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Book Blaster Issue 4

Lou
Wilson from Harrow in Middlesex designs computer
programs to manage databases of customer details.
He writes in C++, Omnis 7 and Power Builder. He
has had excellent results with PhotoReading.
"Before I learnt to PhotoRead
I'd just read small chunks from software manuals,
and then constantly refer back to these manuals
to work out the best way to write a section of
a program.
When I bought the Course I PhotoRead all my software
manuals in one fell swoop. Now, when I program,
all the code seems to come out of my head, and
I hardly ever stop to look in the manuals. I intuitively
know that the program will work first time - and
it does. Previously I would have written a bit,
tested it, tweaked it, referred to the manual
and so on, So I'm much more productive in my work.
"I also instinctively know where to look
for a routine in a manual. One day recently I
was attempting to write a function. I felt that
the software could do what I wanted, but I got
the sense that the information I needed wasn't
in the manual. I rang up the manufacturer and
told him that the routine wasn't in the manual
(even though I hadn't checked to be certain).
the technician said that I was right - the routine
wasn't there as it had been missed out of the
manual by mistake. He told me how to write the
routine, which was exactly the way I thought it
should be written. It was uncanny.
"Another weird thing happened not so long
ago. I was rushing to go to a client's office.
I saw a book I needed on my office bookshelf and
grabbed it as I dived off. As I put the book on
the passenger seat I realised that I had grabbed
the wrong book! I thought: Damn, why did I take
this one, it's not the one I wanted. It was too
late to go back to my desk so I drove off.
"While I was sitting waiting for my appointment,
I opened the book to a seemingly random page and
there, staring me in the face, was the solution
to a problem I'd had for the last two weeks. I
couldn't believe it! I'd PhotoRead this book about
a month earlier for no reason. It was like my
subconscious had grabbed this book deliberately
as I rushed out of the office.
"PhotoReading is a magical set of techniques
that has really made my job easier and more enjoyable."
(Lou got five Paraliminal CDs for this contribution.
Now it's your turn!)
PhotoReading got a major
TV news slot on American TV in May of this year.
It made the six o'clock evening news and the PhotoReading
piece even got referred to on TV and radio adverts:
"PhotoReading -- is it a reading breakthrough
or just another gimmick: see Channel 9's news
this evening."
the news item was hosted by Gary Rebstock, the
Emmy award-winning anchor for KMSP television.
He heard about PhotoReading, got the Course and
tried CD one. the Dictionary Game worked for
him and he told Paul Scheele: "If side B
of the first CD is any indication, this is going
to be the best story of the year."
Gary interviewed several professionals, an educator,
a reading expert, a student and a school headmaster.
Altogether Gary and his camera crew filmed four
hours on PhotoReading, and somehow managed to
edit it down to a six-minute story, which was
their longest story ever.
In the TV piece Gary picks the book Accelerated
Learning by Colin Rose and says: "In five
minutes I'd PhotoRead the whole book -- and felt
completely lost! This is exactly how Matt Haug
felt who learned to PhotoRead two years ago when
he was 13." (the film cuts to Matt speaking
in his home...) "It was like, I didn't believe
it. All I was doing was flipping pages. How was
this going to work? I did the process, then Wow
it worked!' Gary: "Matt says it's given him
so much confidence that at school he's gone from
a C grade average to an A average."
(Back at the office...) "After the first
six minutes of activation I was still lost. Six
more minutes, and as strange as it sounds, the
book was beginning to come alive for me and I
could actually answer questions on it -- this
is bizarre!" and the TV piece shows Gary
surprising himself by recalling information from
the book.
Later it cuts to Professor Mike Bennett who has
a doctorate in reading at University of Minnesota.
Says Mike: 'I certainly know why PhotoReading
works. How? I don't know.' (Back to Gary to round
off:) "How it works, and how PhotoReading
really affects the mind, no-one knows, but Paul
Scheele is working with a team of doctors to develop
test to find out."

We've mentioned Paul McKenna's
TV coverage of PhotoReading before but
as we can now grab pictures off the film (lent
to us by customer Ray Bacchus), we've got a great
excuse to mention the feature again.
