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6759044 Mega Memory

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    This can apply to you, too, in whatever you are trying to memorize, whether it is names and

    faces, mathematical formulas, historical figures, movies, delivery routes, etc. In practice, you

    will find that patterns will emerge, and you can do it much faster. You'll be surprised at how

    much and how quickly you can learn! I certainly surprised myself. Can you believe I've now

    memorized the capitals for all the countries of the world? A few years ago I thought I'd never be

    able to do something like that (or have the time for it). But with the memory techniques and a

    little practice I have achieved what seemed to be impossible.

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    1.7 Instrumental Music

    Music can sometimes be very easy to memorize; sometimes it can be very hard. It depends on

    what you're trying to memorize. When presented with the concept of "music," for many of you

    the first thought that comes to mind are some of the most popular pop/rock hits. Usually there's

    no problem memorizing these: Since they are of special interest to us, we take a special

    interest in remembering them. The tunes are usually simple so they're easy to memorize -- in

    fact, often we'll end up with the song going around in our head all day! And before long we've

    memorized the words to the song, and once that is done, we've also memorized the title to the

    song because usually the title of the song is somewhere in the lyrics.

    Now... instrumental music is more difficult. Since there are no words, the tune takes longer to

    remember, though usually we do after listening to the composition a few times. The most

    common challenge is trying to remember the name of the composition. The key is to use

    creativity and some of the techniques you've learned on this web site. I've decided to present a

    few examples with increasing order of difficulty to give you some helpful ideas. If you don't

    know the examples personally, just read the text anyway, try to understand the concept and try

    to apply it to a similar composition you know.

    March to the Scaffold by Hector Beriloz. This is a famous classical piece you might hear in an

    introductory music class. The victim is marched towards a scaffold, makes a final gasp for life,

    then is hung. If you imagine all of this while you listen, it's a very powerful piece. In this case,

    it's very easy to associate the title with the music. If you forget the composer, you could

    associate the composer's name with the scene: For example, perhaps the prisoner is going to

    be hung because he has broken the "Bear Laws" (Beriloz)! He marches between two lines of

    angry bears which are all looking at him. Wow, this picture is getting more vivid by the minute.

    Probably even you will remember this for years even if you never actually hear the

    composition!

    Rondo Alla Turka by Amadeus Mozart. Here's a tough one. Unlike Bariloz's special story, this

    is just a generic march. Not only that, but the title isn't even in English. Here's a clever idea:

    We know that music is easy to remember if they have words... and difficult otherwise. Well,

    why not make up our own words? That's right... let's invent our own words to give to the

    composition. We don't need to do this for the entire musical piece, just the most prominent

    melody -- the most memorable part. For this composition I've thought of, "It's for Ron! It's forAll! It's for Rondo Alla Turka! It's for Ron, it's for all, it's for Rondo Alla Turk." Silly, eh? Who

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    cares... you don't have to tell anyone what your silly words are, you're only using it for

    memorizing the title.

    Symphony Number 5, Second Movement by Tchaikovsky. Another tough one... this time it's

    all numbers! I have a 5 and a 2. To solve this problem, I turned to one of the techniques for

    memorizing numbers: peg words. I put the 5 and 2 together to get 52, then I thought of apicture word for 52: Lion. Then, as with Rondo Alla Turka, I invented my own words to

    composition. When I hear the main theme, I think to myself, "It is a li-on, Tchaikovsky's li-on!"

    Isn't that amazing? I not only memorized a very difficult numerical title, but I turned it into

    something quite interesting! To get the original title back, I convert Lion back into 52, then I

    assume the first number is the symphony and the second number is the movement number.

    There are a lot of symphonies that follow this pattern.

    Oxygene 7 by Jean-Michel Jarre. I love Jarre's music, but most of his compositions he's given

    insane names like Equinoxe 5, Chants Magnetiques 2 and Oxygene 7. One album I have is

    titled Oxygene 7-13 and contains the compositions Oxygene 7, Oxygene 8, Oxygene 9,

    Oxygene 10, Oxygene 11, Oxygene 12 and Oxygene 13. Yikes! To solve this problem, I again

    turned to peg words. I then decided to use these rules: I'll assign 7 to Oxygene (because the

    peg word for 7 is cow and a cow breathes oxygen), 9 to Chants Magnetiques (I think of a

    metallic bee -- 9 -- being affected by a magnetic field) and 6 to Equinoxe (I think of a shoe -- 6

    -- having a matching shoe that is "equal"). Then I put the digit together with the other digit: so

    Equinoxe 5 is 65, Chants Magnetiques 2 is 92 and Oxygene 7 is 77. For Oxygene 10 to 13 I

    just use 10 to 13.

    Now that I have 77 for Oxygene 7, it's time to do the memorizing. The peg word for 77 is Coke.

    As I listen to the composition, certain portions remind me of the fizz in a glass of Coke. Have

    you ever looked at the little fizz bubbles? They appear out of nowhere, then slowly get bigger,

    and bigger, then finally get so light they take off to the top of the glass with a slight zig-zagmovement. Some of the composition reminds me of a bubble making that zig-zag trip to the

    top. So if I hear the composition and want to know the title, I listen, then I remember the

    bubbles, then I remember Coke, then I remember 77, then I remember Oxygene 7. By the way,

    for Oxygene 10, there's more of a melody, so I can use the method where I make my own

    words: "Please, sir, don't tick-le my toes" ... and toes the peg word for 10.

    This may seem like a lot of work, but imagine trying to memorize compositions like "Symphony

    No. 5 in C Minor, 1st Movement" or "Etude in C Minor, Opus 10, Number 12" without it! Use

    some creativity. Don't be discouraged if you try something and it doesn't work and you forget

    it... keep trying, and with practice, you'll do well!

    http://www.thememorypage.net/peg.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/peg.htm
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    Here's an even more sophisticated method based on something I read in a book once about a

    piano player who wanted to keep track of hundreds of different instrumental tunes in his head.

    The idea was to convert musical notes to numbers, then from there to words. So you might

    convert "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star" to 11556654433221, where C=1, D=2, E=3, etc. Then

    you could memorize Dot Lilly Judge Hill for the first seven notes, something like a pink DOT

    falls on the middle of a LILLY pad, then a JUDGE (fully robed) comes by and stomps on the

    lilly pad, then goes up a HILL. Then associate that with the tune, like you're looking up at stars

    in the sky, then a pink star, as a dot, falls down to a lilly pad, etc. So now if you are a hired

    piano player for a fancy restaurant, and someone calls out for you to play "Twinkle, Twinkle,

    Little Star", then you remember the story and keywords and come up with 1155665, then hit

    those notes on the piano, and after playing the seven notes your memory is refreshed and you

    remember how to play the rest of the composition!

    Of course, that convention above doesn't take into account sharps and flats. But the idea is

    simply to get creative and work out a system that works well for you. What I might do is come

    up with peg words for all 12 notes. It would take a while to memorize the 12 words, but once

    that is done, then you have a very flexible system. You could do something like this:

    C = Sea (by sound)

    C# = Seed (modification of "sea")

    D = Die (either the verb or the singular of "dice")

    D# = Dime (modification of "die")

    E = Eel

    F = Foe

    F# = Phone (modification of "foe", by sound)

    G = Guy

    G# = Guide (think of a female guide to avoid confusion with "guy")

    (etc.)

    Actually, you can use any word you want to go with a letter -- it doesn't have to be "logical" --

    but I chose the words above simply because they'd be faster to memorize.

    To be even more elaborate, you could come up with words for "D flat", "E flat", etc. You could

    even come up with a second set of 12 words just so you have more words to work with and

    thus avoid some confusion by not having to use the same words so frequently. The ultimate

    would be to come up with 144 words for every two-note combination... which would take a LOT

    of time, but it would be extremely powerful once mastered.

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    Anyway, suppose you want to memorize the major C chord, which is C, E and G. Then you'd

    have to memorize Sea, Eel and Guy. Imagine a big, raging sea. There is an eel (out of water)

    on the beach, and a big wave comes in and sweeps it back into the sea. Then there is a guy

    on a beach, and an even bigger wave comes in and takes him in!

    Note that when you memorize all 12 chords, you'll be using the same words multiple times,and you might get them confused. It is important to remember the correct starting word and the

    correct order. You could think of a "big" version of the starting object and "small" or "normal"

    versions of the other two. Also, notice that I put the eel OUT of the water to start out with rather

    than in the sea where it's supposed to be. This is because the sea has to come first, and if the

    eel is already in the sea, you might get confused as to which comes first. This is the sort of

    thing you learn with practice. The challenge is to come up with a very flexible system that

    works the best and reduces the possibility of confusion.

    If you had 144 words, you could memorize C, then E-G as a single word, which would be

    quicker, and you probably wouldn't have to re-use that word. Of course, it would take a long

    time to memorize the 144 words, perhaps the same amount of time it would take to learn all 12

    chords by "brute force." However, once the 144 words are memorized, it can be used for

    MANY things in the future. It depends on just how much stuff you want to memorize.

