Improve Your Recall To Avoid Freezing in Front of Women

Carlos Xuma July 10, 2008 2

bad date

Here’s my technique for being prepared and NOT losing it in  front of a woman…

I’m assuming that you’ve walked up and said “Hi” or  used some other opener to get the conversation started. I’ve taught you plenty of methods in these newsletters, and you can find more in my programs.  And, as you know, it’s not what you open with that’s important, but what you say NEXT that will make the difference.  But how do you keep it going with all the stuff you want to talk about?

Here’s what you do first…

STEP 1: CREATE YOUR OWN BRIDGE
A conversational bridge is a way of bringing up a topic that you want to steer the conversation towards.
Let’s say you know you want to talk about your passions and interests with a woman, and you’ve thought of a great way to bring it up and talk about it. And, let’s say your passion is photography.  You have a couple ways you could bring it up in conversation, like:

“You know, I was just thinking as I’m looking at you that you would make a fantastic subject for photography. Have you ever thought about doing a sitting?” (Note that I did NOT use any corny lines about “you should be a model.”)

You could also bring it up without focusing on her by saying: ”I was out scouting locations for some photos today. The light here is really fantastic for bringing out skin tones and eye color. Isn’t it great?”
(I don’t have time to cover it here, but showing this kind of “vision” of the world is VERY attractive to women.)  Okay, so now we’ve got a couple ways to bring up our interests in conversation, without bragging AND at the same time communicating to a woman that you’ve got a hobby in your life that brings out your passion.  Maybe you’ve got some great questions to ask, and things to say that you think of when you’re at home, but now you need to have it ready all the time, like a loaded gun.  You want to be able to come up with this when you’re out and about, but you find yourself constantly forgetting it when the pressure is on.

Here’s your next step…

STEP 2: ENGAGE YOUR MODALITIES
Modalities are simply your senses. Sight, smell, hearing, taste, and touch.  The more of your senses you use, the quicker things are embedded in your mind.  So you want to spend some time before you go out writing these words down, whether it’s the questions you want to ask, or just a list of topics you want to bring up in conversation.  This will engage your “kinesthetic” modality.  Then you want to spend some time saying the words out loud. This will help you rehearse and say things smoothly, and it also engages
your “auditory” modality.  And you also want to spend some time reviewing things on paper.  Read and re-read the phrases and information you want to commit to memory. This will engage your “visual” modality.  But even this is not enough for most of us. You need ONE extra simple step to make this work, and it’s something that not many guys know about.  I’ve got a special method that increases your results about 1000%.

You need to…

STEP 3: ENGAGE “SITUATIONAL REHEARSAL” TECHNIQUE
Back when I was in high school, I used to have a good method of learning material I needed for tests. You probably did, too.  I would cram all my notes on a piece of paper with facts, writing stuff everywhere, and in every direction. On the margins, sideways, whatever.  Then, when it came time to study for a test on  memorized facts, I would just sit down with the page and cover up sections with my hand and try to recall the information.  Well, we all did this in some way or another with our notes. What you don’t realize is that you weren’t learning the information as much as you were learning WHERE that information was on the paper.  You got locked into recalling the information based on WHERE it
was, not WHAT it was.

So when you get a fact or information that you can’t see on a piece of paper, you would forget it fast. (Which is why  it’s so easy to forget names. We’re not paying attention to it enough the first time, and there’s nothing to anchor it in our heads.)  That’s right, it wasn’t the information you were learning as much
as giving your brain a LOCATION for that information. It’s called ”spatial relationship,” and it’s how your mind stores information.

It’s more important to give a RELATIONSHIP to the information to make it stick.  Like right now, if you close your eyes, chances are you can recall where almost everything is in your bedroom, or another room in your apartment that you are very familiar with. So here’s how you use this “Situational Rehearsal” technique. It’s based on the way your brain really learns.  And you’ll get at least 10 times better retention and recall of information if you use it…

In my previous example, you came up with a great way to talk about photography, your passion. And you came up with a great way to actually SAY it to a woman. You may even have some of my “Power Questions (TM)” that you want to memorize to use.  Now you have to practice recalling these things in MANY different locations, and in many different situations.  You would want to do stuff like:

- Recall and recite the words when you’re in the shower.

