Stage 1, Day 16,
I gender-identify as Oprah.
Still singing, and getting marginally better. Received my two books in the mail; excited to begin reading them, but I'd like to finish 'Rhetoric' before I give it a look.
Still working on the Superlearner exercises; creating images and grouping them together. This plays into my pMemory training, but this program is much more optimistic about the speed in which you can create and link images.
pMemory states that you must hold two objects together for 6 seconds MINIMUM, as well as have base-images - which host images - as well as connect these base images. There is also a standardized list of images for numbers from 00 to 99, for months, and days of the week. Each concept or name must have its own image.
Superlearner states that you can condition your brain to put out greater numbers of detailed images, as long as you practice. This can allow you to create 1-2 images per second, with 4 details per image. This amounts to 60-120 details of a book per minute, or 3600-7200 images per hour of constant reading. Additionally, your ability to recall and decode these images increase with practice.
I no longer give a shit at work, yet I am still as productive; nothing throws me off anyone, and my manager, despite a little mad (crazy), respects me.
I gender-identify as Oprah.
Still singing, and getting marginally better. Received my two books in the mail; excited to begin reading them, but I'd like to finish 'Rhetoric' before I give it a look.
Still working on the Superlearner exercises; creating images and grouping them together. This plays into my pMemory training, but this program is much more optimistic about the speed in which you can create and link images.
pMemory states that you must hold two objects together for 6 seconds MINIMUM, as well as have base-images - which host images - as well as connect these base images. There is also a standardized list of images for numbers from 00 to 99, for months, and days of the week. Each concept or name must have its own image.
Superlearner states that you can condition your brain to put out greater numbers of detailed images, as long as you practice. This can allow you to create 1-2 images per second, with 4 details per image. This amounts to 60-120 details of a book per minute, or 3600-7200 images per hour of constant reading. Additionally, your ability to recall and decode these images increase with practice.
I no longer give a shit at work, yet I am still as productive; nothing throws me off anyone, and my manager, despite a little mad (crazy), respects me.
UMS v2 Journal (current) || Overcoming Fear 5.75G Journal