Forgetful Of What You Read?

In this note, I want to reveal some little known facts about how your brain works. I will also clarify some great misunderstandings about the differences between reading, comprehension and memory. If you forget rapidly after you have just read something, you need to read on. You may not be as “brain dead” as you think.

With all the information you move your eyes over during the course of a day, how much can you recall? Do you sometimes find yourself reading a document, determining it has important information, and then forgetting most of what you have read even 10 minutes earlier?

If that happens to you, it must be frustrating!

When you learned to read as a youngster, your brain was still fairly new and uncluttered. Remembering and recalling were easier then. But now as an adult you have been exposed to so much data and information, your brain's hard drive, perhaps, doesn't work as efficiently as it once did. We live in an information driven world. Information Overload is a fact for almost any adult today.

When you read something and few days later had difficulty recalling it, what did you tell yourself? Most people beat themselves up psychologically. They complain about how forgetful they are, or what a bad memory they have.

Does this sound familiar?

The Truth - unless you have had a brain injury trauma, abused drugs or alcohol, had a birth defect, are taking certain medications or have a documented case of dementia or Alzheimer's Disease, then you probably do not have a bad memory. What you are suffering from is poor recall.

Fact - Comprehension is understanding what you read while you read. You may be able to get through either a short document like an email message and understand it. But you may forget what the message was about, or the action required minutes after. Why?

Fact - Memory is the conscious process of storing of information in an organized manner so that it can be easily retrieved. Your brain has survival mechanisms built in. Our mind filters information in order to act. If you did nothing to activate your memory about the e-mail, you may or may not recall it.

Fact - Recall is the retrieval of information stored. If you have done nothing to create the memory, our recall will be haphazard. Our bio-computer is busy and overloaded. It needs to decide what to pay attention to. If your reading of the email did not include some conscious steps of dealing with the information, it makes sense that you might forget.

I hope these facts are helpful for you. If you want to be better able to recall what you read, then I strongly recommend you enroll in our "Dynamic Speed Reading Masters Online Program." We teach you step by step how to create a more powerful memory of what you read for more exacting recall upon demand.

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