- Call your home voicemail and recite it back as a message.  This one is great. It will put you “on the spot”

- AND it will give you a chance to review how you said it later. You can do this with your cell phone voicemail, too.

- Recall and recite when you’re driving in the car.

- Recall the words when you’re watching a television show, as if you’re saying it to the people on the screen.

- Recall and recite when you’re out on a city street. (Just whisper it so that people don’t think you’re crazy.)

But if you REALLY want to improve by leaps and bounds in your inner and outer game of conversation, here’s a KILLER bonus technique:

- Put a bluetooth headset on (or any cell phone earpiece so it looks like you’re talking on your phone). Then, go out and recite what it is you’re memorizing when you’re out in public on a city street or in a store.  Don’t worry, other people will just assume you’re talking to someone on your cell phone. But this method will help you get over your fear of looking foolish in front of other people.  AND it gives you a killer rehearsal for saying it in front of a woman. You get your shyness out of the way, and you build confidence in the process.  (I used to do this all the time, and make up some pretty crazy conversations to see if I could get people around me to listen in.  ”He hit the cop with a baseball bat??? No WAY!” Try it sometime…  it’s better than prank phone calling.)

The point of this is that you must get out there and put yourself in as many DIFFERENT situations where you have to recall the information you’re trying to memorize.  The more situations you find to rehearse in, the better you’ll be when it counts – in front of a woman.  By using my technique, you activate millions more neurons in your brain, which commits the words DEEP into your memory. And then this helps you pull out the words when you really need to, and you won’t have any of those embarrassing gaps and silences in your conversations with women.

Stay Alpha…

Carlos Xuma teaches men the inner and outer game secrets of the Alpha Lifestyle – Attracting Quality Women with the REAL You.  Get Carlos Xuma’s free Art of Attraction ebook and e-course – CLICK HERE: Dating Tips for Guys.

photo by glenn harper

2 Comments »

  1. avatar
    Sergio L July 10, 2008 at 8:07 pm - Reply

    The bluetooth thing is great! I might have to get one just for that… I actually just started talking to myself in the car, saying the first thing on my mind, practicing vocal tonality, saying hi to other cars, “opening imaginary sets”, etc. to get used to being in a talkative mood before starting my day. I even practice banter lines and conversational threads. I may try conversing with talk radio, that might be fun…

  2. avatar
    Ed July 11, 2008 at 5:07 am - Reply

    The ancient Greek and Roman orators had a similar technique. They would memorize the rooms of their house or a street with all of its buildings benches, statues, etc. Then, when they had to memorize a speech, they would create visual images of the points that they wanted to make. Then they would put them in order starting in the entrance way of their virtual home, next the table just inside the entrance, then on the wall a few steps in, etc. Then, as they gave the speech, they would walk through the virtual house and recall the points in order by seeing the images they had put there.

    To relate this to the article, you could put an image of a camera just inside the door. Connect the topic you want to use with it, a pretty girl sitting for her portrait or the locations that you scouted earlier. The ancients would try to make the images really strange or funny or sexual to make the images far easier to remember than something more mundane so make the portrait nude, or put a clown in the location you scouted. Make that a nude clown…

    If you just have the one thing you probably don’t really need to do this, but once you have a dozen or so topics that you want to be prepared to steer the conversation towards it could be helpful. Next to the camera you put your wind board, (I have been listening to Dan the Social Hitchhiker, he really needs some new examples..) Next to that a photo album of you best vacations, next to that a concert ticket stub, etc. That one image should be enough to bring everything back that you built up using the techniques that Carlos outlined.

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