How to Remember Anything: The Proven Total Memory Retention System (33 page)

BOOK: How to Remember Anything: The Proven Total Memory Retention System
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In location 5, see one cup of tea with baking soda floating in it (1 teaspoon baking soda).
In location 6, see three tables with melted butter all over them (three tablespoons of melted butter)
In location 7, see one cup of buttermilk, and beside it one tree with a cup of buttermilk in it (1
1/3
cups buttermilk).
In location 8 see a large egg.
1.
Preheat the oven to 425°F.
Memory technique: in the next room, at location 1, see an
oven
with
rooms
in it! (Oven set at 430°.)
2.
Butter an 8-inch square
baking pan;
set it aside.
Memory technique: in location 2, see an 8-inch square baking pan with butter in it standing on its side. (Butter an 8-inch square
baking pan;
set it aside.)
3.
In a bowl, stir together the flour, cornmeal, sugar,
baking
powder, and baking soda.
Memory technique: in location 3, see a bowl with an electric mixer in it. It is stirring the contents of locations 1 through 5 from the previous room in it. (In a bowl, stir together flour, cornmeal, sugar,
baking
powder, and baking soda.)
4.
In a
small bowl,
stir together butter and buttermilk with an electric mixer at low speed. Beat in egg.
Memory technique: in location 4, see a
small bowl
with an electric mixer in it. It is stirring the butter and buttermilk, then the egg (the contents of locations 6,7, and 8 in the previous room). (In a
small bowl,
stir together butter and buttermilk with an electric mixer at low speed. Beat in egg.)
5.
Mix all ingredients and stir only until combined.
Memory technique: in location 5, see a huge bowl with all the ingredients mixed together.
6.
Pour batter into prepared
pan
and bake for 30 minutes or until golden-brown.
Memory technique: at location 6, see the batter in the prepared
pan
in the oven with a
moose
standing guard outside until it turns golden brown. (Pour batter into prepared
pan
and bake for 30 minutes or until golden-brown.)
8.
Let’s suggest that you eat out often. You may have visited the same restaurants for several years and have been served by the same servers, but you don’t know their names. That may be because, until now, you did not realize that you could. Start today to make a point of remembering the names of your waiters. You will be amazed with your success and even more amazed with the remarkably better service you receive. As an added memory exercise, you may wish to start a mental link of the names of the waiters whose names you learn at each restaurant.
9.
To remember the names and times of TV shows, first make a list of the programs of interest to you for the seven days of the week. Change the name of each day of the week to an audionym.
 
Monday becomes
moon
Tuesday becomes
tooth
Wednesday becomes
wedding
Thursday becomes
thirsty
(glass of water)
Friday becomes
fried egg
Saturday becomes
Saturn
(the planet)
Sunday becomes
sun
 
Use seven rooms—one for each day of the week—and see each of the seven audionyms at the ceiling of each of the seven rooms.
You can then mentally store nine programs for each of the seven days of the week:
a.
Change the name of the first program to an audionym and see it in location in the appropriate room.
b.
Convert the number of the channel to a Code Word and link it to the audionym for the name of the program.
c.
Convert the time of the program to a Code Word and link it to the Code Word for the channel.
Repeat a, b, and c, for the time and channel of any program on any day of the week.
10.
To know the number of calories in food items, make a list of ten foods. Visualize each food item. There is no need to create an audionym for the food items because they are objects you can see.
Look up the caloric content of each item. Change the number of calories in each food item to a Code Word using the Number Code. Associate the Code Word (illogically) with the food item.
After you learn the number of calories in the ten food items, repeat the process with ten more foods at a time. It is quite easy to learn the number of calories in any number of foods.

Other DEAN VAUGHN Memory Products

The Vaughn Cube Jor Music Theory

The Vaughn Cube for World Geography

How to Master the Art of Public Speaking and Speech Communication

The Vaughn Cube for Addition/Subtraction

The Vaughn Cube for Multiplication/Division

The Vaughn Cube for Plane and Solid Geometry Formulas

How to Learn and Remember the Periodic Table

Instant Spanish—Conversational Spanish Course
(CD-ROM)

How to Learn and Remember 1000 Spanish Vocabulary Words

How to Tell Time

U.S. Memory Map Puzzle

How to Learn and Remember the Books of the Bible

Latin and Greek for English Vocabulary and SAT Verbal Mastery

 

Academic and business site licenses for the following
Dean Vaughn Total Retention Courses are available
exclusively through DCM Instructional Systems,
a division of DCM Systems, Incorporated:

Medical Terminology 350

Basic Human Anatomy

Dental Terminology, Anatomy, and Physiology

 

For more information or a free video demo, please visit

www.deanvaughn.com
.

