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World Memory Championships 2012

WMC 2012 is in.....drumroll, please.......er, London? After all that talk of potentially being in Lithuania, Latvia, Malaysia, China, outer space even....it comes back to London. No big deal really; I'm totally fine with it. It makes the whole thing a lot easier to get to, reliable, and less subject to sudden change. Will there be any prize money? Who knows. Probably not. If they decided to stay in London it probably means that there's no big sponsor. Either way, I'm in. I was planning to compete in the UK Championships at the end of August, but maybe I'll just wait till the WMCs since it's in the same place. My goal at this point is one thing and one thing only....to become a Grandmaster.

To become a Grandmaster of Memory one needs memorize a deck of cards in under 2 minutes (easy peasy), 10 decks of cards in an hour (I've done 9 in 30 minutes), and 1000 digits in an hour (I've done 880 digits in 30 minutes). Should be doable. Once I have that, I'll be happy. There's only one other American who has that title (Scott Hagwood) so it would be cool to be the second (David Thomas doesn't count).

Oh, the dates are December 14-16.

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All Hail King James

2012 NBA Champions = Miami Heat. 2012 NBA MVP = Lebron James. 2x NBA Champ = Dwyane Wade. 7-three pointers = Mike Miller. Velociraptor scream = Bosh. All memorable stuff.

This whole season was memorable. The playoffs were even more memorable. The finals were just absolutely, impossibly unforgettably, memorable. All those things add up to help my memorizing numbers and cards systems that much easier to use....and remember, of course.

2 years ago I set out to expand my 2-digit number system to 3-digits. That meant taking my existing 100 images (00-99) that I knew so well and tacking on 900 more of them to make 1000 total images (000-999). I had no clue where to begin. It just seemed too overwhelming. How would I ever be able to learn a system that massive?

The answer dawned on me when Lebron James and Chris Bosh joined Dwyane Wade on the Miami Heat in the summer of 2010. I knew that I wanted to add all these memorable NBA players to my system somehow because they were all so memorable to me. These were people that I'd basically followed their every move for almost 10 years. At the time, I only had 2 NBA players in my 2-digit number system: 24 was Kobe and Shaq was 34 (because of their jersey numbers).

So I had the ingenious idea of expanding those numbers into categories. All the 24's would become NBA guards and all the 34's would become NBA big men. The preceding digit to the 24 or 34 would use a very loose hybrid between the Dominic and Major phonetic system to help remind me of the image. Basically the following letter-number associations:

1 = t, j, a 2 = b, n 3 = c, m 4 = r, d 5 = e, l, y 6 = s, sh, ch, 7 = g, j, k 8 = h, f, o 9 = n, p, v 0 = (nothing)

I know it looks complicated and random, but I wanted to give myself as much flexibility as possible when coming up with all the images, so I let each digit cover a number of possible letters. I left 024 as the original 2-digit image, i.e. Kobe (034 as Shaq), then started building the nine other 24s (124, 224, 324, etc.) and 34s. Here's what I came up with and the reasons why:

024 = Kobe [original number 24] 124 = Michael Jordan [MJ is the number 1 NBA player in history] 224 = Bosh (Chris) [2 = b = Bosh] 324 = Dwyane Wade [3 is D-wade's number] 424 = UD (Udonis Haslem) [4 = d = uDonis] 524 = Carmello (Anthony) [5 = l = carmeLLo] 624 = Lebron James [6 is Lebron's number] 724 = Jeremy Lin [7 = j = Jeremy] 824 = Tony Parker [8 = o = tOny] 924 = Vince Carter [9 = v = Vince]

034 = Shaquille O' Neil [original number is 34] 134 = Tim Duncan [1 = t = Tim] 234 = Blake Griffin [2 = b = Blake] 334 = Alonzo Mourning [3 = m = Mourning] 434 = Dirk Nowitski [4 = d = Dirk] 534 = Yao Ming [5 = y = Yao] 634 = Stoudamire (Amare) [6 = s = Stoudamire] 734 = Garnett (Kevin) [7 = g = Garnett] 834 = Howard (Dwight) [8 = h = Howard] 934 = Pau Gasol [9 = p = Pau]

Following this idea till the end, I managed to complete all the other 2-digit number categories and come up with all 1000 images. This is the system that led me to set this year's US speed-numbers record of 303 digits in 5 minutes. I am now closing in on 400 digits.

I didn't stop there. I decided to use this idea to expand my card system. For so long I memorized cards individually. Each card was a single image and I would make little 3-card stories to chunk more cards into one image (the PAO system, read more here). After years of practice and training, that system took me to 32 seconds in practice, but no further. I wanted to get faster, and that meant coming up with a more complex card memorizing system. Instead of each card being a single image, I'd have to one-up it by making each pair an image. That's over 2700 images I'd need to create!

