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Thursday, December 9, 2010

Thinks Like the Actors in the Theaters


Have you ever wondered how the actors of a play can remember such long dialogues of the script and be fluent while presenting them?
How can actors in a theatre remember all of the script of the entire drama all at once?
 Is there some sort of magic? Nope!
 Actors never try to rot remember their dialogues for the play. All they do is they put themselves into the role of the character they are playing and feel the character’s intension so that the dialogues comes naturally and fluently. Researchers have found out that the secrets inside all this is a technique called “active experiencing”. ACTIVE EXPERIENCING is a process of breaking down the written script into logically connected intensions. Person using this technique uses physical, mental as well as emotional channels to communicate to those stuffs related to that person as a result it becomes easier for him to act and present himself as the same person. (Read More)

Now the real question is that “Can we people (who are not actors) use this technique for our memory improvement?”
 Yes, Researches have shown that this method is very useful for increasing the recalling and recognition power. It’s not that active experiencing is only useful in making the scripts of a play easier for an actor to present in the play; it is effective for the peoples off-stage too. For example a student can remember a material by relating it to other persons who needed information about that material or who has used that material. If you are an engineering studying student then you can remember the description of any equipment then prepare yourself in such a way that you are about to describe about it to a normal person in a market. 
It becomes easier to remember by this method rather than the rot remembering.

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