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January
16, 2007:
Improving Your Memory
Interview
with Scott Hagwood, author of Memory
Power
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Mike
Carruthers:
Your
memory is like a muscle and you can make it stronger.
Scott Hagwood:
You know it's not just if we don't use it we lose it,
it's when we use it we truly get more out of it.
Scott Hagwood,
author of the book Memory
Power, says most of us have trouble remembering names, but
with a little practice you can get remarkably good at it.
We may not realize
it but we have a tremendous database for names. Even though
I may not have ever seen Mike Carruthers in person, I have an
idea because I know a lot of Mike's - I have a cousin Mike,
I went to school with a couple of Mike's, so then when I meet
you and when we're engaging and talking and whatever, I try
and find as many correlations, as many associations, as many
things that you have in common with people that I already know
- really what I basically do is I turn you into an experience.
It's so important
to understand, says Scott, that you'll always remember an experience
better than a fact or a thought. So instead of simply trying
to remember a fact out of a book, you'd do much better to remember
the whole experience of finding the book, the color of the book
and the weather outside when you read the book.
Because what
you're trying to do is trying to create an experience because
our memories in our brains are measured not by calendars, not
by dates but they're marked by experiences. And when you want
to remember something, turn it into an experience and it becomes
as natural as remembering what you did yesterday.
Tomorrow, how
a small change in your thinking can instantly improve your memory
- I'm Mike Carruthers and that's Something You Should Know.
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