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Book Blaster Issue 3
OU student attributes 95%
result to PhotoReading!
Peter Barka with his tutor's
report saying
he'd got 95% for his Open University essay on
Freud
Peter Barka got quite a shock
on May 2 when he opened up the envelope containing
his marks for two Open University essays he wrote.
"I couldn't believe it -- I got 95% for an
essay on Freud and 88% for one on Piaget.
"My tutor wrote: 'In the Freud essay you
analysed the relevant concepts with unusual depth
and insight. Clearly a pass 1 (95%). A similar
standard is maintained in the short notes questions.
You have evidently gained a great deal of knowledge
which will be of use throughout the course.' What
amazed me was that I was only expecting 65-70%
as I hadn't done any background reading -- I didn't
get round to it in time -- or the expected 15
hours a week study time!
" I first did an OU home study course in
social sciences 14 years ago, getting Cs and Ds
and a bare pass. So I'm not a model student by
any means -- I was just expecting a C grade for
these particular essays. You printed a letter
from me in issue 2 of the PhotoReading newsletter.
At that time I'd got 73% for an essay I'd done
just after I'd started studying PhotoReading.
Since then I've finished the PhotoReading course
but not had any major revelations -- until now!
"All I did was PhotoRead the relevant chapters
on Freud and Piaget, then, when I rapid read them,
I noticed that the text seemed to have a tinge
of familiarity to it. I also PhotoRead some essay/thesis-writing
guides without activation. When I sat down and
wrote the essay I felt I knew something about
the subject. But after I wrote the essay I thought
'Oh my god, I'll probably do worse than last time
when I got 73%', especially as I'm very left brain,
and the subject matter was more right brained.
"In the course the Dictionary Game didn't
work for me, and some of the other exercises didn't
work too well either. But I stuck with it, and
now -- wow! I'm glad I did.
Peter rang us with the news on the day he got
the results: "I feel delirious. I've been
dancing around like an idiot. then I began to
doubt myself again! I'm just shocked at the result,
and I feel quite shaky when I talk to my friends
about the possibilities of PhotoReading. I got
to know about the PhotoReading course from a LifeTools
mailing before Christmas as I bought a MindLab
last year. I bought the course there and then.
Recently I saw an ad for PhotoReading in the Daily
Express and thought 'On no, the secret's out!'
But you can't be greedy can you! Everyone deserves
to find out about PhotoReading and benefit from
it as much as I have."
A lady from London called
Illavia rang me the other day. She works in medical
research and needs to get through piles of medical
journals that pass across her desk -- and wanted
to know how best to prove that the PhotoReading
was working.
Here's what I suggested: PhotoRead two journals
every day no matter what, so it becomes a habit.
then sit back and mentally state a purpose such
as 'I'd like a specific new technique that some
doctors are using to improve medical aftercare.'
Pick up the two journals, one in each hand, and
see which one seems to be the best to activate.
One of them may just feel like it's the right
one, or one may look brighter than the other --
or you might try one as you seem to prefer the
way the pages rustle. This way you are engaging
your subconscious mind, getting out of your usual
left-brain thinking, and starting to play.
An obvious way to proceed is to look at the contents
page of the mag you've chosen, and see if one
article seems to catch your eye, whether it seems
relevant or not: trust your initial instinct.
Now turn to that article and watch where your
eyes naturally fall. they may fall onto one paragraph,
buried in the article, which is exactly what you're
looking for.
Here's a more unusual approach. Take your pen
in your left hand if you're right-handed. Write
the numbers 0 to 9 so you get used to writing
with that hand. Now re-state your purpose and
write down the first two or three numbers that
pop into your head, or just let your left hand
write by itself (this feels very weird at first).
If you wrote 57 look up that page number and see
if there are any surprises there. If not, try
page 75.
I'd like to emphasise that it doesn't matter if
this technique doesn't work. At least you've tried
something new and been more flexible in the way
you solve challenges. And I'm sure you'll notice
something in the process -- perhaps you'll find
that you're more relaxed now.
If you're interested in learning more about writing
with what's called your non-dominant hand, see
the book the Power of Your Other Hand by Lucia
Capacchione. It's a large format American title,
well illustrated with fascinating examples, and
available to order from a good bookshop.
