Anthony Metivier's Magnetic Memory Method Podcast Podcast Por Anthony Metivier's Magnetic Memory Method Podcast arte de portada

Anthony Metivier's Magnetic Memory Method Podcast

Anthony Metivier's Magnetic Memory Method Podcast

De: Anthony Metivier's Magnetic Memory Method Podcast
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Learn, Memorize And Recall Anything Using Memory Techniques, Mnemonics And A Memory Palace Fast Aprendizaje de Idiomas
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  • The Scientist Exposing What Your Brain Does With “Fuzzy” Memories
    Apr 10 2026
    Have you ever parked your car, walked away, and completely blanked on where you left it? And yet… somehow you walked straight to it anyway? When that happens, it might not be luck. Rather, it could be your brain using what scientists now call “fuzzy memory.” And this might be the most important discovery about short-term memory in the last 20 years. To learn more, I sat down with Dr. Paul M. Garrett, currently doing postdoctoral work at the University of Melbourne. In addition to studying how your brain makes decisions when it’s uncertain, his recent article on The Conversation raised old and new questions related to how I think about forgetting, remembering, and every decision I make in between. Here’s one aspect of Paul’s research that blew my mind: The old theory said your brain has a fixed number of memory “slots.” If something made it into a slot, you remembered it. If it didn’t, it was gone. But that theory is apparently wrong. Rather, Paul’s research demonstrates that even memories you’d swear are completely gone still leave a faint signal in your brain, precise enough to push you toward the right answer without you even knowing why. That “gut feeling” you get sometimes? That might literally be a fuzzy memory talking. In this conversation we go deep on why your brain caps out at 3 to 4 items in working memory and what that actually means. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wm6C08m3WUI We also discuss why you remember better from a physical book than a screen (and the possible spatial memory scientific explanations behind it). Next, we discuss: How trained motor skills get so deep into procedural memory that even ten years away can’t break their strengthHow marketers and salespeople exploit your decision boundaries using time pressureWhy a tiny dose of Bayesian reasoning would make almost everyone a sharper thinkerWhat new EEG research on voluntary decisions reveals about whether or not free will is realHow to make memory science more accessible by finding good science popularizers Paul and I had such a deep conversation that we kept going well past the formal interview. That bonus discussion covers experimental design for mnemonic research, Giordano Bruno‘s 16th century memory seals, the neuroscience of pitch detection and white matter volume, music therapy for Alzheimer’s patients, and a lot more on the topic of how memory works. You can access the full bonus conversation in the Magnetic Memory Method Masterclass. You’ll find it on the Bonus page. More About Paul Garrett & His Research To follow more from Paul, check out his: LinkedIn ProfileGoogle Scholar pageProfile on The Conversation If Fuzzy Memory Fascinated You, Go Deeper With These Science-Related Episodes Ready for more? Check out my conversations with: Dr. David Reser and Tyson Yunkaporta about Aboriginal Memory TechniquesDr. Gary Small on science-backed ways to keep memory strongDr. Christine Till on research into brain training with apps Final Thought Here’s the final thing (for now) that comes to mind about fuzzy memory: If your brain is already doing this much work behind the scenes with zero memory improvement training, just imagine what it can do when you actually give it the right tools. That’s what the Magnetic Memory Method is built for, and that’s why it’s based around the Memory Palace technique. After all, many of us have been using locations we barely remember to memorize tons of information. So if you’re not familiar with this approach, or you’re worried that you can’t remember places you remember enough to use the method of loci, complete this Complete Guide to the Memory Palace technique. You might just be pleasantly surprised by just how much your fuzzy memories help you remember more than you ever imagined possible!
