Improve Visual Memory

This is a great way to memorize a list – for starters, we will limit ourselves to ten points, but the method can be used for larger lists, as our ability to remember strange associations is greater than you think! You can apply similar principles to any number of things you might want to remember, and as used this method you get faster and faster.

You already know the numbers from one to ten – which is half the battle! Then have to associate an object with each issue, and I suggest you use the following well-established rhyming pairs:

one – bun

Two – shoe

three – tree

four – door

five – hive

six – sticks

seven – heaven

eight – gate

nine – wine

Ten – fat hen

So no surprises! The next step is to link the elements of the list with the number of associations above.

Say you need to remember ten stations of the underground Central Line of London, from Grange Hill. I chose because I do not think it was any of those places – so I have no preconceived ideas about them – and they appear in a defined order:

Grange Hill

Hainaut

Fairlop

Barkingside

Newbury Park

Gants Hill

Redbridge

Wantstead

Leytonstone

Leyton

This is how I could create strange links on my mind:

"Grange Hill" was the name of a TV drama, set in a comprehensive school. I imagine the children throw buns (bread = one) to each other, facing the television cameras and lights.

Henao sounds a bit as "aberrant" (as in the "heinous crime") – so let's tie a shoe (shoe = two) to a crime: the victim was terribly unfortunate crushed by a huge shoe.

Fairlop is like a "fair" and as "lop" (as in cutting the branches) and fits well with The "tree" of the "three" – maybe a branch is cut down the trees and could be on the fairgrounds.

Barkingside – Well, perhaps a strange dog is barking only one side, perhaps because it is at the door (door = four).

The next station is Newbury Park. Photo Come a new huge soft in the middle of a park, surrounded by bees in the hive of five years.

Gants Hill is a little like "Hill of alcatraz" – maybe the boobies (birds) can not go down the hill, since we are surrounded by sticks.

Redbridge is simpler, a Red Bridge. Let's make the bridge red (color the blood) that leads to heaven.

Wantstead – seems to "want Stead," and that reminds me of Mr. Steed of The Avengers. Mrs. Peel (played by Diana Rigg) might want Steed, because he has been chained to a gate (constant in the imagination!).

Leytonstone stone could be a latent, waiting to explode in action, but this stone could be held because of a drink problem. In any case, there is a bottle of wine on the stone latent.

Finally Leyton has to be different in Leytonstone – maybe we'll just settle for the chicken (hen = ten) being the afternoon. The rooster is looking at his watch and tapping his foot impatiently while waiting for the hen.

It remains to revisit the list of associations of number (bread, shoes, trees, door of the hive, clubs, sky, door, wine, chicken) and have recreated each scene strange. As you get used technique to recover faster the words of visual images.

That's it – you can do – and of course there are plenty of other associations to go to other numbers. Now that we have memorized stations TEN tube in the correct order, goes without saying – but I'll say it anyway – just as well we can recite, in reverse order, which could be useful if you ever find on the Central Line to the north-east!

About the Author:

Tom Morrell is a teacher and internet marketing consultant.
For many more memory methods and tips on how to train and improve your memory, use this link:
http://www.steprightthisway.eclipse.co.uk/MEMORY
For ways of making money online, use this link:
http://www.steprightthisway.com

Article Source: ArticlesBase.comHow to Improve your Memory using the Peg Method


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