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    2.3 Mathematical Formulas

    In March 2000, I wrote an Email message to a young student who had asked me about

    memorizing mathematical formulas. With his message he included some example formulas for

    perimeter, area, etc. Here was my reply:

    There are lots of different ways to memorize mathematical formulas. I have always found that

    the best way is to know how the formula was created in the first place. Then, if I forget the

    formula on a test, I can just go through the steps of re-creating the formula. It gives me a great

    feeling to know exactly how a formula works rather than just taking the letters and numbers

    and trusting the "magic."

    Here is an example, using the formulas you gave me:

    >Perimeter: Rectangle: P=2 (L + W), Square: P= 4s

    To derive the formula for a rectangle, first picture the rectangle, like this:

    W

    +-----------------------+

    | |

    L | | L

    | |

    +-----------------------+

    W

    The perimeter, as you probably know, is the distance around the rectangle. To do that, we

    simply need to add up the four sides. The answer is L + W + L + W. This is equivalent to the

    condensed formula that you gave: P = 2(L+W). Is this pretty easy?

    The only problem you may run into is that you may use different letters than were used in the"official" formula. For example, you might use "a" and "b" instead of "L" and "W" and get a

    formula like P = 2(a+b). There is nothing wrong with this alternate formula. If you use it to

    calculate a perimeter, it will work fine.

    So the only question is whether your teacher expects you to quote the exact formula with the

    right letters or if he/she wants you to use the formula to actually solve a math problem. If you

    are solving a math problem, then the teacher will never see the formula you use, so you can

    use whatever formula you want (as long as it works). If he/she wants you to write down the

    formula on a quiz, you might have to use the same letters. But hopefully the teacher is

    reasonable. You could do something like this on a pop quiz:

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    Perimeter of a rectangle: c = 2(a+b) where c = perimeter

    a = length

    b = width

    Since you are specifying what the letters mean, the teacher should accept this answer as

    correct, unless he/she's really strict. (If you don't say what you use for your letters, the answer

    will not be correct, because someone else who looks at your formula has to be able to

    understand how to use it.)

    Here's another example of deriving formulas: What about the area of a triangle? Let's say you

    already know the easy formula for the area of a rectangle: A=LW. A triangle looks like half of a

    rectangle:

    ______

    | W /

    | /

    L| /

    | /

    | /

    |/

    In that case, the area is half that of the imaginary rectangle: A = 1/2 L*W. Now, of course

    triangles have different shapes, so does this forumla work for all triangles? The answer is yes.

    If you doodle on the back page of your quiz, you can draw various triangles and fit rectangles

    around them. Some of the triangles may cut the big rectangle into three pieces instead of two,

    but, when you look at it, it still will look like half the area. Also, hopefully you've previously

    made an attempt to memorize the formula, and you know that it's a real easy formula, so it has

    to be right! The only difference is just the letters we used. The "real" formula uses B and H for

    base and height instead of L and W. But we already talked about this. "Base" and "Height" are

    easier to understand than "put an imaginary rectangle around a triangle as tightly as possible

    and take H for the height and W for the width of that rectangle and use that in my formula A =

    1/2 L*W" ... so you'd want to use the preferred "base" and "height" on your pop quiz unless you

    really were having a memory crisis!

    The techniques I mentioned above can be applied to almost all of the formulas you gave me.

    But sometimes you may have to do something different because 1) the formula is too

    complicated, or 2) you don't have enough time on the pop quiz to derive the formula because

    it's a really short pop quiz and you're expected to know the answer immediately.

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    The most complicated formula you gave me was the area of a circle, which is A = 3.14*R 2 (R

    squared). Actually, I hope you were told that the number 3.14 is a special number in

    mathematics called PI (and represented by a Greek letter). It is special because it appears in a

    whole bunch of forumlas, so once you've memorized 3.14159, you can really take advantage

    of it. If you know that 3.14 is PI, then that makes for a very intersting memory "picture"... you

    can think of a PIE for PI. Then you can think of two rats on top of the pie, eating it. You watch

    them as they gobble down the whole pie. The pie represents PI. The two rats represent R and

    2 (2 for squared). The full stomachs represent the entire "area" of the pie. Actually, we have to

    be a little careful because "area" is a two-dimensional concept and the pie in our imagination is

    three-dimensional and we might think of it as VOLUME... we don't want to confuse it with a

    volume formula we might memorize in the future. So... just modify the picture a little bit...

    pretend we have a very FLAT pie... one that is perhaps only half an inch thick. Perhaps this

    was a rejected pie by a baker, so he threw it out the door into the alley, where the two rats

    found it. WOW!! What a picture! You'll be sure to remember the formula now!

    The only other problem is memorizing what PI is in the first place. There are different ways to

    do this. One way is to convert the numbers to letters using the mnemonic alphabet as

    described in my "How to Improve Your Memory" tutorial (you might think of meat, run, lip, then

    use that with "pie" to make a short little story). Another way, if you have the luxury of time, is to

    cleverly create a sentence like: "Hey, I feel a lumpy cantelope." The trick is that if you write

    down the number of letters in each word, you get PI! A third idea is simply to write 3.14159 on

    a card and tape it to your bedroom ceiling, front door, maybe even your Playstation console. It

    may take longer to memorize, but soon you'll have it memorized by "brute force," and you'll be

    able to recall it very quickly without even a story. Since it's such an important number in math,

    it may be worth it.

    Here is an example from another Email message:

    >I found website very informative. Do you know of any information out there

    >on memory techniques for remembering detailed technical calculations ... ?

    Most of the good, published books out there on improving your memory include a section or

    chapter about memorizing mathematical formulas. The basic idea is that you convert the

    formula into a picture. For example:

    _()_ = V

    ---

    A

    http://www.thememorypage.net/htiym.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/htiym.htm
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    This formula says that resistance is the ratio of voltage to current. For the horizontal line, you

    might think of a table. V is perhaps a V-shaped vase, and it's on top of the table, whereas

    under the table is an Ant. The Greek Omega symbol on the left side sort of looks like a

    horseshoe, and you could pretend someone throws the horseshoe over to the other side of the

    equation and hits the vase and it crashes. Some of the falling pieces disturb the ant. There,

    that is a beautiful and memorable picture for a formula! For more complicated formulas, you

    just creatively expand on the idea.

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    2.1 Class Notes

    One question that's frequently asked of me is, "What's the easiest way for me to memorize

    class notes?" The question is difficult to answer because different people learn best in different

    ways. It also depends on what kind of material is being memorized (history, math, physics,

    charts of numbers, etc.).

    One strategy I've used in the past is to type in an entire term's worth of hand-written notes on

    the comptuer. This is long but the process causes you to think about the material again, just as

    if you were in class the first time taking notes. You think even more if you have a chart or

    graphics and have to try to figure out how to put thatinto the computer! Anyway, this strategy is

    kind of nice because you can relax... instead of going over a page again and again and being

    frustrated by not knowing it perfectly or having a clear method, here you just start at the

    beginning of your notes and type to the end. The plan is clear and it's something that you can

    do because it's mechanical and not trial-and-error.

    Other strategies include using lots of colored markers to give each page of your notes a very

    memorable appearance, making an outline of the notes, etc. And then of course there's the

    mnemonic techniques of using associations to memorize new terms and things.

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    1.1 How Memory Works by Association

    How does our memory work?

    We remember things by association. Every piece of information in our memory is connected toother pieces in some way or another. For example, if you are given the word "apple", what do

    you think of? Perhaps something like this:

    APPLE: red, round, sweet, teacher, tree, fruit

    But it's unlikely that we might see "apple" and think of "dog" (unless you remember some funny

    incident in which your dog investigated an apple). And what if you were asked what the 7th

    letter of the alphabet was? Chances are, you wouldn't know that "G = 7," but you could easily

    think to yourself, "A B C D E F G," and then say "G". You used association to get to the letter

    G, because you knew A was the first letter, then you kept choosing the next letter in the

    sequence until you got to the right one.

    Why do most of us have a bad memory?

    Most of us don't. Most of us have a really good memory, but we just don't have practice in

    using it efficiently.

    If the above is true, then why is it so hard for me to remember things?

    As stated before, our memory works by association. If there is no obvious association between

    things, it's very difficult to remember them. For example, suppose you needed to remember

    that your plane takes off at 2 P.M. There is nothing about the plane that would suggest the

    number 2 more than it would any other number (at least at first glance). Therefore, 2 is easily

    forgotten. Likewise, how does your best friend relate to his phone number, an arbitrary string of

    digits? Or how does a new word, like "hypothalamus," relate to what it represents?

    How can we learn to remember things better?Simple. If memory works by association, we actively work to create an association between

    two bits of information. For example, for the plane that we need to catch at 2 P.M., we can

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    imagine the plane in our mind, and notice that it has 2 wings. Two wings, 2 P.M. There's an

    association. We are now ten times more likely to remember the take-off time long after it has

    faded from our short-term memory.

