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Improving Memory Just Doesn't Get Any Easier Than This



How To Become More Creative And Remember The Information That Matters In Your Life

Would you like to be more creative?

How about in a way that makes you more visual so you can memorize more information faster and with greater accuracy?

You would?

Great. Then this may be the most important episode of the Magnetic Memory Method Podcast you'll ever experience.

Here's why:

I'm going to give you two simple ways to become more visually creative so you can use your imagination to memorize anything. Of course, you'll need to use a Memory Palace. Ideally you've already created several.

If not, you can listen to previous episodes of this podcast for help. These include How to Find Memory Palaces and movie and How to Enhance Your Memory With Virtual Memory Palaces. There's also a full memory improvement course for improving memory in all areas of your life.

But for now, here's …

How To Improve Your Memory By Legally Stealing Information That Already Exists Using Direct Analogy

The first way to become more visually creative involves creating "direct analogies."

To use direct analogy, you need only follow five fun steps.

1. Identify an issue or problem. For people interested in using memory techniques for accelerated learning, this step should present no problems.

Chances are that you need to memorize:

  • Facts for school
  • Mathematical equations and other number-based information (link to math book)
  • Information about historical figures
  • Professional terminology in fields like medicine or law (am links)
  • Music
  • Names and faces
  • Poetry and speeches
  • Foreign language vocabulary and grammar rules

And this list is just for starters. Pilots, teachers, restaurant staff, police officers and a whole host of other people need memory techniques to make them better professionals.

The more specific you are about the problem you need to solve, the more dedicated you can be about shaping memory techniques as your go-to solution.

2. Find similar problems.

You might think it's crazy to leap from your problem to other problems that only tangentially relate, but trust me. This second step is critical for developing your visual imagination. We'll explore this point more completely in the next section.

3. Explore the analogy.

Once you've picked an example, dive in and start charting out the territory.

For example, doctors need to memorize a lot of terminology relating to the body, diseases, medicines and the cruel instruments related to their trade. How to get that large variety of terms and definitions into long term memory can be hard to visualize.

A similar problem that might come to mind could involve computer programmers. They need to teach computers to store terminology and make it accessible to users with intuitive ease.

You could then create a picture in your imagination of a doctor programming his mind as if it were a computer. Maybe he's opened his skull and attached some wiring to his brain. And maybe the wires run into a keyboard so he can type the words and definitions, sending them exactly where they need to go.

Every Cell In Your Brain Has The Power To Help You Create Powerful Memories

By finding an analogy, you help yourself create an image. It's great exercise and simply achieved.

To take another example, you could think of a painter who needs to place shapes and colors in just the right places. For example, you could see a doctor painting terminology o


Published on 10 years, 6 months ago






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