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    1 h y 5 m
  • How to Think on Your Feet: The Complete Training System for Mental Agility Under Pressure
    Mar 24 2026
    If you want to know how to think on your feet, you need to understand something most advice on this topic gets wrong: Thinking on your feet is not a talent. It’s a trained response. And the training required goes far deeper than memorizing a few “power phrases” or practicing small talk at networking events. Real mental agility, by which I mean the kind that serves you in a boardroom, on a stage, in a heated conversation, and even in physical danger, is something you earn. And to earn it requires systematic preparation across multiple domains. I know this because I’ve spent decades training for exactly these moments. As a university professor, I’ve lectured in multiple languages to rooms of students who didn’t always want to be there. And to get my PhD, I had to sit for a dissertation defense in a room where some of the examiners delighted in throwing hardball questions. As a performing musician, I’ve improvised solos on stages where the set list changed mid-show. While performing card magic, I’ve recovered from botched tricks in front of audiences who were actively trying to catch me out. And as a martial arts practitioner, I’ve used my training to escape three real-world physical confrontations without throwing a single punch. Then there was my TEDx Talk where I had to make real time adjustments when the audience failed to even smile at my scripted laugh lines, but chuckled substantially during parts I had not planned to be funny. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqtDy68-gkY How to Think on Your Feet: The Complete Training System for Mental Agility Under Pressure What I’ve learned across all of these experiences is that every domain of “thinking on your feet” shares one foundational requirement. It’s not intelligence. It’s not quick wit. It’s often not even confidence. Rather, the biggest lesson I’ve learned is that thinking quickly and responding in the best possible way comes down to the systematic reduction of ego. That might sound philosophical, but it’s intensely practical. And it will become the thread that connects everything in this guide. From how to recall information instantly in a conversation to how to physically escape a threatening situation without freezing. Here’s what we’ll cover today: Part 1: Why “Thinking on Your Feet” Is a Trained Skill, Not a Personality Trait Part 2: The Ego Problem (Why Your Self-Image Is Your Biggest Obstacle) Part 3: Mental Recall Under Pressure (How to Access What You Know When It Matters) Part 4: Verbal Agility (How to Sound Smart, Pivot, and Recover in Conversation) Part 5: Performance Under Pressure (Lessons from Music, Magic, and the Stage) Part 6: Physical Composure (How to React When Your Safety Is at Stake) Part 7: Daily Training Exercises for Mental Agility Part 8: Loading Your Mind (Why What You Memorize Determines How Well You Think) Part 9: The Paradox of Mental Silence Let’s dive in with why most people struggle with the skill of spontaneously responding in optimal ways in the first place. Why “Thinking On Your Feet” Is a Trained Skill, Not a Personality Trait As Freud pointed out, civilization is not our natural state. In Das Unbehagen in der Kultur, which is usually translated as Civilization and Its Discontents, he argues that much of our inner tension comes from how our social training represses our instincts. “Discontents” is not really a great translation for the title of this book. “Unbehagen” means something more like “unease” or “discomfort.” And since languages and skills are something we learn, we literally have to undergo a process of discomfort to learn most things. That’s not a political statement. It’s a neurological one. Your brain’s implicit memory system, the part that handles automatic behaviors, gut reactions, and how you repeat social patterns on autopilot, was shaped by millennia of environments that looked nothing like a conference room or a dinner party. It was shaped by physical survival, tribal dynamics, and the need to read danger before it arrives. This means that when you’re put on the spot in a modern context, your brain defaults to patterns it learned through observation, not through deliberate training. And those patterns were modelled on the people around you growing up. Especially in contexts like: Being asked a question you weren’t expectingGetting challenged during a meetingHaving someone force you to improvise a presentation at school or work In such situations, you might find yourself freezing under pressure and not realizing that you’re actually repeating how you saw a parent go cold when you were young. Or you might find yourself getting defensive in arguments the way a sibling did, or going blank during presentations based on someone else’s blip you observed. When you repeat this behavior yourself, it’s not a character flaw. That’s implicit memory doing exactly what it was designed to do: replicate observed behavior. And if...
