How to become a memory master | Idriz Zogaj | TEDxGoteborg

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  • čas přidán 23. 10. 2012
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    Idriz is passionate about teaching others how to improve their memories and believes that with the right practice, almost everyone can get a super-memory.

Komentáře • 4,6K

  • @Michael_00001
    @Michael_00001 Před 6 lety +3884

    Let me summarize a 17 minute video in about 2 seconds: Make a fun story out of something you want to remember and you will make a strong connection.

  • @sodazman
    @sodazman Před 9 lety +2506

    My ex must have done this. She remembers shit from 15 years ago.

    • @TheFreedomWriting
      @TheFreedomWriting Před 9 lety +27

      LOL

    • @Reason1717
      @Reason1717 Před 9 lety +44

      Now that was funny. But not so much for your ex. And if she see's this...she'll remember this post.

    • @SercanPy
      @SercanPy Před 9 lety +14

      Jame Gumb that was such an inspiring comment. I clapped with my butt cheeks.

    • @TheFreedomWriting
      @TheFreedomWriting Před 9 lety +2

      Cool8474 remove you're ego buddy

    • @nanotech2080
      @nanotech2080 Před 9 lety

      ***** Aww, I feel so sorry for you :( So was your dad cheating on your mom or the other way around?

  • @allpraisetothemosthighyah
    @allpraisetothemosthighyah Před 3 lety +131

    Seeing his head, when I heard him say I will be able to remember a deck of cards with a glance, I beleived him.

    • @daritykharkongor6544
      @daritykharkongor6544 Před 2 lety +1

      💀😭

    • @DuduSP7
      @DuduSP7 Před 2 lety +4

      You're mocking him, aren't you? 🤔🤔🤔

    • @allpraisetothemosthighyah
      @allpraisetothemosthighyah Před 2 lety

      @@DuduSP7 i still beleive him. Looks like the advance version of the transporter he must be serious i need to be practicing it more btw

    • @jawadyammad6621
      @jawadyammad6621 Před 2 lety

      His gor a big forehead 😆

    • @DuduSP7
      @DuduSP7 Před 2 lety

      @@allpraisetothemosthighyah yeah, definitely you're joking him...

  • @iChristm
    @iChristm Před 6 lety +290

    Jason Statham: Transporter, Expendable, Memory Athlete. Is there no end to this man's talent?

    • @manoshijbiswas9494
      @manoshijbiswas9494 Před 2 lety +5

      😂How could nobody noticed you??!!till now.

    • @pascalmbiakra954
      @pascalmbiakra954 Před 2 lety +3

      💀💀💀 I knew something wasn’t right here 🤣🤣🤣

    • @danielpam6310
      @danielpam6310 Před 2 lety +5

      Omg!! I felt that he looked like jason too! 🤣

    • @Jasmine-ze5hj
      @Jasmine-ze5hj Před 2 lety +5

      😂😂😂 hahahah God, you made a funny memory now I can't forget you anymore

    • @00z53
      @00z53 Před rokem +1

      @Priya Sengh yes he is

  • @PhuongNguyen-wr3vh
    @PhuongNguyen-wr3vh Před 7 lety +2161

    16:42: "The next time you hear something that you wanna remember, make a fun story of it."
    That's it, save you 17 minutes, for the sake of your time.

    • @medineyilmaz3491
      @medineyilmaz3491 Před 7 lety +71

      Phương Nguyễn wow is that all he has to say in 17 minutes😳

    • @cv6040
      @cv6040 Před 6 lety +12

      Thank You.

    • @SparkingLife111
      @SparkingLife111 Před 6 lety +73

      Wish I scrolled through comments first

    • @TheDawningEclipse
      @TheDawningEclipse Před 6 lety +28

      Phương Nguyễn that's horrible advice for remembering programming 😂😂😭😭😭😭

    • @batabatonica
      @batabatonica Před 6 lety +3

      ward

  • @paulspydar
    @paulspydar Před 8 lety +651

    I was gonna watch this months ago but I totally forgot..

    • @guerrerosebastian183
      @guerrerosebastian183 Před 8 lety

      +paulspydar jajaja

    • @Misendei
      @Misendei Před 8 lety

      lmao me too!!

    • @noevilea8370
      @noevilea8370 Před 8 lety

      +paulspydar I got bored by the 10 minute mark.
      Already been tested with memory during a rather intensive IQ test that took 4.5 days to do 2836 questions.
      I exceeded the math/number sequencing 2 digits beyond the test criteria.
      It only allowed for 18 digits but the tester made up an extra 2 totaling 20 just for his own curiosity.
      He would state a number and I had to repeat it backwards.
      I also have OCD and have been habitually doing this for 41 years - lol.
      Not all mental issues are negative so I told off a group of 12 OCD sufferers in 2014 because they just wanted to get rid of it as if it`s all a bad thing.
      Some is, but many of us have learned to harness it.

