Page 234 - Use Your Memory
P. 234

USE  YOUR  MEMORY
 repetition  of  any  item  you  wish  to  learn  greatly  increases  the
 probability  of your  remembering it.
 5  Verify the pronunciation. Once you have been given the name,
 immediately  confirm,  by  asking  the  person  to  whom  the  name
 belongs, if you have the correct pronunciation. This confirms your
 interest and once again repeats the name, increasing the probabi-
 lity of your remembering it.
 6  Request the spelling. If there is any doubt about the spelling of
 the name, politely or playfully ask for the spelling, again confirm-
 ing your  interest  and  allowing  another  natural  repetition  of the
 name.
 7  Your  new  hobby - derivations.  With  a  natural  enthusiasm,
 explain  that  one  of your  new  hobbies  is  the  background  and
 derivation of names, and politely ask the person to whom you have
 been introduced if he  or she  knows anything about the history of
 his or her own family name.  (Be sure you know the history of your
 own surname!) It may surprise you to know that on average 50 per
 cent of people not only know at least some part of the background
 of their families' nomenclature but most of them are  enthusiastic
 about  discussing  it.  Once  again  you  will  have  confirmed  your
 interest  in  the  individual,  as  well  as  having  laid  the  ground  for
 more  repetition.
 8  Exchange cards. The Japanese have developed card-exchange
 as a major social function, realising how useful it is for memory. If
 you  are  really interested  in remembering people's  names,  make
 sure you  have  a very presentable  card  to  give them,  and in most
 cases they will give you their own or write the details down for you.
 9  Repetition in conversation.  Carrying the principles of interest,
 politeness and repetition further, make sure that during conversa-
 tions  with  people  newly  met  you  repeat  their  names  wherever
 possible. This repetition helps to implant the name more firmly in
 your memory, and it is also socially more rewarding, for it involves
 the other person more intimately in the conversation. It is far more
 satisfying for them to hear you say, 'Yes, as Mary has just said  ..  .'
                 .
 than to hear you say, 'Yes, as she  [as you point] has just said ..'
 10  Repeat internally. During any little pause in the conversation,
 look  analytically  and with  interest  at the  various  people  who  are
 speaking and about whom others are  speaking,  repeating intern-
 ally to  yourself the  names  that by  now will  be  becoming  second
 nature to you.
 11  Check during longer breaks. If you have gone to get a drink for
 someone  or for yourself,  or for any other reason are  momentarily
 alone in a crowd, spend that time scanning everyone you have met,
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