Unlimited Memory: How to Use Advanced Learning Strategies to Learn Faster, Remember More and be More Productive (Mental Mastery, #1)
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One represents the t or d sound:
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Two is the n sound:
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Three is the m sound:
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Four is the r sound:
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Five is the l sound:
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Six is the j, sh, soft ch, or soft g sound:
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Seven is the k and hard c sound:
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Eight is the f or v sound:
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Nine is b or p, which look like the mirror and upside-down image of nine:
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Great presenters know that audiences tend to remember: F—First things L—Last things O—Outstanding information O—Own links R—Repeated information
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familiarity breeds forgetfulness. We often perform our routines in an “autopilot” state and don’t attend to what we are doing.
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With all our technology and systems we should be more at peace, but we seem busier and more stressed than ever.
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We live in an activity illusion and keep our minds full of “busy-ness”—no wonder we are absentminded.
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If you choose to believe that you can’t grow beyond your current limits you will live a limited life. Would you rather put in the effort to learn and master the world’s most effective memory strategies, or keep struggling with outdated methods of studying and trying to remember information ineffectively?
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