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    1 h y 42 m
  • Everyday Genius by Nelson Dellis: Review, Interview & Analysis
    Mar 18 2026
    Nelson Dellis delivers yet another epic memory improvement book with Everyday Genius: Hacks to Boost Your Memory, Focus, Problem-Solving and Much More. In my view, this book is also a corrective to the increasing mountains of bad memory training advice online. I mean, spend ten minutes browsing memory improvement forums and you’ll start to see the rot. Same recycled advice. Same flat explanations lacking nuance. Same people “teaching” techniques they’ve: Never stress-tested in publicNever pushed to the limitsNever offered anything more than mostly copied explanations of standard mnemonic methods The toxicity for the serious student of the memory arts and mental skills is only getting worse as people ramp up their use of AI to produce even more untested “teaching” of these techniques. So the fact that Nelson actually demonstrates and performs a kind of “immersion journalism” when it comes to the techniques he teaches provides just one of many reasons why Nelson Dellis’s Everyday Genius matters so much. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PJoc5gLIx2c How Everyday Genius Takes Memory Training Into New Terrain It’s not that Nelson has invented any new memory techniques in this book, which you can learn more about on Abrams Books. He hasn’t. And it’s unlikely that anyone ever will. Nelson told me as much at the opening of our interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcTJuCiDVqE Anyhow, “new” doesn’t come into the picture for people serious about memory and accelerated learning. As someone who has received and read Amazon reviews on memory improvement books for decades, I always find it odd when someone writes, “nothing new here.” Since even Giordano Bruno essentially announced that nothing new would be coming to the field of mnemonics back in the 1600s, the real task is to: Stop Confusing Activity with Accomplishment Nelson’s book matters first and foremost because it comes from a mnemonist of actual accomplishment. A real practitioner, not just a reader of memory improvement books who then comments on them. He’s someone who has put his mind on the line under pressure, in competition, with nowhere to hide. In other words, Nelson’s history of accomplishment adds weight to every page. And you can feel it almost immediately. Everyday Genius is written by someone who has actually lived inside the machinery of memory and various mental tactics and then extended these into real life situations: Giving a speechMaking new business contactsSolving real-world problemsExploring the nature of the mind At the risk of repetition, this distinction matters more than ever, because the internet is drowning the memory arts with all kinds of secondhand certainty written by people lurking behind anonymous user accounts. What Kinds of Real-World Problems Will This Book Help You Solve? As most memory improvement books worth their salt do, Nelson covers the Memory Palace technique, a.k.a. the method of loci. But he doesn’t just recite the classic approach to this technique. He describes it from lived experience. And his approach to mnemonic images and pegword systems likewise comes from accomplishment. Then, when you go through his explanations of how to apply these mnemonic systems to remembering names or speeches, you’ll have a deeper understanding of how to implement them. Likewise when it comes to critical thinking. Nelson takes you through actual real-world scenarios and shows you how various critical thinking examples can make life a lot smoother and more successful. Making Memory & Learning Both Relevant & Fun Another major thing Nelson gets right in Everyday Genius is that he doesn’t shy away from blending the use of memory and thinking tactics for fun with more serious learning outcomes. I know that I’m guilty of not finding that balance in my own writing, even if personally I perform card magic with a memdeck and play music, etc. The cost, however, is that using memory techniques for activities like card counting can be learned a lot more readily when you have at least some of the foundational mnemonic strategies working for you. In reality, learning them doesn’t have to be a grind. And the stories and profiles of polymathic geniuses Nelson shares throughout the book will help you see the multiple layers of fun in store for you. The key is to find ways to make these techniques integrate into your everyday life. Figuring out how to do that can be a challenge, but that’s all the more reason to pay attention to the examples distributed throughout Everyday Genius. The Potentially Controversial Aspect of Everyday Genius Now, you might be wondering… Is Everyday Genius perfect and free from critique? No. And unlike his previous books like Remember It! and Memory Superpowers, Nelson takes risks that I partly admire and partly question. And one of my criticisms goes back to at least two years prior to its publication when Nelson first told us about his “remote viewing” ...
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    57 m
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