    • @de_light641
      @de_light641 Před 8 lety

      -paulspydar what's wrong with your pic?

    • @paulspydar
      @paulspydar Před 8 lety

      BryantGamer HD
      ?

  • @KeivisRojas
    @KeivisRojas Před 3 lety +137

    The only thing I got was: "Make a fun story out of something you want to remember and you will make a strong connection.
    "

  • @r.b.roberts9747
    @r.b.roberts9747 Před 6 lety +27

    Hi TEDx Goteborg!
    Thank you presenting for Idriz for this very special moment in mnemonic technique. This has been an inspiration to me for being a bit more proactive about reinforcing my ability to remember what I should.
    My greatest benefit from this was the reminder, yet, in other words, for conscientiously creating "strong connections" for what I need to remember. It's a reminder to the effect that it's crucial to always be alert for that throughout the day and every moment I'm awake.
    And, of course, please, allow me to say: TEDx does it, again!

  • @Sad-Lemon
    @Sad-Lemon Před 8 lety +1992

    I wanted to write something after watching this but I forgot what it was.

  • @BJ-eh4ol
    @BJ-eh4ol Před 8 lety +374

    I've been trying out these tricks for about a year now while in college and it's really helped quite a bit. I never forget small things anymore now and I wonder if there's any connection. I know our brains work best when we're frequently recalling that information. So even just thinking about where you put your keys two times, separated by 10-15 second intervals, seems to help wonders. That applies with most everyday things. It's a great habit to get into.

  • @ConstellationMushrooms
    @ConstellationMushrooms Před 5 lety +41

    "Its all about having fun and making strong connections." Idriz.

  • @joophoop349
    @joophoop349 Před 6 lety +2

    He takes time to get to the point but its worth watching it.
    Idriz Zogaj :thank you very much, I think it will help me using my memory
    in a better way. Greetz from the Netherlands, two thumbs up .

  • @Travis7060312
    @Travis7060312 Před 8 lety +332

    im going to think of a happy little swedish man painting memories on my brain to remember this technique

    • @adro7354
      @adro7354 Před 8 lety +13

      +Travis7060312 he's albanian

    • @jemimaonuoha7081
      @jemimaonuoha7081 Před 8 lety

      U

    • @Travis7060312
      @Travis7060312 Před 8 lety +9

      Adrian Meta im american I dont know any better

    • @animATEer
      @animATEer Před 8 lety

      +Travis7060312 how do i turn a deck of cards into a funny cartoon?

    • @piontropechetrini5640
      @piontropechetrini5640 Před 8 lety +1

      +Travis7060312 No. You are a USA citizens Part of the American Continent, don't insult the rest of the American countries comparing them with the USA ignorants.

  • @perikaveera4438
    @perikaveera4438 Před 10 lety +59

    I am a physician, M.D. in Mississippi and would like to share my experience here. I've been in the United States for 25 years but I was born and raised in Bombay, India which I visit every couple of years. Now, India is a multilingual country and Bombay is the most cosmopolitan Indian city where several languages are spoken. Ever since I can remember, I was exposed to 6 languages including English (education though, was exclusively in English with French and the vernacular lingo being an optional subject, and that too starting only in the 5th grade). Besides English (&French) at school and with friends, by the age of 3 or 4 I could also speak Hindi (+read/write), Marathi (+read/write), Telugu and Gujarati fluently. And each of these languages in 2 or 3 different regional dialects. As for Chinese, we had a small ethnic Chinese minority in Bombay who spoke Mandarin Chinese at home (only speak, not read/write) and English and 2 or 3 local Indian languages. I've been away from India for 25 years and living in South Mississippi, hardly ever get to speak the Indian languages and YET, I have not lost my fluency in these. My American friends, co-workers and office staff are amazed at this ability of mine and say "Doc, you're a doctor, you're smart and that's why". If I was indeed so smart I would not have been struggling with Spanish considering that 20% of my patients are Latino and I still sometimes need my office translator to whom I pay $27000 a year!
    Bottom line is that as a child, toddler, your brain's capacity to learn things is infinite but as an adult, it's very limited. In Medical School, by the time you've passed your Ist year and successive years, you've forgotten 70% of what you've learned during the previous year. Left me saying to myself, if I could learn and remember 6 languages by the time I was 4 or 5, why not my medical subjects??
    Jackson, Mississippi.