    Sometimes an association comes very easily. For example, suppose you are introduced to a

    Mr. Hill who lives on a hill at the end of town. Mr. Hill on a hill. Pretty easy, huh? Or what ifyou're trying to remember the classroom number for a Chemistry class, and it just so turns out

    that it's the same as your dorm room number. Another natural association! Do you think you'll

    have a problem remembering it?

    When pieces of information are not obviously related in any way, however, we have to be a bit

    more creative in linking things together. But it isn't as hard as it seems. Most of us learned

    rhymes and acronyms in school that helped us remember things. Do any of the following look

    familiar to you?

    i before e except after c, or when sounded like a as in neighbor and weigh (rule for

    remembering ei or ie)

    ROY G. BIV (colors of the rainbow)

    All cows eat grass; Every good boy does fine (notes of musical scale)

    Nevereat sourwatermelons (directions on a compass)

    Why do they work? Because they form an easy-to-remember and cleverassociation between

    themselves and the information that is to be remembered.

    The idea is to be creative and clever. You don't have to invent a rhyme or a poem every time

    you want to remember something, though -- just think of a picture in your mind that links pieces

    of information together, preferably something unusual or silly so it is more memorable. For

    example, suppose you want to remember that the football field is on Maple Street. You might

    imagine in your mind a burly football player eating a football for breakfast... he pours some

    maple syrup on the football, cuts off a chunk and eats it!

    To demonstrate how effectively this works, look at the following list of words, and try to come

    up with an association between the left word and the right word of each row. Some will be

    easy; others may be harder. As an example, for the first pair, you might want to imagine a

    mouse that has a long, wavy tail that is in the shape of the letter S.

    mouse S

    fur R

    train bridge

    http://www.thememorypage.net/acro.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/acro.htm
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    moat boat

    popcorn chair

    elephant pancake

    toothbrush canal

    umbrella triangle

    After you have formed the associations (if you had trouble on one or two of them, that's okay;

    just skip them for now), cover up the right side of the list and then try to name the word

    associated with each word on the left. If you formed vivid, clear associations, you may be

    surprised at how quickly and easily you were able to remember everything!

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    1.5 Practice Makes Perfect

    Where to Go From Here

    At this point, you've learned a bunch of techniques for memorizing things more effectively:forming pictures and making associations, making vivid or funny pictures, converting numbers

    to picture words, "linking" items in a long chain to form a list, and pairing items with peg words

    to memorize numbered lists. These are the basic techniques. If you read a book or different

    web site on memory improvement, you may find different terminology or a different

    presentation, but the basic ideas are the same.

    By now, you actually know most of what you need to know! Probably, though, you have a

    specific memory application in mind that wasn't covered here, such as memorizing

    mathematical formulas for school. To help with this, I've provided the "Tips & Tricks" section of

    this web site. Each section focuses on a specific application. There is no magic "right" or

    "wrong" way to memorize something; the idea is simply to take the information and techniques

    you've already learned and adapt them to the specific problem.

    What you have already learned you can apply to your life right away to help you remember

    things better, but if you are really serious about improving your memory a lot, then I suggeststudying more about memory. In addition to the two other tutorials on this web site which cover

    more advanced memorization techniques, I encourage you to find a book on memory or

    perhaps simply check out a couple of other web sites. You can find some resources on the

    "Enhance" page.

    Practice Makes Perfect!

    But above everything else, I encourage you to practice memorizing things every day. As a

    metaphor, consider this: If someone teaches you how to drive an automobile, and you study

    the car's Owner's Manual carefully, and learn perfectly everything there is to know about

    driving a car, that doesn't mean you can jump in a car and start driving flawlessly in downtown

    New York City! You know what you need to do, but it's awkward at first because you've had no

    practice.

    In the same way, you ought to keep practicing the memory techniques you've learned. Right

    now it still may be taking you some time to think of picture words for things, and you haven'tlearned yet what pictures work better for you than others. Look around your world and find

    things to memorize, such as your cousin's telephone number, your favorite chocolate chip

    http://www.thememorypage.net/tip.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/enh.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/tip.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/enh.htm
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    cookie recipe, the call letters of your local TV stations, the vocabulary words in your school

    science textbook, the few phrases of French you've always wanted to memorize, your license

    plate or driver's license, etc.! Go for it! If you have trouble, don't give up. Say to yourself, "If I

    keep at it, I know there's a way to memorize this, and I'm not going to give up. I will work at it

    until I succeed!"

    To end this tutorial, I would like to give you some more encouragement and motivation to

    practice. Someone from South Africa was boldly going forth to use the memorizing numbers

    technique to memorize telephone numbers, and he wrote to me with some questions. I noticed

    he wasn't doing it perfectly. But who cares! That's how you learn! I was impressed just by his

    motivation to even try to dive into a memory problem like this. The text prefixed with ">" is what

    was written to me; the other text is what I wrote in response. (Note: The telephone number

    given in the person's example and the corresonding picture story has been altered slightly toprotect the person whose phone number it is; the new number represents no one in particular.)

    >Will things like this make more sense to me in the future? Can I

    >safely assume that after using this technique for a while it will

    >become easier and easier?

    Yes, with practice, you'll be able to do it more quickly, and you'll make fewer mistakes, and

    you'll have and idea as to what works and what doesn't.

    > Here in South Africa we have cellphone numbers which go something

    >like this - 082 746 4071. Taking this example I have broken it up

    >into pairs with accompanying letters :

    >

    > 08 - SF Sniff

    > 27 - NK Nike

    > 46 - RJ Rich

    > 40 - RZ Rizlas

    > 71 - CD Card

    You'll want to use different words for the first and the last numbers. The word "Sniff" actually

    forms SNF which is 028. Likewise, card is 741. You could use "Sofa" or "Safe" for 08, and "Cat"

    or "Cod" for 71. "Rizlas" is okay for 40... it actually is 4050, but if you always memorize

    everything in pairs, you'll know it's only two digits, so you'll drop the extra digits.

    >Is the following a good example of remembering the number?

    >"My friend walks into a shop and can Sniff the smell of new Nikes.>Seeing as she is not Rich and only has Rizlas she decides to use a

    >credit Card to buy a pair." -- This seems a bit confusing.

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    Well, that's pretty good for a first try! If it were me, I'd want to emphasize what the key words

    are so I can be sure to pick them out... otherwise I might try to turn words like "Shop" into

    numbers. Of course, much is lost when you try to write down your memory picture in words.

    Actually, you'll be thinking pictures in your head and will be seeing a kind of movie. Also, if you

    use mostly nouns for your picture words and not adjectives or verbs, it's easier to form your

    movie. Usually I use adjectives and use verbs not as part of the picture but only to help link

    things together. This is something that I got only with quite a bit of practice.

    So, as an example, I'll do 08-27-46-40-71. Note that I'm using the words and pictures that work

    best for me; Your own personal experience will be different so different words/pictures will work

    better for you (by the way, isn't that neat? You'll come up with some picture movie unique to

    you that only you can appreciate in a very deep way because it reflects your own personal

    experience/likes/dislikes/ideas/etc!).

    Sofa, Nike, rash, rose, cut. I picture the friend (whose phone number it is -- important, since I

    need to link this person in with the story) entering his house. She opens the door and is

    surprised to find the house empty except for a single SOFA in the middle of the room. Then,

    she notices a very strong, terrible smell! She goes to the sofa, lifts one of the cushions, and

    finds a stinking pair of NIKES underneath (by the way, you might love Nikes as your favorite

    brand, but if you picture Nikes in this way it will be such a vivid picture in your head you'll never

    forget it!!). She drops the cushion down, but then she looks at her hand and sees a large

    RASH because apparently she accidentally touched one of the Nikes and got infected

    somehow. She goes to the bathroom to try to wash her hands, but instead of a bar of soap she

    finds a ROSE flower. She tries to wash her hands with the rose under the faucet, but it doesn't

    seem to work. In fact, in the attempt she scratches her arm with the stem of the rose and gets

    a CUT. (As if the rash on her hand wasn't bad enough!)

    That's a long story, but remember, a picture is 1,000 words, and I'm trying to picture this in mymind. In reality I wouldn't need to write down this story or even tell anyone about it (especially

    not the friend!!). There's a definite sequence of events so it's pretty clear what the order is of

    the five items. Also, there are ordinary elements to the story (the house, the sink, the faucet,

    etc.) and then there's some very unusual elements. Each of my five items is not a normal

    element but an unusual and even surprising element. So I can quickly think back through the

    script of events in my mind: SOFA viewing, NIKE discovery, RASH acquisition, ROSE wash-off-

    the-rash attempt, CUT wash-off-the-rash result. A silly story, but memorable!!

    >Can a person ever get to a point where such 'story telling' is no

    >longer needed and when I hear a number I will be able to commit

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    >it to memory immediately without having to go the picture route?

