Two men approached each other on the street with a look of
recognition in their eyes. One said to the other, “Now wait a minute, don’t
tell me, I know I know you, but I’m not sure of where we met. Let me see if I can
think of your name. I‘ve got it! We met in Miami Beach two years ago’.
‘No, I’ve never been to Miami Beach.”
“Hold it, don’t tell me-oh, yes, it was on the boardwalk of
Atlantic City that we met.”
“Sorry, I’ve never visited Atlantic City.”
“I’ve got it now! Chicago in 1953!”
“Nope, I was not in Chicago in 1953.”
“Well, I know we’ve met, where do I know you from?”
“Idiot! I’m your brother!!”
“Oh, I know your face, but I just can’t remember your
name!”
Although I doubt if any of you are as bad as the fellow in
the anecdote how often have you been embarrassed because you had to say this? I’m
sure it has happened to you many times. If I were to take a poll as to why most
people want to take my memory course , I think it would show that at least 80%
want to because they can’t seem to be able to remember names and faces.
Usually, of course, it is the name that has been forgotten,
not the face; the reason for this is quite simple. You see, most of us are what
we call “eye-minded.” in other words; things that we see register upon our
brains with much more emphasis than what we hear. You always see the face, but
usually only hear the person’s name. That’s why most of us, time after time,
have to say, “I recognize your face, but I can’t remember your name.”
Not only can this be embarrassing, but can sometimes hart in
business, and ultimately cost you money. Some people try to avoid this
embarrassment by trying to trick people into giving their names before they
themselves realize that their name has been forgotten. This might work
occasionally, but not usually, and it still pays to remember the names. I’m
sure you have alkyd heard the old story about the man who met a business
acquaintance whose name he couldn’t recall. He tried to avoid embarrassment by
pretending he know the name, but wasn’t sure of the spelling; so he asked, “How
do you spell your name again?” The reply was, “The only way it can be spelled,
J, O, N, E, and S!” You see, this trick didn’t work in this particular case.
Another sneaky way of pretending you didn’t forget the name of someone you
should have remembered is this: - Merely ask the person what his name is. If he
tells you his second name, you say, “Oh, I wouldn’t forget that, it’s your
first name I meant. “ If the person tells you the first name first, you, of
course, say that you knew that, but it was the second name, and it seems as if
you only forgot one of the names. There is only one thing wrong with this
little bit of hocus-pocus. If the person gives you his gull name as soon as you
ask for the name in the first place, you’re out of luck.
Then there is the classic example of the fellow who always
asked people whose name he had forgotten whether they spelled it with an e or
an i. This was fine, until he tried it with Mrs. Hill.
No, I’m afraid it still pays to remember the name, instead
of resorting to trickery. Not only does it pay to remember it, but believe me,
it’s easier than resorting to subterfuge because it talks much less effort.
People have tried various systems and methods to help their
memory foe names. Some use the alphabet, or first –initial method. That is to
say, they make a tremendous effort to retain only the initial of the person’s
name. This is more wasted effort, since they usually forget the initial anyway;
and even if they remember the initial, how can that tell them the person’s
name? If you address Mr. Adler as Mr. Armanjian, or vice versa, he isn’t going
to be pleased just because the name you called him has the same first letter as
his own.
Although writing things down on paper can sometimes be
helpful in remembering, it cannot be depended upon as far as memorizing names
is concerned. In conjunction with a good system of association- perhaps, as I
will explain later, but not by itself. If you were able to draw an exact
replica of the person’s face, this would be better, since you would then know
which name belongs to which face. You‘d have your two tangibles with which to
make some sort of ridiculous association. But, unfortunately, most of us can’t
draw that well, and if we could, it wouldn’t be that helpful that it would make
up for the time it would take.
Some memory teachers will tell their students to keep a
“memory book’” and write down the name of every person they want to remember.
As I’ve said, this might help a little if used together with a good system of
association, but not otherwise. It might help some, of course if you wanted to
run down the list of names each time you meet a person, with the hope that the
name will come to mind when you see it written in your book,. If it did, I
don’t think you would feed the ego of the person whose name you “fished “out of
a book instead of out of your memory.
It isn’t necessary. I’m sure, for me to tell you how
important it is to remember names and faces. Yet, here is one of the most
common memory complaints of modern timer: “I just can’t remember names!” Our
way of life today makes it almost unavoidable to meet many new people very day.
You meet people continually, people you want to remember and people that you do
not think are important enough to bother remembering until you meet them again.
Then when it is too late, you realize that you should have tried to remember.
Would it not be an asset for any salesman to remember the
names of his customers? Or for a doctor to remember the names of his patients;
a lawyer, his clients, etc? Of course it would. Everybody wants to be able to
remember names and faces, but many times an important sale is nipped in the
bud, money is lost, someone is caused to be embarrassed or a reputation is
stained, because someone forgot an important person’s name. Yet, even as far
back as early Greek and Roman civilization, Cicero remembered the names of
thousands of his villagers and soldiers, by using a memory system.
There is a young lady that I’ve heard of, who is the hat-check
girl in a popular New York night club. She has gained a reputation, because she
never issues a check for your hat or coat. She simply remembers which hat or
which coat. She simply remembers which hat or which coat belongs to whom. It is
said that she never yet has given anyone the wrong article. This may not seem
so important to you, since it would be just as easy to do it with hat or coat
checks, the way all check-room attendants do it. But this young lady has made
herself into sort of an attraction at this night club, and her sizable tips
prove it. Of course, this is not exactly remembering names and faces, since she
doesn’t remember the name, but it is similar enough. She must associate the hat
or coat, or both, to the person’s face. I’ve been told that the bellboy of a
large hotel down south has gained a similar reputation. Whenever someone checks
into the hotel that has been there even once before this bellboy addresses them
by name. The last I heard, he is well on his way to saving enough money out of
his tips to buy the hotel.