You may remember the four-page
letter I originally sent you about PhotoReading.
It mentions my youngest brother Mike, 25, who
lives and works in Lyon, France. He had told me
about his friend Nick who'd PhotoRead a French
dictionary and then been told by his work colleagues
that his French had significantly improved.
In a fit of impulsiveness I gave Mike the PhotoReading
CD course for Christmas. He teaches English
to French managers by day and works in a bar in
the evenings, so he didn't touch the course until
the middle of May after he gave up his evening
job.
Just three days later he wrote this to me in a
letter: "I looked at my growing pile of books
about a week ago and then decided that enough
was enough, and I decided that evening to start
this course that had been lying around for so
long.
"On the first CD is a taster of what's
to come in the form of the Dictionary Game. I
felt ready for the exercise and PhotoRead about
a third of the dictionary in a few minutes. I
then started the recall exercises shortly after.
"I just let a word drift into my mind and
tried not to reason or be logical. I then pictured
the word I had chosen and instinctively felt where
it was on the page. I tried again and again and
kept hitting the word almost exactly where it
was on the page in the dictionary (every time
without fail I knew whether it was a right or
left hand page). I thought that this wasn't bad
but it still wasn't exact. Nor was I totally convinced.
"the next morning I suddenly had the urge
to try the recall exercise again without re-reading
the dictionary. I let a word pop into my mind:
'hurtful' (I'm not sure why I chose that!) and
imagined it at the bottom left hand column of
the left hand page. I turned to the relevant page
and saw the very last word was 'hurt', and 'hurtful'
was at the very top of the right hand column.
"I thought that wasn't bad but I wanted to
get closer. 'Harass' popped into my mind and I
decided to imagine how many words were above this
word: 10, I thought, on the left hand page, right
hand column. then I thought, no: 20 words down.
I turned to the page and counted down the words.
'Harass' was actually 19 down and 'harassment'
was 20. I felt a shiver down my spine as I thought
this was too uncanny. I realised that it was not
down to good luck.
"When it comes down to it I'm a bit of a
sceptic about this sort of thing. I also usually
scoff at these sort of letters that people supposedly
write after they've bought a new product and they're
'absolutely flabbergasted' by the results. Well,
from the little that I've done of the course I
can't wait to complete it and see even more dramatic
results."
Mike Payne, Lyon, France
Do you ever
get anxious about all the studying you need to
do -- or worry about your heavy workload at the
office?
Paul Scheele has produced a Paraliminal CD called
Anxiety Free which may be just what you need to
calm you down, get you focused on what you need
to do right now and create the energy to give
100% to the material you are studying.
Anxiety does serve a purpose. It certainly has
kept me from running out in front of a car. Anxiety
becomes detrimental when it ceases to be an internal
warning system. Staying away from a busy road
for fear of being run over is such a detrimental
anxiety. So you need to let anxiety serve to guide
you, not control you.
If you have anxiety on a 0-10 scale where 0 is
no anxiety and 10 is high anxiety, you are best
to keep the anxiety level in the 4-5 range. That
is very manageable. When it becomes greater, then
you need to do something.
Think of anxiety as a level of energy flowing
through the nervous system. When it gets right
down to it, feelings of anxiety are similar to
feelings of excitement; the difference is in our
attitude toward it. It is not wrong or bad to
feel anxious. Many people, unfortunately, use
their imagination to turn this energy into stifling
and debilitating fear.
Anxieties are always about future events or situations.
You may think of an anxiety is about something
from the past, when it is really about how the
past event affects your future.
the Anxiety Free CD helps you transform anxious
energy into positive energy, free you from its
control and prepare you for optimal performance
in the future. Anxiety Free costs £19.95
+ £1.50 p&p. It comes with our usual
money-back satisfaction guarantee.
Last year I met and chatted
with television hypnotist Paul McKenna -- he's
very enthusiastic about PhotoReading. Paul interviewed
Paul Scheele for a TV documentary he created.
Paul writes about PhotoReading on page 81 of his
new book, Paul McKenna's Hypnotic Secrets.
