I feel assured that there is no
such thing as ultimate forgetting; traces once impressed upon the memory are indestructible.
– Thomas De Quincey
An ACCURATE and retentive memory
is the basis of all business success. In the last analysis, all our knowledge
is based on our memories. Plato said it this way, “All knowledge is but
remembrance”; while Cicero said of memory, it is “the treasury and guardian of
all things.” One strong example should suffice for the time being-you could not
be reading this book right now if you didn’t remember the sounds of the
twenty-six letters of our alphabet!
This may seem a bit far-fetched
to you, but it is true nevertheless. Actually, if you were to lose your memory completely,
you would have to start learning everything from scratch, just like a newborn
baby. You wouldn’t remember how to dress, or shave, or apply your makeup, or
how to drive your car, or whether to use a knife or fork, etc. you see, all the
things we attributed to habit should be attributed to memory, Habit is memory.
Minemonics, which is large part
of a trained memory, is not a new or strange thing. As a matter of fact, the
word “mnemonic” is derived from the name of the Greek goddess Mnemosyne; and,
memory systems were used as far back as early Greek civilization. The strange
thing is that trained memory systems are not known and used by many more
people. Most of those who have learned the secret of mnemonics in memory have
been amazed, not only at their own tremendous ability to remember, but also as
the kudos they received from their families and friends.
Some of them decided it was too
good a thing to teach to anyone else. Why not be the only man at the office who
could remember every style number and price; why not be the only one who could
get up at a party and demonstrate something that everyone marveled at?
I, on the other hand, feel that
trained memories should be brought to the foreground, and to this end- this
book is dedicated. Although some of you may know me as an entertainer, it is
not my purpose, of course, to reach you a memory act. I have no desire to nut
you on the stage. I dc want to teach you the wonderful practical uses of a
trained memory. There are many memory stunts taught in this book; these are
fine for showing your friends how bright you are. More important they are
excellent memory exercises, and the ideas used in all the stunts can be applied
practically.
The question that people ask me
most often is, “Isn’t it confusing to remember too much?” My answer to that is,
“No” There is no limit to the capacity of the
memory Lucius Scipio was able to remember the names of all the people of
Rrome; CYrus was able to call every
soldier in his army by name; while Seneca could memorize and repeat two
thousand words after hearing them once.
I believe that the more you
remember, the more you can remember. The memory, in many ways, is like a
muscle. A muscle must be exercised and developed in order to give proper
service and use; so must that memory. The difference is that a muscle can be
overstrained or become muscle-bound while the memory can’t. You can be taught
to have a trained memory just as you can be taught anything else. As a matter of
fact it is much easier to attain a trained memory that, say, to learn to play a
musical instrument. If you can read and write English, and have a normal amount
of common sense, and if you read and study this book, you will have acquired a
trained memory! Along with the trained memory you will probably acquire a
greater power of concentration, a purer sense of observation, and, perhaps, a
stronger imagination.
Remember, please, that there is
no such thing as a bad memory! This may come as a shock to those of you who
have used your supposedly “bad” memories as an excuse for years. But, I repeat,
there is no such thing as bad memory. There are only trained or untrained
memories. Almost all untrained memories are one-sided. That is to say that
people who can remember names and faces cannot remember telephone numbers, and
those who remember phone numbers can’t, for the life of them, remember the
names of the people they wish to call.
There are those who have a pretty
good retentive memory, but a painfully slow one; just as there are some who can
remember things quickly, but cannot retain them for any length of time. If you
apply the systems and methods taught in this book, I can assure you a quick and
retentive memory for just about anything.
As I mentioned in the previous
chapter, anything you wish to remember must, in some way or other, be
associated I you mid to something you already know or remember. Of course, most
of you will say that you have remembered, or do remember, many things, and that
you do not associate them with anything else. Very try! If you were associating
knowingly, then you would already have the beginnings of a trained memory.
You see, most of the things you
have ever remembered have been associated subconsciously with something else
that you already kne- or remembered. The important word here is
“subconsciously.” You yourselves do not realize what is going on in your
subconscious; most of us would be frightened if we did. What you subconsciously
associated strongly will be remembered, what was not associated strongly will
be forgotten. Since this tiny mental calisthenic takes place without your
knowledge, you can help it any.
Here then is the crux of the
matter-I am going to teach you to associate anything you want to, consciously!
When you have learned to do that, you will have acquired a trained memory!
Keep in mind that the system that
I teach in this book is an aid to your normal or true memory. It is your true
memory that does the work for you, whether you realize it or not. There is a very
thin line between a trained memory and the true memory, and as you continue to
use this system taught here, that line will begin to fade.
That is the wonderful part about
the whole thing; after using my system consciously for a while, it becomes
automatic and you almost start doing it subconsciously!
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