Page 263 - Use Your Memory
P. 263

SPEECHES, JOKES, DRAMATIC PARTS, POEMS, ARTICLES AND BOOKS
           speak, making recordings of ideas, quotations and references that
           you think will prove relevant. These recordings should be done in
           the  Mind  Map  form  as  basically  outlined  in  chapter  23  and  as
           expanded upon in Use Your Head and The Brain User's Guide.
           2  Having completed your basic research, sit down and plan out,
           using a Mind Map,  the basic structure  of your presentation.
           3  With your basic structure in front of you,  fill in any important
           details, still in Mind Map form, so that you have completed a left-
           and right-brain, associative, imagistic Mind Map Memory Note of
           the entire speech. Usually this will contain no more than 100 words.
           4  Practise making your speech from this completed outline. You
           will find that, as you practise, the final order in which you wish to
           present  the  speech  will  become  increasingly  clear,  and  you  can
           number the main areas and subtitles of your speech appropriately.
           You will also find that, having completed the research and thought
           in  this  way  about  the  structure  of the  material,  you  will  already
           have automatically memorised the bulk of your speech. Initially, of
           course, there will be points in it at which you will hesitate or get
           lost, but with a little practice you will find that you not only know
           your speech  from beginning to  end but know,  at a much  deeper
           level than  most speakers,  the  real  associations,  connections  and
           deeper structures of your speech.  In other words, you will really
           know what you  are talking about. This point is especially impor-
           tant,  for it means that when you finally do speak to your audience,
           you will have no  fear of forgetting the word order of what you are
           presenting.  You  will  simply  say what you  have  to  say  smoothly,
           using the vocabulary appropriate  for the moment and not getting
           bogged down in a rigid succession of preordained sentence struc-
           tures.  You will thus become  a creative and  dynamic speaker.
           5  As a backup safety system, you can always use one of the basic
           Peg  Systems.  Select  the  ten,  twenty  or  thirty  Key  Words  that
           completely  summarise  your  speech  and  use  the  Basic  Memory
           Principles to connect your speech Key Words to the Peg System,
           thus guaranteeing that even  if,  for a moment, you do get lost, you
           will immediately be  able  to find  yourself.  Don't worry about any
           little pauses that might occur in your speech. When an audience
           senses that a speaker knows what he or she is talking about, a pause
           is actually more positive than negative, for it makes it obvious to the
           audience that the speaker is actually thinking and creating on the
           platform. This adds to the enjoyment of listening,  for it makes the
           presentation far less formal and more personal and natural. Some
           great speakers actually use the pause as a technique, maintaining
           electrifying 'thinking silences'  of up to as much as  a  full minute.
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