    Not quite. Yes, you will still need stories for brand new phone numbers, though you might get

    faster with practice. BUT... if you keep recalling someone's phone number over and over again,

    eventually you're going to think of the number directly without having to use the picture movie.

    After this happens, you won't need the picture movie, and the movie will gradually fade away

    (but not the number).

    >Then again I suppose it's better to take a few minutes to recall

    >a number (in this case) instead of not being able to recall it at all.

    Yes, you are right!

    >Also, seeing as I am trying to remember someone else's phone

    >number should I include that person in the image that I create

    >with the number? I suppose there should be some link between

    >the two.

    Yes!

    One more thing: Most likely South Africa has "area codes" similar to the United States. In other

    words, if you are memorizing the phone numbers for 10 different friends, they're probably all

    going to start with "082". In that case, you can just skip the "082" and memorize only the

    unique numbers. You'll be able to guess "082" because probably "082" refers to some

    geographical region, and you know your friend lives in that region, so you can omit it from the

    story. You don't have to, of course, but if you do, you'll have a shorter story that will be faster to

    memorize.

    You certainly seem to be on the right track! Don't give up, and keep practicing, and I'm

    confident you'll do well and perhaps even surprise yourself!

    Sincerely,

    Kevin Jay North

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    1.4 Techniques for Memorizing Lists

    Memorizing Short Lists

    Suppose you're going to the store for groceries and you need the following five items: eggs,bread, bacon, cheese and milk. How can you remember the list? For short lists, the easiest

    way is simply to "link" the words together in a long chain, like this:

    eggs -> bread -> bacon -> cheese -> milk

    Then, think of some animated story in your mind to link the items together. For example,

    imagine walking to the store with a grocery bag in your hand. We start with a grocery bag

    because it's a grocery list -- it would be difficult to jump immediately to eggs. On a street corner

    someone appears from nowhere, hands you an egg then walks off. Dazed, you take the egg

    and drop it in the bag. It cracks and makes a mess. (The mess is a vivid picture in your mind

    that strengthens the picture of "egg" even more.) So by the time the next person comes out of

    nowhere and hands you a loaf ofbread, you don't want to put it in the bag, so you carry it in

    your other hand. You hold it by the tie and it twirls as you walk.

    This is a long story so far, but remember, you're not writing a story on paper, you're just

    thinking of it in your mind, so it goes rather quickly. In fact it often goes so quickly through your

    mind that the added, extra detail is very helpful in remembering later. The more ways you

    experience an object -- if you think of its appearance, its touch, its smell, etc. -- the more likely

    you'll remember it later!

    Suddenly, there's bacon on the sidewalk as you're walking, and it crunches under your feet.

    The grease gets on your shoes. Next there's cheese on the ground, and you walk on it. Yuck!

    Now there's grease and gooey cheese on your shoes. When you get to the store, there's no

    restroom or water fountain, so you, strangely, just take a gallon of milk, open it, and pour it on

    your shoes to clean them! (Don't worry, this is only imagination -- you would never do this in

    real life!)

    Wow, what an exciting finish to the story. Notice that we didn't just put all the grocery items in

    the bag one by one. The instances would be so similar we'd get them mixed up! So a lot of

    variety was used. The story was so fun that, no doubt, you can stop right now, look away from

    this document, think through the story again and remember perfectly the five items. Try it again

    tomorrow morning and see if you still remember!

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    Memorizing Long Lists

    The grocery list was easy, but what about longer lists, such as a list of all of the states of the

    United States? If you forget a word in a middle, the chain is broken and you've lost the rest!

    Also, if you want to remember the 15th state -- useful if you memorized the states in order of

    population or size -- you have to recall the first fourteen. Another way to memorize lists is to

    use what are called"peg words."

    Before we begin, memorize this short list of peg words. Note that they are numbered, and the

    peg word actually does translates into the correct number, so you should be able to form some

    associations right away.

    1. Hat

    2. Hen

    3. Ham

    4. Rye

    5. Hill

    Practice recalling the peg words before continuing.

    Now, let's use the peg words to memorize a list of the five biggest cities in Michigan, in order:

    Detroit, Grand Rapids, Warren, Flint and Lansing. We'll take each of the peg words and place

    them next to each item in the cities list. Next, we'll form some simple paired associations

    between the words. Note that instead of making a huge chain, we are now working with only

    pairs.

    PEG ITEM ASSOCIATION

    1. Hat Detroit Picture large top-hat with Model T cars

    stiched on it in an interesting pattern

    2. Hen Grand Rapids Hen steps into a river, then is quickly

    carried away and gushes through rapids

    3. Ham Warren Ham on platter is given to Warren Beatty

    (movie star), who looks at it oddly

    4. Rye Flint Start with rye bread. Use Flint and

    steel to make spark to burn the bread!

    5. Hill Lansing The hills are alive with the Sound of Music

    (movie)! The whole land begins to sing!!

    After studying the above associations, cover it up, then look at the five peg items by

    themselves. Can you name all five cities on the list? Hopefully, you can. Note that we've solved

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    our problem. Our long chain of items has been changed to a numerical chain, an easy list of 1,

    2, 3, 4, 5. These correspond to a certain peg item, which, after a little practice, you can easily

    name. Finally, we associate simple pairs of words: the peg words with the actual list of items.

    You probably could have done it easily by using the short list method -- I didn't want to give you

    a huge example so fast -- but it's obvious that this method would be very helpful for long lists

    (like the 50 states).

    To memorize longer lists, all you need to do is memorize a basic set ofpeg words, words which

    are derived from their associated numbers directly. Some example words are given below; you

    can also come up with your own. Try to come up with the shortest possible words for your list,

    because many different words can stand for a number, and you want to reduce the number of

    possibilities. (When memorizing numbers that aren't peg words, you can use longer words,

    because in that case, you will only be converting words to numbers, and a word alwaysproduces a unique number.)

    1. Hat 11. Dot 21. Net 31. Mat 41. Road

    2. Hen 12. Town 22. Nun 32. Moon 42. Rain

    3. Ham 13. Dime 23. Name 33. Mummy 43. Room

    4. Rye 14. Tire 24. Nero 34. Mower 44. Aurora

    5. Hill 15. Doll 25. Nail 35. Mule 45. Roll

    6. Shoe 16. Tissue 26. Notch 36. Match 46. Rash

    7. Cow 17. Duck 27. Neck 37. Mug 47. Rock

    8. Ivy 18. Taffy 28. Knife 38. Movie 48. Roof

    9. Bee 19. Tape 29. Knob 39. Map 49. Rope

    10. Toes 20. Nose 30. Mouse 40. Rose 50. Lace

    The peg words method for lists is great for lists of items that must be in a specific order,

    because peg words are tied to specific numbers. Assuming you've previously memorized the

    five peg words, note how easily you can come up with the 4th item -- just go 4... rye... Flint --

    without having to go through items 1 through 3 first. For unordered lists, where the assigned

    number is not important, you could even exchange items in the list to come up with easier

    associations.

    http://www.thememorypage.net/peg.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/peg.htm
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    2.2 Vocabulary and/or Foreign Words

    I received an Email message from someone who got a little confused about how to memorize

    vocabulary words. Actually, it's quite easy. Here's the Email message and my response.

    >Every week I have to take a vocabulary test. Very hard words

    >AND definitions. I cant think of any lists to do which to use

    >pictures for the word AND definition. Any suggestions?

    You do not need to make a list to memorize vocabulary words. All you need to do is make a

    picture for the word, a picture for the definition, then link them together. Example:

    polemic: a verbal attack on a belief or opinion

    You might think of a MICrophone on a long POLE (a pole-mic, even though it's pronounced

    differently), then you might think of it tipping over and falling right on top of a policital candidate

    giving a very passionate speech to a crowd... then the microphone itself starts talking and

    criticizing the politician! That's a very vivid picture that will instantly come to mind during a

    vocabulary test. Try it! You may be slow at first, but with a little practice, you will surprise

    yourself!

    Here's another Email and response.

    >I'm having trouble using mnemonic systems for memorizing foreign words.

    >I've been reading the memory book by lorayne and lucas, and there example

    >works for concrete words, but for abstractions, it's not easy. I try

    >forming ludicrous movies in my heads between the German pronunciation

    >and its meaning in English, but i'm not finding myself all too successful

    >in remembering the meanings of those words. Like sometimes, I can see

    >the movie in my head, but I cant interpret it, since the English

    >meaning is also an abstraction; e.g., words like sorgfltig for meticulously.

    I think you're on the right track. But yes, abstractions are a bit more difficult since you can see

    an object like "chair" but you can't see "meticulously". One way is to think of some stereotype

    for the word. For example, you might think of Pinnochio for "lie" or Abraham Lincoln for

    "honesty".

