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Ageless Memory: Simple Secrets for Keeping Your Brain Young - Foolproof Methods for People Over 50

Ageless Memory: Simple Secrets for Keeping Your Brain Young - Foolproof Methods for People Over 50
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Ageless Memory: Simple Secrets for Keeping Your Brain Young - Foolproof Methods for People Over 50

 
 
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Description

The world's foremost memory expert—and mega-bestselling author—proves that memory CAN get better with age, using his foolproof system for sharpening the mind, improving concentration, and attaining a truly "superpower" memory.

Completely practical and easy to use, Harry Lorayne's unique memory system can be put into practice immediately—for a better memory the very same day you open the book and start to read. With this one book, specially geared for those of us past 50, we learn to:

• Recall names and faces, even years later

• Never miss an appointment or misplace keys, glasses, valuables, etc

• Give speeches without notes and learn foreign words and phrases easily

• Memorize long lists of items, huge numbers, quotations, Bible verses, and all kinds of facts and figures

• And (most important when we age) regain the confidence that comes with having a sharp, active mind.

Harry Lorayne has been honing and teaching his memory systems for 40 years. Ageless Memory is the culmination of his life's work, specially tailored to our needs as we age and encompassing all of the many ways we can use a better memory every day.


Product Details
Author:Harry Lorayne
Hardcover:239 pages
Publisher:Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers
Publication Date:January 01, 2008
Language:English
ISBN:1579127509
Product Length:8.38 inches
Product Width:5.79 inches
Product Height:0.87 inches
Product Weight:0.82 pounds
Package Length:8.3 inches
Package Width:5.8 inches
Package Height:1.0 inches
Package Weight:0.8 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 16 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5 ( 16 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

37 of 37 found the following review helpful:


5Harry Lorayne's newest book, "Ageless Memory"  Mar 14, 2008 By G. Cary "Lloyd W. Cary"
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I became a Harry Lorayne fan ever since he published his first book, "How To Develop A Super Power Memory." His easy-to-learn memory systems became indispensable at the work place. Teaching Mr. Lorayne's systems are one of the greatest lifelong GIFTS you can give your children. (I taught it to my sons and they almost felt as though they were "cheating" in tests, since they could "see" the answer right there in their minds.)

I have, as I recall, gotten every memory book Mr. Lorayne has written since 1957, but "Ageless Memory" is, without doubt, his best. It may well prove to be his "legacy."

"Ageless Memory" is well-written in non-technical, numerous, encouraging style. He doesn't waste your time with a lot of techo-talk or theories. He just teaches you shows how your memory naturally works and HOW to develop a "push-button" memory from the git-go. His book is results-oriented. I consider it to be his BEST book on memory because it covers SO MANY AREAS by showing you step-by-step how to apply his systems to YOUR own personal memory problem.

He covers, e.g., however to remember names, faces, numbers, dates, shopping lists, appointments, spelling, trivia, vocabulary, foreign vocabulary, stocks, history, playing cards, Morse code, speeches, remembering what you read, computer shortcuts, medications, how to cure absent-mindedness, even remembering Bible verses! He even teaches you how to easily perform a 400-digit memory feat. At the end of each chapter is a special "Mind Power" exercise that is equivalent to doing "mental pushups."

I would heartily recommend Mr. Lorayne's latest book, "Ageless Memory" to ANYONE who wants to improve his or her memory. All you have to lose, when all is said and done, is your forgetful memory.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:


4Worked Well, too many stories  Feb 06, 2009 By C. Peake
I would recommend this book. It helped me and I am well over 50. However, I agree with other reviewers. The author should have left out a few stories.

8 of 9 found the following review helpful:


5Memory exercises  May 26, 2008 By Harry Goldstein
I had read a Harry Lorayne book as a teenager many many years ago and found the techniques useful then.

This book allowed me to revisit his lessons as an elder retired physician and is helping me to cope with the usual senior moments that we all encounter.

