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Book Blaster Issue 1
Here's some feedback from
Jennifer Denning in Dyfed, South Wales. Jennifer
started the Course in late November 1995:
"I listened to CD one of the PhotoReading
Personal Learning Course and spent about five
minutes PhotoReading the enclosed dictionary.
the results were amazing! I had words popping
out from the woodwork over the next two days.
And I knew specifically where they were! I turned
to my husband Trevor and said look up this word
in the dictionary -- it's on page 120, seven words
up on the right-hand column of the left-hand page
-- and I was right!
"With other words I just
knew their position on the page. With some I knew
they were four or five words down a column, with
others I knew they were about a quarter or a third
of the way down.
"It was spooky! I only spent
five minutes PhotoReading! Of course I wasn't
always right, but I was right most of the time.
Words kept popping into my head for a few days
afterwards. I was busy in my office at work and
the word emotion suddenly appeared -- and I knew
it's position. I had to wait until I got home
to check if I was right -- and I was!
"While I was PhotoReading
the words were just floating off the page, and
the margins became very bright.
"the other day I had some
papers to read for a meeting. the papers weren't
particularly easy to PhotoRead as they were on
A4 sheets, but I decided that I'd see if I could
absorb the material quickly. So I spent a few
minutes PhotoReading, and found that I used some
of the information in the meeting -- more than
I would have expected.
"I've always thought that
my mind had this kind of ability, but I didn't
know how to access this infinite ability. Now
I've had my first glimpses of what I can do.
"I can't wait to get on
with the Course. It's so wonderful!"
By the way, in case you may be
thinking that Jennifer is a bright young thing
in her 20s or 30s she was generous enough to allow
me to tell you that she's 58, still bright and
young at heart.

If you look at a double
page spread in the dictionary you'll see that
there are two columns on each page, and you can
split each column into three -- so there are 12
sections in all.
This means that if, after PhotoReading
say A to L in the dictionary, you think of a word
and try to guess its position on the page you'll
get one in 12 correct by chance alone. So if you
get three or more out of 12 then that's pretty
unusual, wouldn't you think? Say you got five
out of 12 right. Now that would be special --
and that also means you got seven out of 12 wrong
too!
So don't expect to get most word
positions correct -- just mark yourself fairly
and realise that any score of four or more is
pretty impressive!
On the evening of Saturday December
2 1995 I was staying with some friends in Leeds.
Simon, the host, is a physiotherapist and he asked
me what I was up to, so I mentioned the results
I'd had with PhotoReading. He promptly produced
a fat Collins dictionary and said "Show us
how it's done then."
Despite the fact that it was
11pm, and we were all starting to slow down, I
took up the challenge and taught three friends
the very basics of PhotoReading in about 20 minutes.
Simon suggested all three should take a test,
so I picked words out of the dictionary at random
and announced them, and all three guessed the
positions.
Simon surprised himself by being
so accurate on so many words. For example when
I said Amaze, he guessed fifth word up on the
left hand column of the right hand page. In fact
he got the page wrong -- but it was the fifth
word up on the left hand column! What was even
more interesting was that he circled all guesses
that he was certain were right -- and he'd circled
'fifth' and 'left column' but not 'right page'!
Simon devised a scoring system
and out of 30 possible points he got 15 -- whereas
pure chance would probably have generated three
(plus or minus three), so 15 was incredible! And
the other two also got high marks too.
So try this game with your partner,
or a family member, and see what kind of results
you get -- and let us know here at LifeTools.
the Dictionary Game, although
remarkable, is really just a party piece -- with
not too much practical value, though it could
help you to spell better. then again, if you try
PhotoReading a thesaurus.
What the Game proves to you is
that something magical can happen within just
one hour of starting to learn PhotoReading. Your
mind really does know where certain words appear
on any page. It's taken in a huge amount of information
without deliberate concentration or memorisation.
Now you can approach other, more
practical books with enthusiasm, commitment and
energy. You can try out your skills immediately
-- you don't have to wait until you've been through
more CDs -- just don't expect too much at this
stage.
Bear in mind that CDs two to
eight build on what you learn on CD one, so
that by CD eight you'll be an expert PhotoReader
-- yet you can get some value even after using
just the first CD.
Now imagine what your enthusiasm
and PhotoReading can do together!

Chris Payne at LifeTools (left) and Paul Scheele,
developer of PhotoReading, when they first got
together in April 1995
You may have heard of mind
machines, sometimes called light and sound machines
(click
here for more info). Here at LifeTools our
main business is selling the very best of these
devices to help people relax, sleep or learn better.
We've been doing this for nearly three years --
then we discovered PhotoReading in April 1995.
Paul Scheele, developer of PhotoReading,
owns our best-selling machine, the MindLab and
loves its power to reduce jetlag on business trips,
and help get the best results from his own CDs.
A mind machine can help you get
into a more deeply relaxed state so you enter
PhotoFocus easily and so on. Typically you would
select a 15-minute Relax-type session on the mind
machine.
For the first five minutes you
would mentally prepare for PhotoReading, state
your purpose and position the imaginary tangerine.
then you would take the liteframes
off, keeping the headphones on, and PhotoRead
for five minutes, using the rhythmic tones to
pace your page turning.
When you've gone through the
book put the liteframes back on and affirm that
the book's contents have been absorbed, and so
on.
Paul and I have put together
a sheet explaining how to get the very most information
from your reading by combining PhotoReading and
mind machines. You can have a free copy by ringing
or writing and asking for sheet PRMM, or adding
this code to an order line on your next order.
