ^
- Benjamin Biggs
-
- (9-26-3-2-9-7-0)\
-
- Your assistant would only give the first six digits - 926329, because he
- knows that the number only contains six digits. Your 'medium' friend should
- not blurt out the number, but give the digits slowly, one at a time, as if
- really concentrating on the process of thought transference. At your end,
- the showmanship is really up to you. Don't worry about being able to come
- up with a name that fits the number given. You will have plenty of time
- while your audience are 'concentrating' on those digits.
-
- With the right amount of showmanship from you, and dramatic pauses from your
- assistant, this really is a most effective stunt !#
-
- That concludes the Memory Master training course. If you have just skipped
- through the course, nodding as you understand the principles but not really
- stopping to try all the examples, you should go back to the beginning and
- learn the basics thoroughly. Start with Association and the Link, and really
- make an effort to perform the mental exercises given.
-
- The time you spend doing it %now\ is guaranteed to save you huge chunks of
- time and effort in the future. Above all, remember that the Memory Master
- systems are designed to be ^flexible\ - adapt them to |your\ needs, and to
- the things that |you\ personally would like to remember.
-
-
-
-
-
- ^G\ |O\ <O\ >D\ $L\ %U\ |C\ ^K\ !~