    If you can't think of a stereotype, you can just pretend the English word is a foreign word. So

    let's work with sorgfltig. I don't know the correct pronunciation, so I'm just going to use Sorg-

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    fall-tig. I might think of "Borg" (from Star Trek) and "fall" (a verb). Now for meticulously. I might

    think of "metal tickle lousy", which kind of sounds like meticulously. Now to put that all into a

    story. A Borg robot creature walks along a plateau top and clumsily walks right over the edge of

    a cliff and falls -- kersplat! -- to the bottom. Someone walks up to it to see if it is dead. He

    touches its metal to tickle it. It moves and laughs, but it does so in a very lousy and

    unconvincing way which would be typical of an emotionless Borg robot creature.

    So, when I start with sorgfltig, I think of the Borg-fall story, and at the end the Borg "metal

    tickle lousy", which reminds me of "meticulously". That's a long way to go, but it works. After

    seeing sorgfltig about 10 times I'll probably start thinking "meticulously" to myself without

    having to recall the whole movie. After about 20 times I'll probably think of the concept of

    "meticulously" without even thinking of the English word to represent it. That is the ultimate

    goal. But the little movie is very helpful at first because you can learn the word quickly withouthaving to run to the dictionary all the time.

    You can think of your own story for sorgfltig that uses the correct pronunciation and that

    works best for you, using objects and pictures that you personally are familiar with.

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    2.6 Acronyms

    Acronyms are a technique for memorizing lists of things. The concept is so simple that I'm sure

    everyone has come across them: for example, ROY G. BIV to remember the colors of the

    rainbow orNever Eat Sour Watermelons to remember the points on a compass. Of course,

    knowing only the first letters of words isn't much of a clue to the words themselves unless you

    already have a good idea as to what they are, so this memory technique isn't as powerful as

    some of the others mentioned in these web pages. But acronyms are so simple that it a

    technique everyone should use, and sometimes it just works out the best.

    In the rest of this document, I present acronyms that I've collected from other sources. In

    addition to providing good examples and ideas, you might learn a few new things easily thanks

    to these acronyms. There's a few non-acronyms in here, but oh well!

    The following text is taken from a November 1994 public BBS message written by Chip

    Edwards.

    I also like acronyms. Like for the classification system (at least the way I learned it in high

    school): King Philip Can Only Find his Green Slippers = Kingdom Phylum Class Order

    Family Genus Species.

    or the classification for humans: Antropology Can Make People Hate Helping the Sick =

    Anamalia Cordata Mamalis Primate Hominidae Homo Sapien.

    My favorite one of all though is to remember the bill of rights. Our history teacher taught it to us

    and it involved a rather heavy-set man who student taught at our school and used to make

    jokes about how heavy he was (his name was Joe Bones). It goes: FATS AS Joe Bones are

    Positavely Stupid which equals Freedoms (SPRAP another acronym for the freedoms =

    Speech Press Religion Assembly Petition), Arms (right to bear), Troops (no more quartering),

    Search (unreasonable search and seasure), Accused (rights of the accused), Speed (right to a

    speedy trial), Jury (right to a jury trial), Bail (no escessive bail/fines or unusual punnishment),

    People (rights not mentioned in the constitution are reserved for the people), and State

    (powers not delegated to the U.S. are reserved for the states). It makes a real easy way to

    remember something that would have been nasty to remember otherwise.

    Here's a couple of acronyms for memorizing the first 20 periodic table elements from Enid and

    Philip Yim:

    Hi! He Lies Because Boron CanNot Oxide Fluoride

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    H He Li Be Bo C N O F

    New Nation Might --- Sign Peace Security Clause

    Ne Na Mg Al Si P S Cl

    A King Can

    Ar K Ca

    It looks as if Aluminum was forgotten, but perhaps you can invent your own word to fit! (One

    word I thought of is "Also".)

    From the column "Gamboling" by Lawrence Gibbs, in the Stillwater (Oklahoma) NewsPress, 19

    Jan 97, 26 Jan 97 and 02 Feb 97. (C) 1997 Stillwater Publishing Company. Used by

    permission.

    Nearly 100 years ago, during our days in grade school, we learned a way to remember the

    names of the Great Lakes.

    Just think ofHOMES -- Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie and Superior.

    Using the word "homes" like that is a mnemonic. Here's another:

    What words are the exceptions to the I before E rule? We were taught a sentence that includes

    all the exceptions. It makes the rule go like this:

    I before E, except after C, with the exceptions of Neither Financier Conceived Either

    Species of Weird Leisure.

    And there's this one: Any word that fits in the blank of this sentence is a preposition: The

    squirrel ran --- the tree. Over, under, after, around, through, etc.

    Trying to explain a mnemonic to someone, we attempted to find it in the dictionary and without

    any luck. We had to call Debbie Hamble at the reference desk at the city library.

    We had tried nemonic and pnemonic and knemonic. What could be left? She called back and

    put us onto the M. In fact, in our lexicons, it's the only word spelled mn. Look in yours.

    Our book says: mnemonic, assisting or intended to assist memory; of or relating to memory; a

    mnemonic device or code. Mnemonics, a technique of improving memory.

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    We have another assignment for you. Send us your favorite or unusual mnemonic. Did you use

    a mnemonic to help you learn something in particular? We'll pass along some of them.

    Post them to Gamboling, c/o NewsPress, Box 2288, Stillwater, 74076.

    In this space last week, we discussed mnemonics -- a tool to aid memory.

    We mentioned HOMES as an example of a way to remember the Great Lakes: Huron, Ontario,

    Michigan, Erie and Superior.

    We also asked you to submit mnemonics you recall from your school days. And we received

    several responses. It seems the spelling of arithmetic and geography was especially difficult

    because they drew the greatest response. Here are a few:

    Bethel Simmons of Stillwater wrote the following:

    I am over 50 and went to school in Kansas and I read with interest your Sunday article on

    mnemonics. I, too, learned the Great Lakes with HOMES. Other spellings that I learned are as

    follows:

    Geography: George Edwards Old Grandma Rode A Pig Home Yesterday.

    Arithmetic: A Rat In The House May Eat The Ice Cream.

    When we learned the provinces in Canada in the fifth grade, we were taught an easy way to

    remember how to spell Saskatchewan, one of the harder to spell, as follows:

    Ask At Chew An with an S in front of it.

    I have always used mnemonics to learn lists of things for different classes or to help me

    remember what I would write in an essay question, etc.

    My I before E rule went like this, but I'm sure you will get many of these:

    I before E except after C or when sounded as A as in neighbor or weigh.

    Dona Cooper recalled from her country school days this help for geography (similar, but

    different): George Edison's Oldest Girl Rode A Pony Home Yesterday.

    And these two from Mken Mbreuninger of Stillwater: George Ellis' Oldest Girl Rode A Pig

    Home Yesterday. And, A Rat In Tom's House Might Eat Tom's Ice Cream.

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    (Not so fast. Go back to that last paragraph. Did you catch the contributor's gag?)

    Mildred Lee of Stillwater also mastered the I-E rule during her days at Stillwater public schools

    with the neighbor and weigh mnemonic.

    Mary Sawyer of Glencoe (thanks for the coverage of the Glencoe United Methodist Women's

    New Year's Day dinner, we served more than 400, the largest ever) wrote to say she had not

    heard of the word mnemomic, but she has used the method.

    Especially this example she sent along. She said she has used it many times ... especially

    since she has been helping her grandchildren choose colors for the rainbows they were

    coloring:

    Roy G. Biv, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet, the colors of the spectrum.

    Then comes this letter from James M. Price, associate professor in the psychology department

    at OSU. We'll pass along his note:

    Here are some that you may have received from a number of people, he writes, since they

    were commonly learned by people in public schools (or other places) a few years back.

    For those who had to deal with the color coding on electronic resistors:

    Bad Boys Rape Our Young Girls, But Violet Gives Willingly for Silver or Gold.

    [KJN Note: Good grief! That's not very nice... but I guess it is memorable, and that is the

    whole point of mnemonics. Well, here's the one I learned that isn't so shocking: Bad Beer

    Rots Our Young Guts But Vodka Goes Well.]

    The capital initials, he writes, are a reminder as to the color codes on a numerical scale (black,

    brown, red, etc.), with silver and gold indicating the tolerance (precision) of the resistor.

    From astronomy, he said, here is one indicating the coding for the age and size of stars: Wow!

    Oh Be A Fine Girl! Kiss Me Right Now, Sweetie.

    Price also included the foil rule for multiplying the individual terms in two binomial quantities,

    like (x+4)(Y+8):

    FOIL -- First terms, Outside, Inside, Last.

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    (Just last evening, Mrs. Gibbs asked about the order of precedence among arithmetical

    operators. Well, Price covered that, too).

    He said it's Eek! My Dear Aunt Sally! (Exponentiation, multiplication, division, addition,

    subtraction.)

    Price concluded by saying such memory aids are fairly common and have been studied by

    psychologists for at least 25 years.

    "I haven't the slightest idea why. Have fun!"