DF is an Open University
student, living with her family in Ross-shire,
Scotland. She is three quarters of the way through
a BSc Honours degree in Psychology.
In each OU year, which runs from February to October,
she has to read OU publications for 22 course
units, read set books (about one a week), conduct
research and submit seven written assessments.
She enthuses: " As a result of using the
PhotoReading techniques I am now so far ahead
that I could complete the Psychology course four
months early -- but my tutor has asked me to slow
down. My assessments now average 89% -- and the
tutor thinks his students are doing well if they
score around 65%. My tutor has even told me that
some of the other students have felt intimidated
by my results, and he's had to reassure them!
"For one essay I went in the library and
PhotoRead 16 books with the purpose of getting
one relevant quote from each. I found exactly
what I wanted very quickly and used them in the
essay. When I got my essay back off my tutor he'd
written: 'I really must borrow these books off
you.' I almost feel a cheat, yet I went through
every page of each book, and subconsciously absorbed
the relevant parts.
"Over Christmas, as an experiment, I selected
five novels by medical crime writer Patricia Danielson.
My plan was to PhotoRead the first three then
read them at normal speed, and just read the other
two as normal. I loved the books that I PhotoRead
first, and got really absorbed in the stories.
I read one book without PhotoReading first, and
I felt so disconnected and uncomfortable with
the book as a result -- and so distant from the
story -- that I PhotoRead the final book first
before I read it at normal speed.
"In other areas of my life I've been having
a few surprises too. I took up the violin 18 months
ago. Six months ago I was at grade two standard.
But in the last month my playing has improved
so much that my teacher has said I could now achieve
grade four if I wanted.
"I also teach badminton to players from age
eight upwards for the Scottish Badminton Union.
I've PhotoRead all my badminton books, and now
my opponents can't believe how much I've improved!
"As I PhotoRead something almost every day
I now find that when I'm driving it is as though
my vision is really wide. I am actually seeing
things I never noticed before in 10 years of driving
down those roads.
"the whole PhotoReading experience has been
very stimulating, and I'm really looking forward
to seeing just how many other ways PhotoReading
will manifest in my life."
I
don't seem to be getting results with the dictionary
game. What should I do?
First of all, relax. Let
go of your expectations. People who find the dictionary
game hard to grasp are too anxious about getting
quick results. PhotoReading is far more like playtime
than exam time. Just let go. Daydream for a while
then check some words and see what happens. When
you least expect it, you'll get some amazing results.
See the first page of this newsletter for more
ideas.
I
want to PhotoRead a book on Ancient Greece. What
can I expect to get from five minutes of PhotoReading?
Consciously you may not
notice any difference. But say you wanted to know
about slavery. You would articulate the question
as clearly as possible, then open the book at
the contents page. Your eyes may fall on one chapter
title, yet it may not at first seem to be relevant.
You turn to that chapter and flick through a few
pages. Your eyes lock on one paragraph, so you
read it and realise that this one chapter answers
your question completely. Your conscious mind
may want you to carry on reading because it thinks
you could get more out of the text by carrying
on -- but if you do read further you'll probably
find you get no more information than you did
in the original paragraph.
If you wrote an essay then you would tend to get
much higher marks than you normally get -- or
were expecting.
If you met up with a friend, and he asked you
about Ancient Greece, you'd talk for five/ten
minutes, and he might say that you seem to have
been really swotting up on the subject. He knows
you well so he knows what you know -- and he's
surprised at the sudden improvement. You may not
feel as if you are any more knowledgeable -- but
you trust your friend's judgement.
If you did a multiple-choice quiz then you would
tend to get far more questions correct. Or someone
may ask you which year a particular senator was
born and immediately ask you for the first three
numbers that come into your head. You might blurt
out one, two and nine seemingly as random -- yet
it is likely that this senator was in fact born
in 129AD.
Over time you would learn how to access the information
more consciously.
Can
children learn to PhotoRead?
Yes, certainly. they are
usually very eager to learn, love playing learning
games, and are willing to consider failure as
a step on the road to inevitable success. One
Saturday morning we had a six year old niece over
to stay. I'd asked her to bring a children's dictionary
with her. Over the next 20 minutes or so I explained
about the game we were going to play, and led
her through a simple PhotoReading procedure as
she went through the dictionary about a page every
two seconds.
I then asked her to think of a word and she said
cheese. She 'guessed' it was right in the middle
of a right hand page. Her face was a picture when
she found she was exactly right!
there's one
Paraliminal CD that Paul Scheele highly recommends
to all new PhotoReaders: Belief. This CD is
nothing like the PhotoReading CDs which are
mostly instructional.
Belief is similar in style to the Memory Supercharger
CD you got with the course, and helps you change
outdated limited beliefs like "I can only
read effectively at around 200 words a minute"
to new, positive beliefs.
As a result of listening to this CD you will
have a stronger sense that your mind really can
PhotoRead at 25,000 words per minute; that your
mind is capable of tremendous processing even
though you may not have consciously tapped into
it in the past.As with all Paraliminal CDs,
Belief is simple to use. On side A you will identify
a self-limiting belief and begin revealing personal
strengths that can serve you.On side B you will
form these resources into a new self-enhancing
belief and install it to take the place of the
old belief that no longer serves you.Belief is
available from LifeTools and costs £19.95
+ £1.50 postage.
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