![]() Absurd, meaning, irrational to the common thought, natural laws of perception. Things that are ordinary that are attached to absurd mental movies. Knowing this, we can use it as an advantage when we want to remember things. Often our brain reacts to everything like real life, even the most made-up thoughts. The sensory stimulation from the vastness and darkness of space may be linked to Bryan through us, encoding his black hair turning into the darkness of the night sky. If our imagination and calmness can let us imagine such a thing, our brain will experience this as real life. In order to make the memory stick even better, we can imagine this black hair turning into the whole darkness of the universe. With minimal effort, this is added to our real memory. We can associate their black hair to their name. We know they have black hair, and their name is Bryan. Let’s say we desire to hold better in our memory a person’s face. This face can be remembered through associative memory, for example. No need to say “cheese” for a mental photo to be taken of somebody's face. Indeed, this is a viable asset to have, but with the increase of exposure in memory spectrums, the possibility to possess a rather good memory is a reality. “I wish I had a better memory,” is a widespread aspiration. These techniques can make a person’s brain sharper and the ability to focus will have a more extended point of attention. It is also highly unlikely to be able to newly acquire a photographic memory, but one can try other memory improvement techniques to aid a rather suitable encoding of information. It is uncommon for people to have a photographic memory, in other terms, an eidetic memory. Even then, ten years later, and it is hard to remember a particular thing in your web of thoughts. Future recall of desired images becomes more comfortable to recognize when other stimulations such as sound, taste, and smell are also used, for example. These various occurrences will hinder the perfect ability to remember an image. Life’s events may shift memories stored in the brain due to stress, malnutrition, and lack of sleep. Many simultaneous processes of encoding, storing, and recalling are happening at once. This would be easy if this were the only process the human brain does. A mental photo is taken and stored in the mind. It may be an assumption that the way photographic memory works in the brain is similar to a camera. Recall happens, and the images may be replicated. Once, mentally, passing through this environment again, the objects in one's Mind Palace will correlate to a specific memory. ![]() This is done by connecting new information to an already familiar environment. ![]() For example, a Mind Palace memorization technique may enable the onlooker to use an associative mnemonic device to later recall a seen image. Thus it may appear that all it took was “a glance” and the appearance is captured as if a photo was taken, but this might not be the case. Looking closer to photographic memory and how it works, there is clear evidence that individuals with overall above average intellectual capabilities can use many other instruments to encode a particular image into their mind. Learning and memory are closely tied to remembering things seen in daily life. ![]()
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