How to memorize at the speed of light, endorse quickly, and never forget?

Mondo Education Updated on 2024-02-24

It's so simple that you can't even imagine it.

Normally, if someone reads a book and can memorize it, what is your first reaction?

What you think is definitely not that this person is too powerful, but that he memorized it in advance and pretended to be the first time he memorized it.

Including many magicians, the audience that seems to be randomly selected is actually prepared for a long time.

What did you find? It's important to be prepared in advance.

At this time, someone said, my endorsement is not shown to others, so don't you still have to memorize it several times in advance?

How can this be said to be unforgettable?

But what if those things are just a different form of expression?

Take yourself as an example.

The game I play is called Yu-Gi-Oh, and this game is also a rookie killer, so you should know all about it.

It's the hardest of all the cards to get started.

First of all, the cards are divided into three categories, monsters, magic traps.

Monsters are divided into Normal, Duo, Effect, Adjustment, Ritual, Fusion, Harmony, Excess, Pendulum, and Link.

Magic is divided into Normal, Field, Rush, and Perpetual.

Traps are divided into usual, counter-attack, and perpetual.

There are more than 10 pages of rules alone.

Monsters also have star ratings, attributes, races, attack power, and garrison power.

The amount of memory is extremely large.

It was also my starting point for gaming.

The deck involves various fields such as professions, mythology, food, music, painting, games, animals, cards, wars, ethnicities, cultures, etc.

It can be said that you can almost see the shadow of the entire human society today from Yu-Gi-Oh.

This determines that the difficulty of his getting started is very terrifying.

The text expression of a card is generally two or three hundred words, and a new deck basically has thirty new cards.

Mainstream battle decks are generally forty sets.

I can memorize 200 decks.

Because of study and work, I played until the era of excess and the era of link back to the pit, and now I have retreated again.

When it comes to Yu-Gi-Oh, there are two main points.

The first point is that I memorize the effect very quickly, and most of the cards are done over and over again.

Why can I do it all over again?

1.Interest is a matter of interest.

Interest is the best teacher, and whether there is interest or not is crucial. I don't want to memorize English at all if I don't have an interest, so the college entrance examination English is also bad, only in the early 100s.

Politics is also relatively bad, usually in the eighties, but in the field of philosophy I can easily achieve about ninety.

Because I played in the league in the early days, I fought with my own jungler every day, sprayed the opposite side and shook people without forcing my face, and I actually used these theories perfectly before learning philosophy.

2.Familiarize yourself with the pattern.

I don't know how the new cards work, but the rules and things for card making are universal, and I don't need to learn this aspect anymore.

Unless something new comes along, like an iteration from fusion to cohomology, or a new deck idea.

For example, telekinesis is to exclude blood return, dimension is to exclude return, autoplay is regional transformation, the six martial arts are special summons to explode, Yao Changliu Tianzhi is a chain special call, aliens are to block and control the field, snake venom is to reduce attack restrictions, technology is to split and reorganize, the power of secret rituals is to control fate, the dark ** division is to brush cards, insect bewilderment is to limit monsters, Hope is brainless output, tomb guarding is to limit the cemetery, needleworms are to eliminate cards, volcano is to eliminate blood, turrets are attacks, and flash knife Ji is to change holsters.

3.Reasoning by analogy.

Even if the effect is not the same, most of them inherit the tradition and bring forth the new.

The part that inherits the tradition is the vast majority, and the new thing is very little.

Although the effect is not exactly the same, the effect of many cards is very similar.

All I have to do is strengthen my understanding of the different parts.

So it seems like a lot of things to memorize, but there are very few new things to remember.

The second point is that Yu-Gi-Oh has provided me with a lot of background knowledge accumulation.

Because of Yu-Gi-Oh, I learned a lot about subcultures, which made me feel a lot less strange when I was familiar.

It's also called learning by playing.

For example, geography, animals, tarot cards, cards, psychology, painting.

So even if I'm learning something new than Yu-Gi-Oh, I have a lot more background knowledge than the average 0 basic.

It can be said that Yu-Gi-Oh is a living history book and a reference book for the introduction of all things.

So how do you memorize quickly?

1.Deeply cultivate vertical fields.

When you continue to learn in a vertical field, you don't really need to put much effort into learning new things in this vertical field.

Because your basics are in place, there are very few new things to understand.

2.Expand related fields.

In addition to professional knowledge, relevant knowledge is also very important.

This is also the importance of the so-called generalist.

Because all things are connected, things are universally connected.

A thing does not exist solely on the basis of the material and theoretical foundations of its main field, but also has a variety of connections with other things.

Broadening your knowledge will further reduce your barriers to understanding new knowledge in your professional field.

When you have fewer obstacles, whether it is learning or memorizing, it will naturally be handy, faster and faster.

This kind of speed can also build up the confidence to further improve your knowledge input, and then improve your professional ability.

The best time to plant a tree was ten years ago, followed by now.

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