This should prove to you, if proof were necessary, that
people love to be remembered, they even pay for it. This particular hat-check
girl and bellboy surely made more money than the others who worked at the same
jobs.
A person’s name is his most prized possession, and there is
nothing more pleasing to him than hearing his own name or having it remembered
by to others.
Some of my students and me have remembered as many as three
hundred names and faces at one meeting: and you can do it too!
Before getting into the actual systems and methods for
remembering names and faces, I’d like to show you how you can improve your
memory for them by at least 25% to 50 % without the systems! Read the next few
paragraphs very carefully.
The main reason that most people forget a name is because
they never remembered it in the first place! I’ll take that a step further, and
say that they never even heard the name in the first place. How often have you
been introduced to someone new, something like this: “Mr. Reader, meet Mr.
Star-ph-is”? All you hear is a mumbled sound instead of the name. Possibly
because the person who is doing the introducing doesn’t remember the name
himself. So, he resorts to double-talk. You, on the other hand, probably feel
that you will never meet this person again, so you say, “Nice to meet you”, and
you never bother to get the name right. You may even spend some time talking to
the person and finally say good-bye, and still not hear the name properly.
The only thought most people will give to this situation is
a self-questing, “gosh, what was that person’s name. That nice gentleman I
spoke to the other day?” When no answer is forthcoming, the entire thing is
shrugged off with an, “oh, well, “and that’s that!
This is how peopling find themselves talking to others, and
addressing them as, Buddy, old pal, Fella’. Sweetheart, Honey-anything you can
think of to keep from finding it necessary to use the person’s name, while you
squirm with embarrassment because you don’t know the name. Oliver Herford put
it this way, when he gave his definition of the word, “darling”: “ The popular
form of address in speaking to a person of the opposite sex whose name you cannot at the moment recall”.
Here, then, is your first rule for remembering names: - Be
Sure You Hear the Name In The First Place! As I said before, you see the face,
so the odds are you will recognize it when you see it again. You can only hear
the name, so get it right. I have yet, to hear anyone complain, “I know your
name, but I can’t seem to remember your face.” It is always the name that
creates the problem. So, to repeat, be sure you hear the Name!
Don’t let the fellow
that’s doing the introducing get away with double-talk. If you haven’ heard the
name, if you’re not absolutely sure of it, ask him to repeat it. Sometimes even
after hearing a name, you may not be sure of the pronunciation; if that’s the
case, ask the person to spell it for you. Or try to spell it you self; he’ll
correct you if you spell it incorrectly, and he’ll be flattered by your
interest in his name.
Incidentally, if you make a habit of trying to spell the
name of every new person you meet, you’ll soon become accustomed to the
spelling of most any kind of name. You’ll be surprised as to how many of them
you’ll spell correctly. Eventually, you will be able to recognize how certain
sounds are spelled for certain nationalities. You’ll learn that the Italian
language has no letter, “j”, so the j sound in an Italian name is always
spelled with a “g”. The J or the soft G sound, and sometimes, the “sh” sound in
a Polish name, is usually spelled “CZ”, while the sound “eye” is sometimes
spelled with the letters “aj”. The ch or tz sound in an Italian name is
sometimes spelled with a double “c”; the sh sound in a German name,
particularly at the beginning of the name, is usually spelled, “such”, etc. Of
course, if doesn’t always work-I recently came across a name that sounded like
“Burke,” but was spelled “Bourgeois.”
However, many of the people who have seen my performance will vouch for
the fact that I spell their names correctly almost 85% of the time. Or, closely
enough to impress them, anyway. So, you see, it can be done. I mention this
because spelling a person’s name correctly, or almost correctly, will impress
him almost as much as remembering it.
If after making sure of the spelling you realize that the
name is the same or similar to that of a friend or relative of yours, mention
that fact. The all serves to impress the name on your mind. If it is an odd
name, one that you have never heard before, say so. Don’t feel shy, or as it
you’re imposing when you do these things, because everybody is flattered when
you make a fuss over their names. Just as they would be if you showed an
interest in any of their prized possessions, or in any of their particular
interests. This, I suppose, can be put down to human nature.
While talking to the person, repeat his name as often as you
can in the course of the conversation. Don’t keep jabbering it like an idiot,
of course, just use it whenever you feel it is apropos and necessary. I am not
mentioning this to be facetious. I’ve read some “memory experts” instructions
on this point, and they have given sample conversations: -Why, yes, Mr. Green
pepper, I do sail to Europe every season, Mr. Green pepper. And, oh, Mr. Green
pepper, don’t you just adore Rome, Mr. Green pepper? Mr. Green pepper, tell me
this –etc, etc. and so on into the night. This will not impress Mr. Green pepper;
it will scare him out of his wits.
No. Just use, it, as I said wherever and whenever you feel
it fits. Do use the name when you say good-bye or good night. Don’t just say
something about hoping to meet again, say, “Good-bye, Mr. Johnson, I hope we’ll
meet again soon, etc.” All this will etch the name more firmly and definitely
into your mind.
The only effort
involved here, as usual is just in doing this the first few times. After that
it will become habit and you won’t even realize that you are doing it. Make up
your mind to follow the hints suggested in the last few paragraphs. Read them
over, if you feel you’re not sure of them.
For some people, all this in itself comprises a system for
remembering names. It is simple because by following the above hints and
suggestions you make names interesting you act interested and into doing you
actually create interest. And, interest, as I’ve explained, is a large part of
memory.
All the above will help your memory for names and face by
25% to 50% if you apply yourself; but keep reading and I’ll help you take care
of the remaining 50% to 75%!
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