Page 13 - Use Your Memory
P. 13

Introduction






                                          Like so many children, as a youth I was mystified by this wonder-
                                          ful  and  exasperating thing called  memory.  In casual  and  relaxed
                                          situations  it worked  so  smoothly  that  I hardly  ever noticed  it;  in
                                          examinations it only occasionally performed well, to my surprise,
                                          but was more often associated with 'bad memory', the fearful area
                                          of forgetting.  Since I spent much of my childhood in the country
                                          with animals,  I began to realise that the  misnamed 'dumb' crea-
                                          tures  seemed  to  have  extraordinary memories,  often  superior to
                                          my own. Why, then, was human memory apparently so  faulty?
                                           I began to study in earnest,  eagerly devouring information about
                                          how  the  early  Greeks  had  devised  specific  memory  systems  for
                                          various tasks; and how, later, the Romans applied these techniques to
                                          enable  themselves  to  remember whole  books  of mythology  and to
                                          impress their audiences during senatorial speeches and debates. My
                                          interest  became  more  focused  while  I  was  in  college,  when  the
                                          realisation slowly dawned on me that such basic systems need not be
                                          used  only  for  'rote'  or  parrotlike  memory,  but  could  be  used  as
                                          gigantic filing systems for the mind, enabling extraordinarily fast and
                                          efficient access, and enormously enhancing general understanding. I
                                          applied the techniques in taking examinations, in playing games with
                                          my imagination in order to improve my memory, and in helping other
                                          students,  who  were  supposedly  on  the  road  to  academic  failure,
                                          achieve  first-class successes.
                                           The  explosion  of brain  research  during  the  last  decade  has
                                          confirmed  what  the  memory  theorists,  gamesters,  mnemonic
                                          technicians  and  magicians  have  always  known:  that the  holding
                                          capacity of our brains and the ability to recall what is stored there
                                          are  far  and  deliciously beyond normal  expectations.
                                            Use Your Memory, a major new development from the memory
                                          sections of Use Your Head, is an initial tour through what should
                                          have been included as first among the seven wonders of the world:
                                          the  'hanging gardens'  of limitless  memory and  imagination.
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