    :

    A Helen Gibbs writes from Oklahoma City to say, "During Bible class last Wednesday, we were

    trying to remember the names of the disciples when Ralph (the Rev. Ralph Ranney of St.

    Stephen's Presbyterian Church) told of learning their names through a mnemonic."

    Mother, we mean, Mrs. Gibbs, went on to recite the aid:

    "This is the way the disciples run

    Peter, Andrew, James and John

    Phillip and Bartholemew

    Thomas next and Matthew, too.

    James the less and Judas the greater

    Simon the zealot and Judas the traitor."

    Dr. Don Cooper said almost every medical school anatomy class he ever heard of used the

    following to remember the eight small bones in the wrist:

    "Never Lower Tilly's Pants, Mother Might Come Home." That helps in recalling navicular,

    lunate, triquetrum, pisiform, greater Multongular, lesser Multongular, capitate and hamate.

    Now that will come in handy.

    He also submitted one to remember all 12 of the cranial nurves and used by almost all medical

    students. Pat Loveland of Stillwater submitted the same one, but with a bit softer wording here

    and there. They read:

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    "An Old Olympus Towering Tops, A Finn And German Viewed Some Hops."

    Remember that sentence and it will be easy to remember the nerves: olfactory, optic,

    oculomotor, trochlear, trigeminal, abducens, facial, acoustic, glassopharyngeal, vagus, spinal

    accessory and hypoglossal.

    And there's no excuse for not knowing the function of each nerve, be it sensory, motor or both.

    Pat said it's a help to remember, "Some say marry money but my brothers say bad

    business marry money." Now you know whether the nerves are S (sensory), M (motor) or B

    (both).

    Pat's mom gave her this one to learn the planets in order according to their distance from the

    sun: "Mercy! Vera Ellen Made Johnnie Sit Under Nine Planks." (Her mom had said Vera

    Ellen was a movie star "before my time.")

    We'll wrap this up with some sent in by students of Martha Olsen:

    David DeWeese, "eat all dead gophers before Easter" (EADGBE, the strings on a guitar).

    Laura Brown, "never eat sour wheat" (points on a compass).

    Stacy Baker and Feather Jim, "Mimal" (the shape of these states makes a person, his name is

    Mimal, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana.)

    Kristin Terrill, "please excuse my dear Aunt Sally," (a mnemonic device applied in pre-

    algebra which my teacher says is the most important rule you can learn, to get you going:

    parenthesis, exponents, multiplication, division, addition and subtraction."

    And with that we'll bid farewell to mnemonics.

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    3.2 Do I Read Too Slowly?

    This question does not relate directly to memory, but it is an important question not only

    because people often want to memorize what they are reading while they are reading it, but

    also because of fantastic claims from people who say they can teach you to read thousands of

    words per minute - i.e., Speed Reading. Therefore, I've included this document. I have no

    doubt that one could devote a whole web site to this topic, and I don't want to detract from the

    theme of memory improvement, so if you want to explore this subject further I invite you to

    search the web on the subject of Speed Reading or check your local library for books that exist

    on this subject.

    Personally, I haven't had time to study the subject a lot myself. Nevertheless, I've included my

    own opinion on the subject below, which is based on logic and my own personal experience.

    But to give a more balanced, fair view of this subject, I've also included the opinions of two

    others.

    My Personal Opinion

    Do I (the main author of the Memory Page) read too slowly? When I compare myself to others,

    yes, I probably am "below average." But is this good or bad? I can think of two possible

    conclusions:

    1. God made me a slower learner than other people, so I should continue to read as I have

    been doing and not be intimidated by peer pressure or other outside forces that want be

    to believe that I am not reading fast enough.

    2. I really am reading slow because I am not reading properly or efficiently. There must

    exist some techniques that I don't know about for better reading that I should find and

    put into practice.

    Either one could be true, or the answer could be a little of both. As of now, I guess I lean

    toward possibility #1, because I am a perfectionist and this probably affects my learning style. I

    like to understand things, so it is not enough that I just read something and accept it as true; I

    feel better (and I retain a TON more) if I understand why something is true. I also tend to

    "overlearn": this means I learn more than what I need to know, which forces me to think about

    much more those things that do I need to know (and to apply them), which causes me to retain

    more.

    I am not sure if what I am doing is "right" ... but it does seem to be working for me, and I am

    getting A's. My undergraduate GPA was 3.88 and my graduate GPA was 4.00. I wonder if the

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    speed-readers do this well. But it's also possible that my high GPA is more a factor of my

    intelligence rather than my reading technique; it's also possible that my reading technique

    does work but there is a different technique that could cause me to achieve the same success

    but in less time.

    The bottom line: it is notan easy picture. Oh, well, I'll just do the best I can. Really, the onlytime I feel bad is when I'm comparing myself with someone else; if I just forget everyone else

    and focus only on myself, then I enjoy reading, even if I am slow, and I don't feel bad about it

    or intimidated. Maybe this is the secret. It still may be true that I couldbe reading faster, but

    there isn't much I can do about it at the moment... if someday someone explains to be a better

    method, I will be very happy and I will accept that as an amazing gift; in the meantime, I will

    just accept the status quo.

    I guess that's true with my memory stuff. Until I learned the memory techniques, I really wasn't

    that unhappy. Maybe I got a little frustrated at times for forgetting things or for spending such a

    long time to learn stuff for a test, but I just accepted it as part of life. And really, there wasn't

    anything more I could do at the time. Then I discovered the memory techniques, and it was

    really a great gift to me.

    Greg A. Chulsky sent me the following Email on the subject of Speed Reading:

    "Without trying to sell anything, I will tell people that their reading speed can be doubled in 20

    minutes (though this might only work temporarily and require high concentration) and

    permanently within a few days. The problem, for most people, is that they cannot read without

    saying what they are reading to themselves; they have to hear what they are reading. The

    average person can talk at 200-300 words per minute comfortably, but the average eye can

    catch 1800-2000 WORDS PER MINUTE! You can try to read without talking, but this will be

    difficult and require high concentration. The way to make this permanent is, whenever you

    read, deliberately say it to yourself and force yourself to read slower than you can. In my

    experiences, the brain rebelled and the talking vanished completely.

    "Another interesting exercise is, try running your finger down the middle of a page, at a speed

    faster than what you believe is a possible reading speed. Follow your finger with your eyes,

    keeping them over the center of the printed lines. Speed your finger up until you are spending

    2 seconds per page, and then you will realize that although all you saw at first was a blur, youend up picking up quite a few words!

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    "Oh, and one more thing! Most languages have some redundant words (in the case of English,

    the, and, or, and many others). You can therefore start reading not quite from the beginning of

    each line, and jump to the next line a bit before the end. This will further improve reading

    speed."

    Ed Shanahan's View on Speed Reading

    Ed Shanahan is the copy editor of Brill's Content Magazine. He tried out Howard Stephen

    Berg's "Mega Speed Reading" product and published his comments in the magazine in June

    1999 (page 98) as a sidebar to a main article titled "King of the Pitch", which focuses on Kevin

    Trudeau, the person who developed and sold the entire "Mega" series.

    I can't reproduce the entire sidebar here, lest I violate the magazine's copyright, but the basic

    verdict from Mr. Shanahan is, "Four hours, one videotape, and six audiotapes later, I'm stuck at

    my pathetic 420-words-a-minute rate, well below the 25,000 words a minute Berg claims to

    devour using his 'revolutionary techniques'."

    http://www.brillscontent.com/http://www.brillscontent.com/
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    3.1 Introduction and Motivation

    Memorizing Bible Verses Etc.

    A Tutorial by Kevin Jay North, 3 January 1998

    Introduction

    Most of the other documents on these Web pages relate to memorizing things by creating

    pictures in your mind. This is because for most people vision is the strongest, most vivid of the

    senses. However, sometimes memorizing by sound is more effective -- it all depends on what

    it is you are trying to memorize. Facts, names, numbers and such are best memorized via

    pictures, but if you are trying to memorize a chapter of the Bible (or other book) word for word,

    it would take forever to form a picture in your mind for every single word and then try to link it

    all together. Instead, sound is better.

    In this document I'll teach you techniques for memorizing things by sound which I've mainly

    learned from my own experience. Also, since with Bible verses it's often important to remember

    the reference, I'll suggest one (pictorial) technique for remembering references.

    Motivation

    I will focus mainly on the Bible in this document, but the techniques described here certainly

    are not limited to the Bible, nor do you need to be a Christian to be able to take advantage of

    them. But why take the time to memorize stuff word-for-word? After all, you're not going to be

    asked in a game of Trivial Pursuit to quote something exactly, and you don't want to memorize

    something just to impress your friends. Well, I suppose the answer may not be the same for all

    people, but for me, it is wonderful to have wise and truthful words available to me at any time,

    wherever I'm at. As an example, let's consider a couple of quotations:

    "The mind is its own place, and in itself

    can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven." -- Milton

    "Most folks are about as happy as they make up

    their minds to be." -- Abraham Lincoln

    These quotes can be of great personal help to me if I'm depressed or upset about something.

