Название: THE POWER OF MIND
Автор: William Walker Atkinson
Издательство: Bookwire
Жанр: Сделай Сам
isbn: 9788075836410
isbn:
We know of a schoolboy who remembered the beginning and ending of the term of each President by marking the dates upon the foreheads of each, in the pictures of his school history, but we scarcely advocate the following of this plan. A strong mental image may be formed by the average person, and when a strong impression of the date, accompanying the person or object, is stored away, it is likely to prove permanent and the associated impressions will always appear when the subject is recalled.
The above plan proves of the greatest value to those whose “eye memory” is good. In some cases, however, the “ear memory” is better, and in such cases it will be found that the verbal repetition of the date by the student, or better still by a friend, will fix the sound in the memory so that it may be readily recalled. Others find that they can best remember dates by doggerel rhymes committed to memory, such as—
“In fourteen hundred and ninetytwo
Columbus sailed the ocean blue.”
“In eighteen hundred and sixtyone
America’s Civil War begun.”
“In seventeen hundred and seventysix
Jonathan taught John Bull a few tricks.”
“In eighteen hundred and twentyone,
At last did set Napoleon’s sun.”
“In eighteen hundred and ninetyeight
The Spanish fleets did meet their fate.
For in that year, the first of May,
Dewey entered Manila Bay;
And two months later, on third of July,
Cervera’s fleet was sunk by Schley.”
The average schoolboy has no trouble in composing this grade of doggerel to order, and many an important date and event has been memorized in this way.
But of all the above plans of memorizing dates, we prefer the first mentioned plan of “visualizing,” or forming a mental image of the date in connection with the person or object connected with the date. It is more easily acquired than might be imagined, and after a little practice becomes almost automatic. One can form a mental picture of almost any historical event, and the portraits of the leading characters in history may readily be recalled.
In the case of students who have many important dates to remember, it is a good plan to connect the name of the person or event with the date, by the law of associated impressions. By always speaking of “Waterloo 1815”; or “Yorktown 1781”; or “Hastings 1066,” the dates of these battles will become inseparably associated with the events themselves, and the two impressions will become fused. Of course, this will require the frequent repetition of the event and associated date, to fix the combined impression in the mind. If the date and event had been associated in this way from the beginning, there would have been no more trouble about the association than in the case of the words “Washington” and “George,” or “Napoleon” and “Bonaparte.” If we had not heard Washington’s first name, or Napoleon’s last name, until long after we had formed a clear impression of the other name of each, we would have sometimes forgotten the last learned name, whereas, having learned them both together, the two names are practically one so far as our memory is concerned. If teachers would always speak of “Waterloo 1815,” the students would never forget the date of that battle, so long as they remembered its name.
PRICES.
The above mentioned plan of forming a mental image associating the figures with the object is of the greatest importance to clerks, salesmen, etc., whose work requires them to remember the price of goods. In many cases the clerk may actually see the prices attached to the goods by reviving the impression several times when looking at the goods in question. We know of a young man who was employed in a large retail grocery store who would form a mental image of this kind of every new lot of goods placed on the shelves, and who always thought of the goods as being plainly marked. If anyone asked him the price of “Baker’s Chocolate,” he would think of the package with the price marked upon it, and he knew the price of hundreds of articles of every description without referring to them except mentally. When the price changed he would wipe out the old mental figure and replace it with the new price. Today, after the lapse of over twenty years, he is able, by a mental effort, to recall the picture and price of the majority of the goods carried in the old store, the impression coming as a mental picture of the article with the price attached. His faculty of locality is large, and he is able to mentally rebuild the old store shelves, bearing upon them the goods just as they appeared twenty years ago, prices and all. If you will clearly associate the price with the appearance of the goods, the mental picture of the latter will bring with it the recollection of the former, and perhaps even the figures themselves will appear in the “mind’s eye.”
FIGURES.
Figures other than dates or prices may be associated with any object to which they would naturally be attached. But if there is no such appropriate object to which to attach the figure, the simple “visualizing” method must suffice. This method consists in photographing the figures upon the mind, until the mind will recall the details and shape of the figures, as it will those of a picture. Imagine the figures painted in large white characters on a black background. Hold the mental picture until you see it plainly in your “mind’s eye.” The ability to do this increases with practice. It is, however, always better if you can associate the figures with some appropriate object. The theory of this “visualizing” method, either with or without association, is based upon the fact (1) that many minds accept and retain a visual impression more readily than they do a mere abstract idea without a picture; and (2) that the law of association makes the mental picture (including the date) come easily into the field of consciousness, when the thought of the object suggests it.
Chapter XIV.
Memory of Place.
Treating of that faculty of the mind, which when largely developed enables one to find his way almost instinctively in strange places, and which, when deficient, causes one to “get lost” in places with which he should be familiar—The subject is taken up with the idea of showing how the faculty may be developed, and the importance of training and cultivating it—Instruction, examples, and exercises are given, upon well tested and tried lines, and the careful study of this chapter should start one well on the road to a great improvement in his sense of location, his memory of places, and the ability to “keep his bearings.”
SOME MEN have the faculty of locality largely developed and are able almost intuitively to find their way in strange places. Such people never get lost, and seem to carry the location of the points of the compass in their minds without any effort. They remember places, directions, position, nature’s arrangements as to space and place. Others possess this faculty in a lesser degree, and some seem to be almost without it. The last mentioned class find great difficulty in finding their way and dare not trust themselves in strange places and are constantly getting lost.
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