Paul writes: "My colleague Paul Scheele has
developed a way using a trance to make it possible
for you to take in information at up to 690,000
words per minute. It is done by photographing
the text of a page directly into the brain. Research
has shown that anyone can learn to have an incredible
memory, and whilst PhotoReading is not a memory
technique, it is a way of processing huge volumes
of information very quickly.
"A good analogy would be a country view.
Traditional reading is like looking at each tree,
bush, cloud, etc individually one at a time. PhotoReading
is like looking at the scene all at once. Whilst
you may miss the detail, you appreciate the entire
view.
"Researcher Keith Fredericks at the top computer
centre Cray Research Institute in Minnesota demonstrated
a program which has given people the ability to
read at such an incredible speed. It is not like
reading as we normally understand it.
"He blends a 3D or 'Magic Eye' picture with
a fast flowing text on a computer screen. While
the conscious mind is captivated by the 3D picture,
the unconscious mind takes in the scrolling text.
I didn't know how true his claims were, but it
is certainly a fact that the unconscious mind
can process two million pieces of information
every second.
"I decided to put the program to the test
myself. It was a very strange experience which
made me feel a bit lightheaded. I sat in front
of the screen for a minute watching words zip
past my eyes. I hadn't had time to take anything
in at all, or so I thought, but when he [Paul
Scheele] started asking me questions about the
book afterwards I couldn't believe how much I
seemed to know.
"I scored 73% which was statistically well
in excess of anything I could have achieved just
by guessing. It is pretty clear to me from this
that we don't use anything like the full potential
of our brains.
"You don't need a computer to read the contents
of a book at incredible speed. Paul Scheele teaches
people to read a book while simply flicking through
the pages, though he estimates that you only achieve
a speed of 25,000 words like this. All this shows
that the unconscious mind is stronger, and more
mysterious, than most of us understand."
Ian Jarvie, who handled
our customer service, got an unusual phonecall
at the beginning of April.
"I'm calling about the erm, erm, oh god,
I've forgotten -- it's my memory." said the
caller. "Oh yes, the PhotoReading for a photographic
memory. I almost forgot what I was phoning about
then. As you can probably see, I need some help...
What sort of camera do you need?"
Ian explained that PhotoReading is a radically
new reading course, and went on to talk about
PhotoFocus.
the caller said: "So you focus through the
page so you see the page underneath? Oh, I get
it: I blur my vision. I had blurred vision before
I got my bifocals. I had a problem with my eyes
and everything was a blur. I wouldn't want that
condition to come back... So you go into something
like a trance state. the course doesn't come with
a free hypnotist does it?"
He went on: "I had to fill in a form the
other day and I couldn't even remember my middle
name... Ian, what's my name? I did tell you at
the beginning of the conversation [he didn't actually,
and Ian ummed and arred]. You see, you've forgotten.
"Okay, I've got the advert here in front
of me. Now, paragraph four, third word in... what
is it? [Ian didn't know.]
"Right, when I snap my fingers I'm going
to tell you that you're live on the radio! It's
Scot FM! [cue fanfare and jingle]. You're a star,
thank you!"
the researchers at Scot FM very kindly sent Ian
a CD copy of his radio debut for us all to hear.
He was just brilliant. Whatever next?
Mr Odujinrin rang for some
advice yesterday as his A-Levels in Physics and
Maths were coming up in June. Here's what I said:
number each statement/subject area in the syllabuses,
take a sheet of lined paper, put the numbers down
the left-hand side and rate your knowledge out
of 10 of each of the statements.
Highlight any of the numbers where, say, you rate
yourself lower than five out of 10. Now create
a specific purpose for a subject area where your
rating is low. Select a text book and PhotoRead
it with that purpose in mind. Take a break for
20 minutes, then look through the index and contents
and very quickly Super Read and Dip with the aim
of increasing your knowledge from, say, 3 to 8
out of 10 as quickly as possible.
Do a quick mind map, regardless of your level
of competence, and review it later in the day,
the next day and then twice a week until the exam.
Address each other subject area in the same way.
Ensure you PhotoRead two text books a day so you
get through all your books within two weeks. After
the first two days, take a clean sheet of paper
and rate yourself again on your knowledge of all
the statements. Add up the total points and compare
with your first list. When I first did a similar
exercise to this I was stunned. Just do it! Rate
yourself again every week from then on -- your
self esteem may soar!
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