    The quotes essentially state the truth that, to a large extent, happiness is a choice -- your own

    choice. I believe this truth, but when I am mad or depressed and full of emotion, my emotions

    seem to take me over and suddenly my mind is casting doubt on that truth. I feel trapped in

    misery! But I can fight back these emotions by reminding myself of strong evidence for

    whatever it is that I'm doubting.

    http://www.thememorypage.net/http://www.gospelcom.net/bible/http://www.thememorypage.net/http://www.gospelcom.net/bible/
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    And what is better evidence than exact quotations from famous people who have been through

    the tough times before or the timeless truthful verses of the Bible? When I start thinking the

    exact words, I re-establish my certainty of the truth I was believing in, and I can pull myself out

    of a situation. This doesn't mean that I instantly feel better, but if I simply know that what I

    believe in is still true -- and it's just my emotions messing with my mind -- this gives me a

    sense of peace and confidence to move on.

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    3.2 Three Techniques

    Music

    Whether pictures or sounds, repetition can be used to remember something. But repetition

    alone is somewhat tedious and error-prone. Pictures can be enhanced by imagining the picturein vivid detail or by making it strange or humorous. How can sound be enhanced? By music.

    (Note: If you're not good at music, don't worry; I'll be explaining other ways to memorize

    sounds later in this tutorial.)

    It may take a lot of effort to memorize the U.S. Pledge of Allegience or a chapter from the

    Bible, but you probably know all the words to your favorite song on the radio without your even

    having to spend any effort at it! Songs are so rhythmic and so much fun that memorization

    comes easy.

    Just like one can create pictures in the mind to memorize something, you can also create

    songs in the mind. And once again, it may seem silly, but it works! I've come up with my own

    songs to memorize Psalm 117 and 1 Corinthians 10:13. I don't have to share the songs with

    anyone, but for me, it's a terrific way to remember the verses word-for-word exactly. Just try to

    invent your own tune... or attempt to fit the words you want to memorize to an existing tune.

    The only problem is that inventing a song is much more difficult than enhancing a picture. The

    song has to sound good, otherwise you won't remember it. Also, the more words there are, the

    harder it is to make a good, unified song. (Psalm 117 was easy because it's the shortest

    Psalm.) On the other hand, I think you can actually go to a Christian bookstore and find

    cassettes of verses which someone has set to music specifically for the purpose of memory... if

    you can find something like this, go for it!

    Tape Recorder

    Is there a movie that you've watched 10 times? If so, chances are you know a lot of the lines

    by heart, especially the memorable ones. Because of repetition, your brain has remembered

    the sounds. And it works better than just saying something out loud 10 times, because it's

    someone else speaking, and they have an interesting voice, and they say the lines in a certain

    way. And you hear the lines in exactly the same way every time because the recording

    reproduces the sounds exactly.

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    Well, if it works for movies, why not take advantage of this approach to memorize something?

    Just get a tape recorder and record the Bible (or other) passage that you want to memorize,

    then play it back a bunch of times. It may get boring if you listen to it 10 times in a row, but you

    can do it once a day instead.

    In my own experienced I've discovered that after using this method I can almost get a Biblepassage exactly right. But I still get stuck. So then I use traditional repetition to "fill in the gaps."

    But it goes a lot quicker because large phrases are already burned in the mind... it's just a

    matter of stringing it all together.

    The Secret Repetition Method

    My biggest problem is time. Even the tape recorder method still takes time and effort to set up

    the recording and then to find suitable periodic time slots to listen to it. Arrrgh! I imagine many

    of you are in the same boat... always 50,000 things to do in a day. So when in the world are we

    ever going to find time to memorize whole chapters from the Bible?

    I have found a really neat idea. I write out a whole chapter from the Bible on a small card that

    will fit in my wallet. Or, alternatively, I can access my Bible on the computer and print it out on

    my printer with the smallest font. In any case, I make a card that I can take with me at all times.

    Then... I wait for an opportunity. I wait for some moment in which I'm alone and just waiting for

    something, such as waiting in line. Then I pull out my card and start memorizing what is on it.

    Even though I'm busy-busy-busy and want to use my time most efficiently, I don't have to feel

    guilty about memorizing at a time like this because I can't do anything else anyway.

    The only problem is that you can't read aloud from the card over and over again while other

    people are around -- they'll think you're crazy! Instead, I glance at the card and read the firstsentence or other suitable sentence fragment that I can keep in my head all at once. Then I put

    the card away and silently repeat the sentence over and over again in my mind. It's really not

    very hard at all... and I can be looking around at other things, smiling at people, etc. ... and all

    the while gently repeating the sentence in the back of my mind. After I've repeated it about

    thirty times, I glance at the card again for the next sentence, then put it back again.

    What a terrific method! You'll soon find there are lots of occasions in which you might be able

    to memorize Bible verses at, including:

    Waiting in line at grocery store

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    Waiting for movie to start

    Driving in car

    Taking a walk

    Lifting weights or doing other exercises

    Etc.

    I even used the method while at a 3-day trade show in Chicago. Each day involved so much

    waiting and standing! But while standing there smiling and waiting for the next person to walk

    by, I was mentally rehearsing the next Bible verse from a memory card. So I had great fun

    during the trade show, and everyone thought I was so happy and patient, and no one knew I

    memorized all of 2 Corinthians chapters 4 and 5 during the show!

    My biggest desire is for time, and I've managed to find a way to utilize very long chunks of

    previously wasted time. And there's so much time available that there's no problem in using

    plain old repetition to memorize the verses. It may seem slow... like 5 minutes a verse, but if

    you are, for example, spending an hour in the car once a week, you'd probably be able to

    memorize a whole chapter in a month. Now that's pretty amazing! At that rate you could

    memorize the entire New Testament in only 22 years!

    During the long sessions my emphasis is on sheer quantity. I've found it too difficult to

    concentrate on getting the sequence of all of the verses perfectly, especially since that would

    involve looking at the card too much, so I just focus on sheer repetition. It's probably better to

    memorize a verse far more than necessary -- perhaps 60 times -- to pound it into memory

    permanently than to worry about how it all strings together. At some later time when I'm alone

    and can think more clearly I can do a quick review to get the sequence right and to refresh my

    memory on the verses. But this session tends to go very quickly because as soon as I start on

    a verse, the rest of the verse just mechanically comes right out!

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    3.3 Memorizing Bible References

    I've been memorizing whole chapters of the Bible, but it's also very helpful to memorize

    assorted key verses, such as John 3:16. The sound techniques will work great for memorizing

    the words, but not for the reference. More cryptic numbers!! But if you have read "How to

    Improve Your Memory," then you will have learned a great technique formemorizing numbers.

    All you need to do, then, is to expand the system a little bit so you can keep the chapter

    number and verse number straight and also memorize the correct book with it.

    There are many ways to do this, and people have apparently written books about it, but I would

    encourage you to invent a system on your own... something that works best for you. There is

    no right or wrong way! Some may work better than others, though. I'll now describe my own

    method. Feel free to use it, adapt it, or whatever. Currently, my method only covers the New

    Testament.

    The most obvious approach is to come up with a picture for each book of the New Testament.

    Then you can link the book picture with a picture for the chapter and then a picture for the

    verse. The only disadvantage with this is that you're re-using pictures over and over again, and

    soon you might be saying to yourself, "was that sword-ham-tissue or sword-hen-tire?" The

    mnemonic alphabet is nice because you can use different words for the same number (e.g.,

    rake, rock, Rick, rag, rook for 47). You can deliberately choose different words to avoid

    confusion. So my approach attempts to use this same productivity with the books.

    I've assigned a different letter of the alphabet for each book. There are only 26 letters in the

    English alphabet and there are 27 books, so it's a little bit tricky. But I noticed that Philemon, 2

    John, 3 John and Jude only have one chapter each. So I created a new book from each of

    these in which each chapter is one book (Chapter 1 is Philemon, Chapter 2 is 2 John, Chapter

    3 is 3 John and Chapter 4 is Jude). In the list below this book is marked with a star (*). I've also

    included a memory aid for each letter, but you don't have to use the aid I've provided... you canuse the aid that works best for you, and you can even re-assign the letters if you find

    something more comfortable for you.