Coming up with my 2-card per image system took a monstrous year of hard work to figure out. Basically it works the same way as the numbers. To keep it simple for now (these were the first steps I took when creating the system), I worked with only the number cards (A,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9), no face cards. Each pair of cards would read as the numbers on them. Those would be the 2-digit number (ex. AA = 11, 29 = 29 - it's pretty self-explanatory). The pair of suits would then translate to a digit that I would place before the 2-digit number (just like in the number system) to make the card a 3-digit number. I would basically be taking pairs of cards and turning them into 3-digit numbers - numbers I already had images for because of my numbers system mentioned above. The only problem was that suit pairs have 16 combinations, not 10. So using my 1000 images for all the suit pairs that went up to 10, I came up with the remaining 6 images for each category by coming up with 6 more guards and 6 more big men (for 23 and 34 at least). It also meant coming up with a system for translating suit pairs into a hexadecimal system (that's a number system based on 16 rather than 10, FYI). Here's how it works:

(d = diamond, c = clubs, h = hearts, s = spades)

0 = DD 1 = HH 2 = SS 3 = CC 4 = SD 5 = SH 6 = SC 7 = CD 8 = CH 9 = CS A = DH B = DS C = DC D = HD E = HS F = HC

Why? Because I said so. It's the way I like it (there is SOME rhyme and reason to it, but I'll let you figure that out on your own). Because this Miami Heat season was so memorable, I decided to include everyone from the roster in those additional 6 images for the 24s and 34s. Shane Battier became 2 of Diamonds/4 of Spades (DS suit pair = b = Battier = B24). Mario Chalmers became 2 of Diamonds/4 of Clubs (DC suit pair = c = Chalmers = C24). Mike Miller became 2 of Hearts/4 of Spades (HS suit pair = l = mike miLLer = E24). Joel Anthony became 3 of Diamonds/4 of Hearts (DH suit pair = a = joel Anthony = A34).

Pretty cool, right? Eh.....you're probably thinking this is down-right, impossibly complicated. Well honestly, it is. But once I learned it (and I'm still in the process of fully learning it, mind you) it became second nature. Over time with practice, the cards and numbers become the images themselves and the translation isn't needed anymore. At least remembering the 24s and 34s have just become a lot easier, all thanks to the fact that these guys just became that much more memorable last night.

GO HEAT!

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Brief Hiatus

I"ll be out of town for 10 days, just a heads up. Taking a little breather. I"ll be back the week of the 25th with some memory driven posts and how-to"s. Stay tuned. In NOTICE: THIS IS NOT THE POSTING IN WHICH THE PHRASE APPEARS FOR THE CONTEST TO WIN TICKETS TO SEE JOHN FOERTY AT SANDS BETHLEHEM EVENT CENTER horoscope taurus today is Day 3 of our contest to win fifth-row tickets to see John Fogerty at Sands Bethlehem Event Center. the mean time....get ready for my upcoming climb mid-July in Peru. Serious training for Everest begins then!

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Hershey Is Pretty Sweet

Get it? Hershey...sweet? Yeah, well it's nicknamed the "sweetest place on earth" and I was there this past weekend to meet up with the Hershey High School memory team (they are the 5-time champions of the school portion of the USA Memory Championship and some of their team members even have US records in memory). A few of their students were at the competition last March filming the whole thing and put together a pretty sweet documentary. Okay, I'll stop saying "sweet."

The documentary is called "Recall" and it was edited and directed by Bobby Hummel. It was really well done and most of all, it gave a really cool glimpse into how the Hershey kids prepare for and deal with the competition. It was pretty impressive to see them behind the scenes, to see them in action, but I think what I liked the most is the fact that they never take themselves too seriously. I love that. They work at their craft and just show up at the competition having a blast. If they break some records or end up in the finals while doing it, then swee.....awesome.

I forget to do that sometimes. I take things too seriously. You could see it in my face in the documentary, the whole time I was a nervous wreck and on edge, worrying about this score and that. Yeah I won, but it almost felt like I was winning because I HAD to win. That being said, I'm glad I won, but definitely need to tone it down next year. I'm always pushing myself really hard, which is great, but that can also stifle my creativity, which can then weaken my memory. I'm working on a ridiculous system right now for cards and numbers, and frankly, it looks like it's going to be a nightmare to master. But at the base of it all, it's fun coming up with the stuff. I just need to remember to have fun with it and not to take it too seriously.

Just wanted to give Hershey team a shout-out. It was awesome hanging out with them and it made me wish I was still in high-school (only for a second though, haha).

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