Page 133 - How to Develop A SUPER-POWER MEMORY
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What's in a Name?                                    137
                  If you had any trouble with  any of the  above names,
               here's  the way I  might have created  substitute thoughts  for
               them.
                 Steinwurtzel—a  beer stein  worth  selling. Stein  worth sell
               —Steinwurtzel.
                 McCarthy—I     always  picture  the  famous   ventriloquial
               dummy, Charlie McCarthy for this name.
                 Brady—You  could picture a little girl's braids  for this.  If
               you want to get  the  entire name in your  picture, see yourself
               braiding the lines of a large letter, "E." Braid E—Brady.
                 Gordon—I always picture "garden" for this name.
                 Arcaro—I usually  see the  famous  jockey of  the  same
               name. If you want  to  break the name down, see  yourself
               carrying an "O." I carry O—Arcaro.
                 Briskin—You might want  to  picture  someone briskly
               rubbing their skin. Brisk skin—Briskin.
                 Moreida—You could  see  yourself  reading  and calling for
               more  and more books  to read. Some of you may have
               thought of your mother (Maw) being a  reader. More
               reader or Maw reader—Moreida.
                 Casselwitz—A    castle  completely  stocked  with  brains
               (wits). You might see  the  brains  actually oozing  from all
               the windows. Castle wits—Casselwitz.
                 Kolodny—I  would picture a large knee  being all different
               colors. Colored knee—Kolodny.
                 Hayduk—Ducks eating hay, or  a hayloft or haystack  full
               of ducks.
                 Platinger—Picturing a  plate with a bandage  would suf-
               fice. Plate injure—Platinger.
                 Kolcyski—Either  a  piece of  coal skiing in a  sifting  posi-
               tion,  or  calling your  friend Sid to ski would do  it.  Or,  it is
               too  cold  to  stand up  and  ski,  so you  sit and ski. Coal sit ski,
               call Sid ski, cold sit ski—Kolcyski.
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