Page 17 - Use Your Memory
P. 17

USE  YOUR  MEMORY
                                          Negative Mental Set
                                          There is a growing and informal international organisation, which
                                          I  choose  to  name  the  'I've  Got  an  Increasingly  Bad  Memory
                                          Club'. How often do you hear people in animated and enthusiastic
                                          conversation  saying  things  like,  'You  know,  my  memory's  not
                                          nearly as good as it used to be when I was younger; I'm constantly
                                          forgetting things.' To which there is an equally enthusiastic reply:
                                          'Yes, I know exactly what you mean; the same thing's happening to
                                          me..  .  .'  And  off they dodder,  arms  draped  around  each other's
                                          shoulders,  down the  hill to mental oblivion.  And such conversa-
                                          tions  often take  place between thirty-year-olds!
                                           This negative, dangerous, incorrect mental set is based on lack of
                                          proper training,  and this book is  designed to correct it.
                                           Consider  the  younger  supermemoriser  to  whom  most  people
                                          romantically refer. If you want to check for yourself, go back to any
                                          school at the end of a day, walk into a classroom of a group of five -
                                          to seven-year-old children after they have gone home and ask the
                                          teacher what has been  left in the  classroom  (i.e.,  forgotten).  You
                                          will  find  the  following  items:  watches,  pencils,  pens,  sweets,
                                          money,  jackets,  physical  education  equipment,  books,  coats,
                                          glasses, erasers, toys, etc.
                                           The  only  real  difference  between  the  middle-aged  executive
                                          who has  forgotten  to phone  someone  he was  supposed  to phone
                                          and who has left his briefcase at the office, and the seven-year-old
                                          child who  realises  on  returning home  that he's  left  at school his
                                          watch,  his  pocket-money  and  his  homework  is  that  the  seven-
                                          year-old does not collapse into depression, clutching his head and
                                          exclaiming,  'Oh,  Christ,  I'm  seven  years  old  and  my  memory's
                                          going!'
                                           Ask yourself,  'What is the number of things  I actually remem-
                                          ber each day?' Most people estimate somewhere between  100 and
                                          10,000. The answer is in fact in the multiple billions. The human
                                          memory  is  so  excellent  and  runs  so  smoothly  that  most  people
                                          don't even realise that every word they speak and every word they
                                          listen to are instantaneously produced for consideration, recalled,
                                          recognised precisely and placed in their appropriate context. Nor
                                          do  they  realise  that  every  moment,  every  perception,  every
                                          thought,  everything that  they  do  throughout  the  entire  day  and
                                          throughout their lives is  a  function of their memories.  In  fact,  its
                                          ongoing accuracy is almost perfect. The few odd things that we do
                                          forget  are  like  odd  specks  on  a  gigantic  ocean.  Ironically,  the
                                          reason why we notice  so  dramatically the  errors that we  make  is
                                          that they are so rare.
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