Showing posts with label Stop dyslexia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stop dyslexia. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Learn To Trust Your Intuition With ZOXing

Solve Your Problems With Intuition
(ZOX Pro Training Series – Part 9)
How would you like to have the ability to simply solve your problems? Is it even possible? Yes, if you trust your intuition. ZOX Pro teaches you how.
I have an oversimplified “logical” (Ha Ha!) way of defining intuition. It is “simply knowing the solution to a problem, without consciously knowing all the steps in between”. That is a good starting point.
We talk about the conscious and the subconscious as if they are two friends standing there beside us. Well, they both reside in our brain. The conscious is the part we deal with on an everyday basis, while we work, play, go to school, and general activities. The subconscious is the shadowy other side that we must point our attention at to gain purposeful access to it during our day. Although, it is very open to us while we sleep.
Both the conscious and the subconscious have different operating parameters. One of these deals with the QUANTITY of information you have at hand. The conscious has only a small fraction of the information that is available to the subconscious.
If you are making important decisions, which one would you choose? The conscious mind that has only limited information, or the subconscious that has UN-limited information? You would choose the subconscious.
Intuition is how we gain the answers the subconscious has for us. The process of ZOXing teaches your brain to process more and more information this way so it becomes a reliable resource for you. It does not just come from one exercise; it comes from the synergistic process as a whole.
So yes, you can learn to trust your intuition and gain insights how to solve your problems. By gaining access to reliable Intuition, many other talents and gifts come to light as well.
If you’d like to improve and trust your intuition, we encourage you to start ZOXing by visiting: http://ZOXpro.com/
Join us in our next blog post as we discuss ZOXing and how to require less sleep and become more productive.
Other Articles in the ZOX Pro Training Series:
For More Info : Visit Here : https://zoxpro.com/

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Memory – Why do I Forget what I Read? | Photographic Memory

What Happens to the Memory of an Event?

 

Why do I Forget what I read?

 

We are asked this question quite often. Your memory is very important to you. But the things you want to remember are fleeting; or are they? Are the  memories actually burned in somewhere else?

Eidetic Memory / Photographic Memory…

 

You are born with your eidetic memory (photographic memory) fully turned on and functional. You never lose it.  Therefore, your #PhotographicMemory automatically records everything you do and experience in life. Most of those instances you do not need to record, but you do anyway. If you have something important happen to you, but you do not consider it important at the time, then initially you may forget the details of the event. But through hypnosis, you can pull a great amount of detailed information from that same event.

The Hippocampus – What You Forget…

 

The other aspect of this is actually the part of your brain that deals with your short-term memory – the hippocampus. The #hippocampus is a limiter, a filtering system that tells your conscious mind what information is NOT important, so that the NON-IMPORTANT information is “forgotten” by the conscious mind. It is the same reason you cannot remember the details that you can remember under #hypnosis. Once the #hippocampus has determined what information to keep in the short-term memory, it takes about 48 hours for that information (~5% of the original amount of information) to be sent to the long-term memory, relative to you having conscious recall of that same information.



Location of Hippocampus in the Brain

All of the information is buried in your long term memory via your subconscious, but most can only be recalled if you have built the bridge between the conscious and subconscious that you build with ZOX Pro Training.

For more info.  Advanced learning

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Reading, Speed Reading, Dyslexia, and Photographic Memory

Speed Reading vs. Reading:

a short synopsis of some basic differences and misconceptions
How to gain the most from the written page is not found in the technique you learned to use to gather information. The rote-memory system is failing you. Reading teachers around the world say the same thing, “If you do not read every word verbatim, then you are not getting the information”. Their statistics tell a different story.

Reading

Imagine pulling open a good long novel while sitting in your favorite chair in front of an open fireplace for a good long read. Taking your time to absorb yourself in the plot as it thickens, the evening wears on. You find that even though you have been reading for over an hour, you have only gone through about 40 pages. If you do the same thing every night for 10 days, you finally be at the end of your 400 page novel. That’s fine, if you have plenty of time to burn.
Now, imagine what your employer would say if you told him you would be happy to peruse a 400 page report over the next 10 days and get back to him then. What if you were to speed read instead? Reading Doesn’t Work!

Speed Reading

It is no secret that when you speed read, you are neither reading everything, nor are you taking it all in for accuracy. How do you feel about your skill with speed reading? Do you feel that you have missed a lot? Even if the document now only takes you one or two hours instead of 10 hours, do you feel your accuracy of information is there? Are you confident in presenting your findings after just speed reading? Probably not.

Let’s look at the statistics. You have been told that reading is the most accurate way of dealing with information, right? Did you know that you will immediately forget 50% of what you just read? Can you imagine how ineffective reading is when you forget 95% of what you read, in only 48 hours? Did you know that if you were given a comprehensive test covering all the topics you passed tests on in school that you would most likely fail miserably as an adult?

But when you look at speed reading, you would probably think that since you are using fewer words to get your information that you would be even worse off. Right?… Wrong! Statistics prove that speed reading has higher comprehension of information, and even a longer hang time of the information than reading.

So why would people that learn speed reading, and know the statistics, go back to much slower ineffective reading for their information? Most people do not have confidence in speed reading. Even though the statistics prove otherwise, people were taught form an early age that reading is “the way”. Speed Reading Fails!

Dyslexia

There are an amazing number of people that suffer daily with reading; dyslexics. 25% of the population has dyslexia. Since there are 7 types of dyslexia, and if you are a dyslexic, you can experience 1 or more of them at varying levels, the school systems are not equipped with specialists to properly diagnose the different types. In reaction, many dyslexics get diagnosed with ADD and ADHD instead.

For dyslexics, dealing with written information can be painful to impossible. There is a different way of dealing with the dyslexic aberration; bypass it all together. The way this can be achieved is by reteaching dyslexics to access their eidetic memory (photographic memory) instead. #Dyslexia does not inhibit the photographic memory.

Photographic Memory

There is another way to gain information that is much more effective that reading or speed reading. When you were born, you had a #PhotographicMemory. It isn’t limited to just seeing either. It is a photographic memory on all senses. It is called the eidetic memory. Better yet, it is completely natural!

There is a new way to learn that uses that photographic memory you misplaced. It is called Mental Photography. It was invented in 1975 by Richard Welch from speed reading. There is still hope for those that find reading and speed reading painful to impossible.

For more info. Brain Management