Key Word Dictionary: 1,000 Key Words

On the following pages are 1,000 Key Words. The Key Words are used to
remember the numbers 0 through 999. There is no need to memorize the Code Words. Just use this dictionary when you need to remember any number between 0 and 999.

 

 

 0 
 ice, hose, sea 
 1 
 tie, toe, tea, hat 
 2 
 Noah, knee, hen 
 3 
 Ma, mow, ham 
 4 
 row, rye, oar, hair 
 5 
 oil, whale, heel 
 6 
 shoe, show, hash 
 7 
 key, cow, hook 
 8 
 fee, foe, hoof 
 9 
 pie, pea, hoop 
 10 
 toes, ties, hats 
 11 
 tote (bag), tot, toad 
 12 
 tuna, tin, teen 
 13 
 team, tam, tomb 
 14 
 tire, tear, tour, water 
 15 
 tail, tool, towel 
 16 
 dish, dash, ditch 
 17 
 tack, teak, duck 
 18 
 TV, taffy, dove 
 19 
 top, tip, teepee, tub 
 20 
 nose, niece, anis 
 21 
 net, knit, knot 
 22 
 nanny, nun, noon 
 23 
 name (plate) 
 24 
 new oar, Nero 
 25 
 nail, knoll, Nile 
 26 
 notch, new shoe, wench 
 27 
 new key, neck 
 28 
 knife, Navy 
 29 
 knob, nap (a bed) 
 30 
 moose, mice, maze 
 31 
 meat, mat, mud 
 32 
 moon, man, money 
 33 
 Mom, mummy 
 34 
 mower, mare 
 35 
 mail, mule, meal 
 36 
 match, mush 
 37 
 mike, mug 
 38 
 muff, movie 
 39 
 map, mop 
 40 
 rose, rice, race 
 41 
 rat, root, wreath 
 42 
 rain, run, wren 
 43 
 ram, room, ream 
 44 
 rower, rear 
 45 
 rail, reel, roll, rule 
 46 
 roach, rash 
 47 
 rock, rug, rag 
 48 
 roof, reef 
 49 
 rope, robe 
 50 
 lasso, lace 
 51 
 light, lot, loot, lead 
 52 
 lion, line 
 53 
 lime, loom 
 54 
 lure, lair 
 55 
 lily, lolli(pop) 
 56 
 leash, latch 
 57 
 lake, leek, lock 
 58 
 leaf, loaf 
 59 
 lip, loop, lab 
 60 
 cheese, chess, juice 
 61 
 chute, sheet, shot 
 62 
 chain, chin 
 63 
 chime, jam, gem 
 64 
 chair, cherry, jar 
 65 
 shell, chili, jelly 
 66 
 choo-choo, judge 
 67 
 chalk, cheek, jack, check 
 68 
 chef, chief, chive 
 69 
 chip, ship, sheep 
 70 
 case, keys, gas 
 71 
 coat, kit, cot, cat 
 72 
 cone, can, cane 
 73 
 comb, game, cam 
 74 
 car, core, gear 
 75 
 coal, claw, gill 
 76 
 cash, quiche 
 77 
 cake, Coke 
 78 
 cuff, cave, cove 
 79 
 cap, cup, cape 
 80 
 face, fuse, fez 
 81 
 foot, food, vat 
 82 
 phone, fan, fin 
 83 
 foam, fume 
 84 
 fur, fire, fair 
 85 
 file, foil, fly 
 86 
 fish, fudge 
 87 
 fog, fig, vac 
 88 
 fife 
 89 
 fob 
 90 
 pies, peas, bus 
 91 
 bait, beet, boat, bat 
 92 
 pane, pine, pin 
 93 
 pom-(pom), beam 
 94 
 pear, pier, bear 
 95 
 pale, pill, poll, pool 
 96 
 peach, bush 
 97 
 peak, book, bike 
 98 
 puff, beef 
 99 
 pipe, peep, pop, bib 
BOOK: How to Remember Anything: The Proven Total Memory Retention System
5.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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