In the programme, Paul McKenna says, "It's
a fact that the unconscious mind can process two
million pieces of information every second. For
years scientists have wondered why some people
have photographic memories and some don't. Through
PhotoReading they're beginning to find out.
"When PhotoReading does work it's a strange
experience. I ended up feeling a bit light-headed
(after PhotoReading at 690,000 words per minute).
I couldn't actually remember anything about the
book -- until the questions started. I just seemed
to know some of the answers. I scored 73% which
was statistically well in excess of anything I
could have got just by guessing."
Pete Bissonette (Paul Scheele's
business partner) and I appeared on radio to discuss
PhotoReading - and we came across better than
we ever dared dream
It happened on Tuesday, June 1 in Minneapolis.
My flight home was at 11am, and Pete was booked
to do a radio interview at 7am, so he invited
me along before dropping me off at the airport.
When we got to the offices of KS95-FM one of the
DJs had been through the first two CDs of the
Course and had had amazing success with the Dictionary
Games, so he was really positive. Pete and I talked
enthusiastically about PhotoReading, and the three
DJs who interviewed us were really fascinated
by our stories and explanations.
then we found that they'd selected two books for
us to PhotoRead there and then! Pete was given
a book called the 10 Laws of Lasting Love. I was
given a 350-page detective novel called Sudden
Prey (see photo). I felt very nervous, and I stuttered
on live radio that I'd never done a PhotoReading
challenge before, and I'd never PhotoRead a detective
novel either (let alone read one at normal speed
in the last few years). "Well," said
a DJ, "just see what happens: we'll give
you 30 minutes."
Pete and I were sent off to a tiny, windowless
office where we PhotoRead and activated the books.
I felt very apprehensive, PhotoReading the book
twice: right way up and upside down as it seemed
a good idea for some reason. then I flicked my
eyes down each page, about a page every five seconds,
quickly finding the key paragraphs that carried
the major plot lines. Within half an hour I'd
worked out the complete plot and characters so
when we went back in for questioning I could be
very specific.
For example, when the DJ questioned me on air
about a subsidiary character, I was able to say
that her name is Sally, she's 29 and has crow's
feet -- and I gave some info on how she fitted
into the plot. the DJ spluttered with astonishment.
Pete was just excellent with his book, pulling
out the main concepts, and answering very specific
questions with ease.
the DJs let Pete tell listeners the number for
the brochure request line, and we found out later
that there were tons of calls from people who'd
heard us on the radio and wanted to know more.

Derek Chard from Chelmsford
rang to say that he'd just bought a book called
the Tenth Insight by James Redfield, which is
the follow-up to the bestselling Celestine Prophesy.
He PhotoRead it one evening, then woke up the
next morning with the number 22 nagging away at
him. He spoke to his wife about it, then decided
to check out page 22 of the book. "My first
reaction was: Wow! I was amazed to find that page
22 was the beginning of a chapter that was really
relevant to some things that were going through
my mind at the time.
"Learning to PhotoRead has made me more receptive
to intuitive ideas and thoughts. I even chose
the book the Tenth Insight in a synchronous way
it almost seemed to choose me."
Mike Ellis from Wakefield
got in touch recently. "I've just come back
from a week at Butlins with my wife and daughter.
While they were at various shows I learnt to PhotoRead!
the penny dropped after a few days, and I got
this 'Aha!' insight.
"I've always been a very slow reader, pondering
over every word. Now I'm reading about 10 times
faster than I used to. Reading is fun too. I can
pick up a book and leap straight into it. I used
to read every word -- now things jump out that
interest me.
"I PhotoRead the book Learning to Learn that
comes with the Course. then I read it normally,
but much faster than I normally would. I felt
sure I'd read it before -- it just seemed familiar.
It's a really good book too. I've photocopied
the Mind Map of the PhotoReading steps and put
it above my desk at work so I can refer to it
during the day.
"I've also noticed that I'm flying down hills
faster on my mountain bike as my field of vision
has opened up and I trust my inner knowing. I
feel so relaxed, and the bike seems to float over
bumps."
the story that made the
most impact in issue two of Book Blaster was the
one entitled Just Do It. I have since taken many
calls from people who realised that this was what
they needed to do: PhotoRead regardless of their
perceived skill level.