Highly recommended.

6 of 7 found the following review helpful:


5Best Harry Lorayne Memory Book Yet!  Apr 08, 2008 By vederveder3 "vederveder3"
I have many of Harry's books, and love him! He is such a sincere person and gives his all to us the reader.
Naturally if you have ordered this book, you are in a situation that you may be feeling concerned that your mind is feeling fuzzy, or that you want to keep your brain young and vibrant. You will not be dissapointed in this book at all.
I especially liked how positive the books overall feeling is. That our brains shouldn't be deteriorating and actually should be sharper than ever. I have tried the techniques in the book, and as long as I apply them, I have noticed an improvement! I now know my Bible books forwards, and backwards. Have memorized several scriptures, and am partially thru the Sermon on The Mount.
Our brains are wonderfully made, and we should take care of it. So go ahead, whatever you decide to memorize, it will help you in middle age and beyond. Thanks Harry for the encouragment and help to sharpen up!

13 of 17 found the following review helpful:


5You can improve your memory, regardless of your age  Apr 04, 2008 By Blaine Greenfield "eclectic reader"
I typically have difficulty remembering three things: names, faces
and the third thing . . . geez, I can never remember that third thing.

So that is why I was excited to come across AGELESS MEMORY
by Harry Lorayne . . . long
recognized as the world's foremost memory-training expert, I've
been following his career for some 40 years and have read
just about all his other books.

Yet this one had particular interest to me, in large part because of
its appealing subtitle: SIMPLE SECRTS FOR KEEPING YOUR
BRAIN YOUNG . . . and who wouldn't be interested in that premise?

I certainly was, but soon realized that I had to change my thinking
around so as to not fall into this common trap:

* A man called and said he had "the worst memory in the world." He
desperately needed my help. The first thing I told him was that he'd
have to get in line behind all the other people who've told me that they
have the worst memories. (What a great excuse "bad memory" is: Don't
depend on me for anything 'cause I'll forget." The fact of the matter is
that every time you say, "I have a bad memory, " you put another hole
in that sieve of your memory--and give people past fifty a bad name!
My goal here is to get you to brag about your great memory; and each
time you do, you'll plug up one of those holes and tell the world that older
can be better.)

All you need to do is follow this key suggestion:
* Sure, what we refer to as "memory" may get less and less reliable
as we age. I know that when I'm not applying my systems, I sometimes
fumble over words and familiar things may fall into that "senior moment"
abyss. But that never happens with any information, any word, any name,
any number, and anything that I'm interested in. That's my point.

Lorayne even relates his ideas to organizing your desk:
* It's a cliche rule, but one that surely works. The rule is DO IT NOW.
My sub-rule is, try not to let a paper go through your hands more than
once. Because if you do, what too often happens is, you drop the paper
somewhere on your desk with the thought, "I'll take care of it later." It gets
covered up with other papers and you never see it again! It's forgotten. Take
care of it now; then you can't forget it.

Lastly, I liked how the author got me thinking throughout the book with
some intriguing exercises at the end of each chapter . . . perhaps my
favorite was this one:

* A rich Arab dies and leaves his seventeen camels to his three sons.
The camels are to be divided as follows:

Half to the first son, one-third to the second son, and one-ninth
to the third son.

The three sons can't seem to work it out without chopping up
some of the camels!

A wise old Arab happens by on his camel and solves the problem
immediately--without cutting up any camels.

Do some mental exercise; try to figure out how the wise old Arab did it.

Answer:

The wise old Arab simply adds his own camel to the 17, bringing the total
number of camels to 18. Then, the camels are divided as follows:

½ of 18 is 9 camels for number one son.
1/3 of 18 is 6 camels for number two son.
1/9 of 18 is 2 camels for number three son.

After each son takes his allotted camels (9+6+2=17), the wise old Arab's
camel remains. He mounts it and rides off into the sandstorm.


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