    Letter Book Memory Aid

    A Acts (A)cts

    B 2 Thess "Beta" character in German represents "SS"

    C Col (C)olossians

    D 2 Peter "Deux Peter" (deux is 2 in French)

    E Eph (E)phesians

    F * The (F)unny Book

    http://www.thememorypage.net/htiym.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/htiym.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/htiym3.htm#numbershttp://www.thememorypage.net/htiym.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/htiym.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/htiym3.htm#numbers
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    G Gal (G)alatians

    H Heb (H)ebrews

    I Phil Phil(I)ppians

    J John (J)ohn

    K Mark Mar(K)

    L Luke (L)uke

    M Matthew (M)atthew

    N 2 Tim "Hen Timothy" (hen = N = 2 in mnemonic alphabet)

    O --- (not used)

    P 1 Peter 1 (P)eter

    Q --- (not used)

    R Romans (R)omans

    S 1 Thes 1 The(S)salonians

    T 1 Tim 1 (T)imothy

    U Titus Tit(U)s

    V Rev Re(V)elation

    W 1 John 1 John sounds like "(W)un jon"

    X 1 Cor X in Greek is chi (pron. KI), so think "chi-rinthians"

    Y 2 Cor Y comes after X

    Z James James sounds like "jam(Z)"With a single letter for each book, you can now write references in a very compact format. It's

    not as easy to read, but it's much easier to memorize, as you'll soon see. Just write the letter

    for the book, then the chapter, then the verse, but always use two digits for the verse. If you

    want an entire chapter, omit the verse. (So 1-2 digits represents a chapter and 3-4 digits

    represents a chapterand a verse.) Examples:

    Traditional Compact

    John 3:16 J3161 Cor 10:13 X1013

    Mark 2:5 K205

    Titus 2:1 U201

    2 John 6 F206

    Jude 25 F425

    Matthew 6:9-13 M609-13

    Acts 4 A4

    To memorize the compact notation, use the same method as for memorizing numbers except

    make sure the first letter of the first word you use is the same as the first letter of the compact

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    notation. In the case of X, you can find a word that begins with "ox" because the letter O is not

    used. Examples:

    Reference Memory Pictures

    J316 jam + dish

    X1013 oxide + Saddam (Hussein)

    K205 Ken + soul

    U201 unseat

    F206 fan + sash

    F425 fur + nail

    M609-13 match + speedometer (ignore extra consonants)

    A4 air

    Now all you have to do is link the pictures with the verse. That's a little tricky because the verse

    is by sound and the reference is by picture. But you can think of some image in your mind to

    go with the verse. Also, you ought to decide whether the verse picture should come first and

    then the reference pictures or the other way around. For most people, you'd want the verse

    picture first because you want to know where to find a verse when it comes to mind. But if you

    like to think of the words when you see only the reference, you may want to memorize the

    verse pictures first. Of course, you can always go backwards in your memory when necessary,

    but it's more difficult. Anyway, here's some examples:

    "For God so loved the world..."--> Think of God loving the world by taking the earth in his armsand squeezing it to give it a big hug. Then he takes some red JAM (perhaps representing

    Christ's blood?) and rubs it on the top of the earth. Then he puts the DISH on top of that and it

    sticks in place as sort of a hat. Strange way to love the world! But it's only a picture to help you

    remember the verse. Later on, you can think of JAM-DISH to come up with J316 which means

    John 3:16!

    "... but will with the temptation also make a way to escape ..." --> Think of being alone in a

    room wherein there is nothing except you, a table and a huge dessert (the temptation). Godopens the room door so you can escape. You walk out the door, then close it, and you find that

    it's rusty so you got some iron OXIDE on your hand. Then you walk forward but find that

    SADDAM Hussein is blocking you in the hallway! Perhaps you can escape by turning around

    and running down the hallway in the opposite direction. There's a lot of details! How do you

    know which ones are the key words? Well, usually they're the ones that are the most unusual

    (the table and hallway are normal, the iron oxide and Saddam Hussein are unusual).

    I hope this document has been helpful to you. Happy remembering!

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    1.6 Numbers in Spanish

    I received an Email from someone who enjoyed my tips on memorizing numbers but was

    wondering how he could do it in Spanish, his native language, instead of English. Here is a

    quotation from the original Email and my response.

    >I was reading part of the techniques use to memorize the

    >words and numbers and it sound very interesting. My question

    >is How is it can be applied to a different language as Spanish?

    >and if it is possible which words should I use as a Key words.?

    I assume you're referring to memorizing numbers and using peg words.

    First, you know that letters are assigned to the digits 0 through 9. But note also that these are

    by sound, not by spelling. Just survey the sounds, and make sure there is a corresponding

    sound in Spanish. If there isn't, you may have to change one or more of the entries so the table

    has all Spanish word sounds. It doesn't matter if you customize the table for your own personal

    use.

    After that, it works the same way. Let me think of a Spanish word: Senior. That's pronounced

    SEEN-YOUR, I think. So in the English version of the table, the numerical value is 024.

    To make your own peg words: Just think of words that have numerical values of 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,

    6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, etc. There's always more than one possible word. But you choose

    one and stick with it. As an example, the Spanish word "Aqua" (pronounced AHG-WA, I think),

    has the numerical value of 7. So that would be a good peg word for 7. "Fuego", I think, would

    be a good peg word for 87.

    http://www.thememorypage.net/htiym3.htm#numbershttp://www.thememorypage.net/peg.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/htiym3.htm#numbershttp://www.thememorypage.net/peg.htm
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    1.9 Playing Cards

    It takes a bit of work and practice, but you can memorize playing cards. Instead of trying to

    remember "7 of spades," which is largely numerical; a picture "peg word" is assigned to the

    card -- and all other cards -- thus making the card easier to remember. For example, if "comb"

    is the peg word for "7 of spades," and your partner has played that card and you want to

    remember it, it's a lot easier to remember a gigantic comb tapping your partner on the head

    than it is to remember "7" and "spades". Also, once you have assigned peg words to all of the

    playing cards and have practiced a bit, you can play some very interesting memory games and

    impress your friends!

    Let's now discuss how we can assign peg words to the 52 playing cards in a standard deck.

    Before we begin, first you should be familiar with peg words: what they are used for, how peg

    words are assigned to numbers, etc. If you are not familiar with peg words, please look at the"Peg Words Tutorial" first!

    If peg words can be assigned to the numbers 0 to 99, then it follows that we can assign peg

    words to other things, like each card in a standard deck. There are different ways to do this,

    and you don't need to feel that you have to do it a certain way. One book that I read uses a

    special, distinct set of 52 new peg words, something like H2 = Hen = 2 of hearts, H3 = Ham = 3

    of hearts, H4 = Hair = 4 of hearts, etc. There are advantages to this method, but to make

    things a bit easier, rather than have you memorize 52 more brand-new peg words, it's possible

    to use a bunch of the peg words you may have already memorized for 0 to 99. First we choose

    a digit for each of the four suits:

    1 = spade (because a spade has one point)

    2 = heart (because a heart has two halves)

    3 = club (because a club has three leaves)

    4 = diamond (because a diamond has four points)Next, for the cards 2 through 9 of each suit, we can just use that digit for the card and combine

    it with the digit for the suit. I put the card value first, then the suit, because in English you say

    something like "three of hearts", with the value first and the suit next. (Some systems put the

    suit first, then the value, which helps keep all of the cards in one suit together, but the

    disadvantage is that you have to reverse things in your mind.) For 2 of hearts I use 22, for 3 of

    hearts I use 32, for four of hearts I use 42, etc. When I get past 9, here's what I use:

    10 = 0

    Jack = 1

    Queen = blank (use the single-digit peg words)

    http://www.thememorypage.net/cardtrik.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/peg.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/cardtrik.htmhttp://www.thememorypage.net/peg.htm
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    King = use NEW peg words: pad, cart, closet, king

    Ace = use pictures of the actual suits (spade, heart, club, diamond)

    To clarify: The numbers 1 to 4 have different peg words than 01 to 04, so I use the single digits

    for Queen and the "zero" numbers for 10. After that, there aren't any peg words left ending with

    1 to 4, so I invented four new peg words for King, and I used the actual words "spade," "heart,"

    "club," and "diamond" for Ace. Originally I used 1 for Ace, but I found it easier to use 1 for Jack

    because the letter J looks like the number 1 and because the aces have very large pictures of

    the suit on them. But you can use whatever works best for you!

    Putting it all together, here is my list of 52 playing card peg words:

    2 spades = 21 = net

    3 spades = 31 = mat

    4 spades = 41 = road

    5 spades = 51 = light

    6 spades = 61 = sheet

    7 spades = 71 = cat

    8 spades = 81 = fat

    9 spades = 91 = bat

    10 spades = 01 = seed

    J spades = 11 = dot

    Q spades = _1 = hat

    K spades = pad

    A spades = spade

    2 hearts = 22 = nun

    3 hearts = 32 = moon

    4 hearts = 42 = rain

    5 hearts = 52 = lion

    6 hearts = 62 = chain

    7 hearts = 72 = can

    8 hearts = 82 = fan

    9 hearts = 92 = pen

    10 hearts = 02 = sun

    J hearts = 12 = town

    Q hearts = _2 = henK hearts = cart

    A hearts = heart

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    2 clubs = 23 = name

    3 clubs = 33 = mummy

    4 clubs = 43 = room

    5 clubs = 53 = lime

    6 clubs = 63 = jam

    7 clubs = 73 = comb

    8 clubs =


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