Only a very small percentage of people send back
the Course for a refund. I've spoken to a few
of them. "Well, it didn't work for me --
nothing happened." I then ask them how many
books they've PhotoRead. "Oh just one: the
PhotoReading book that comes with the Course."
Or they'll say that the Dictionary Game doesn't
work. So how many words did you look up? "Oh,
just two."
Now I don't mind if people give up so quickly
-- they're welcome to have a complete refund.
I just want to do everything I can to encourage
people to practice more to prove that the System
works!
Having spoken to so many amazing people on the
phone, and read their letters, I know that PhotoReading
works. Full stop. And it works for everyone, if
they're willing to go for it.
As Brian Ahern says in the story above, it's all
a matter of just trusting the process. It doesn't
matter which CD you're up to in the Course,
pick up a book, state your purpose and PhotoRead
it. Don't get anxious about remembering all the
steps -- just do what you feel is necessary.
Make a commitment to PhotoRead, say, three books
a week by bedtime every Friday, then do that even
if it means doing it after a night on the town
on Friday night when you're exhausted. then you
can treat yourself the next day for keeping your
promise no matter what. Good luck!
Dear Chris,
PhotoReading: wow! It's unreal, but it definitely
works for me. I purchased the Course because curiosity
go the better of me (I'm glad it did).
I decided to work my way through the Course exactly
as the CDs directed me, and could not believe
the results I was getting, i.e. the Dictionary
Game was something that got me out of bed the
following morning just to check the location of
a list of words that flooded my mind as I awoke.
Surprisingly they were all in a similar position
on the pages. (This has happened on all the occasions
that I have played the Dictionary Game.)
the Star of Wonder exercise was another strange
experience which did brain lock me, but now is
something which is easy to do.
Perhaps the thing which proved that PhotoReading
worked for me was my recent Open University assignment
results which were completed after using the PhotoReading
system to get through the course material.
Let me give you a bit of background history. My
wife has been involved in an accident which has
resulted in her having three operations on her
leg. Understandably I was starting to fall behind
with my Science foundation course studies because
of the assistance my wife requires. I had two
days to study two units on organic chemistry,
which should have been studied over two weeks,
and submit my assignment for computer marking.
How was I going to do it? the question was: do
I struggle with the course material or do I put
the PhotoReading Course to the absolute test.
Well, I thought, I've purchased the Course so
I might as well use it.
After preparing myself and then previewing the
material I felt great, and after PhotoReading
the units I could not believe how the stress suddenly
disappeared. It was as if I had plenty of time
to do the work. I scored 65% on the assignment,
which was very pleasing because, had I not PhotoRead
the units, I would not have had a clue how to
answer the questions. I now use the PhotoReading
method for all my study reading and find myself
looking forward to my next PhotoReading session.
I'm sure that as my skills develop with practice
I will get even more satisfaction out of my reading.
One final point: as an offshore worker with a
busy workload I found listening to the Memory
Supercharger and Personal Genius CDs very helpful.
In fact I'm getting all my work done, and also
it's relaxing me so much that I can honestly say
I have never slept so well in the four years that
I have worked offshore.
Many thanks, Alex Marchant, Stockton-on-Tees.

Brian Ahern from Watford
started PhotoReading five books a day after he
got the Course, "but I found this was really
tiring, so I'm now sticking to two books a day.
I then activate them the next day. I'm feeling
very intuitive about what I've PhotoRead, and
I seem to get a lot of ideas. Sometimes I know
things I didn't realise I knew.
"I'm currently half way through the book
the Einstein Factor. It's a very cool book. Normally
I very rarely remember my dreams but since I've
been doing 10 minutes of Image Streaming into
a CD recorder each day, my dreams have come
alive and I seem to be both a participator in
and observer of my dreams.
"I've even had some lucid dreams too, which
have been incredible. If I miss a day of Image
Streaming, my dream recall drops off -- it really
is very curious.
"I still feel I'm new to PhotoReading, and
I'm compelled to just practice it every day. What
I realise is that it's important to keep remembering
to surrender to the process and trust in it. I'm
certainly getting better at it."
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