    • @perikaveera4438
      @perikaveera4438 Před 10 lety

      Yes Sir, I hear your comments but I would like to point out a few things. I'm actually a pediatrician with almost 25 years of experience with seeing aged 0-18 years. Keeping aside my professional experience, and the fact that an average child has a vocabulary of 250 words including 3 word sentences. And that also, presuming a monolingual environment. That apart, what I have said here is from my own experience as a child and not as a doctor. At 3 or 4 years of age, I said I only could speak these languages at the basic level of skills expected of a 3 or 4 year old and not claimed to be able to compose literature in the languages. Only with age was I able to gain more and more fluency in all of these. And yes, I do watch stuff in some of these languages on TV or CZcams from time to time even though I've not had a conversation with another person. Learning and forgetting are very complicated processes about which we know very little even today, there is no general rule of thumb. And no doubt, practicing is very important to retain proficiency, beyond basic fluency.
      But what you are saying is that if you are marooned alone on an island (hypothetically) for 1 year or to give you, sir, the benefit of the doubt, for 3 years, you will forget your speech altogether, languages included. You wont even remember the names of your friends and family when you see them again in a couple of years because you have not been able to speak to a fellow human being during that time. Today, we live in the age of communication and globalization where we can call and talk to our families in faraway countries but not so, 60 or 70 years ago when students from different countries traveled west for higher studies for several years before they met anybody else that spoke their native language, but I don't think they all forgot their language(s).
      But thanks for the opportunity to clarify anyways.

    • @perikaveera4438
      @perikaveera4438 Před 10 lety +5

      Sir, with all due respect, the subject here is the ability to learn and remember something, not whether one can forget something over a lifetime or not.
      But again, one can forget anything, incidents, events and language. If one suffers a head injury like a severe concussion one can forget his own name and address. But no matter how severe the concussion, it's extremely rare to forget your language (or languages), that is, the power of speech altogether. Unless he has suffered an injury to the Broca's area (and ?? Wernicke's area) and these is complete or partial loss of speech itself. Coming back to the subject of language (or languages), I am sure that if you have NEVER spoken or even heard a language for many, many years, 20 or 30 years since your childhood, you likely will lose lose the ability to speak that language but when you hear it being spoken again, you will remember what the words mean, slowly and gradually but surely. Not everything, but increasingly with time and some practice.

    • @Winfinitely
      @Winfinitely Před 10 lety

      ***** Agreed, I don't think kids have better brains or something, just that they are more interested in learning and have less on their mind. I feel like adults can learn languages fine and actually quite fast

    • @losangels690
      @losangels690 Před 10 lety +1

      That is why I do not trust doctors...they just don't know anything and refer to books all the time......all they know is what medication to prescribe...and even that they have to look up in their book....over paid..very over paid.

    • @perikaveera4438
      @perikaveera4438 Před 10 lety

      I fully agree with you.

  • @nufosmatic
    @nufosmatic Před 4 lety +50

    In 1975 I read_The Memory Book_ by Harry Lorayne and Jerry Lucas. Understood what they were teaching, never drilled myself on doing what they suggested. Although, in a lame senior high school english class, where we were assigned a list of vocabulary words each day, I composed a story that used those words in order, and everybody in my little cliche got 100% on the test each day. The teacher suspected we were "cheating", but could not prove anything. To this day, I remember "coalesce with a cogent coaster-monger"...

    • @vincentyfsiew
      @vincentyfsiew Před rokem

      Yeah... I learnt my memory skills from Harry Lorayne's peg/link system too and passed on the knowledge to my children when they were just 4 years old.

    • @gpdashixiong
      @gpdashixiong Před 11 měsíci

      @@vincentyfsiew My child is also 4 years old, specifically how do you do it

    • @vincentyfsiew
      @vincentyfsiew Před 11 měsíci

      @@gpdashixiong start with a few simple words they are familiar with like... sweets, pencil, bird, ruler, cap and teach them to link by creating a "story". Have they recite the story in the sequence and test them what is item #2,, #4 ... etc. Next, have them recite the items backwards. This should take a couple of tries. When they are good enough, expand the vocabulary to 10 items, then 15, 20...

    • @gpdashixiong
      @gpdashixiong Před 11 měsíci

      @@vincentyfsiew Thank you very much for your reply, it gave me some inspiration.

  • @subhamkaphle
    @subhamkaphle Před 4 lety +70

    WHO'S WATCHING IN 2020 🖐
    GOD BLESS YOU WITH GOOD MEMORY ❤

  • @Berepicnic
    @Berepicnic Před 8 lety +569

    Only important of this start at 16:41

    • @troy36273
      @troy36273 Před 8 lety +44

      +Bere Santos this killed me XD
      spot on.

    • @Berepicnic
      @Berepicnic Před 8 lety +1

      +troy bradshaw I know, dame here

    • @troy36273
      @troy36273 Před 8 lety +6

      wish i knew more dames :P

    • @blackcheese6061
      @blackcheese6061 Před 8 lety +25

      thank you for saving my time. why would make 16min video with such a simple massage but yet effective.

    • @Berepicnic
      @Berepicnic Před 8 lety

      I know

  • @stephenlester5206
    @stephenlester5206 Před 7 lety +3796

    Who else has a test tomorrow?

    • @SniperMonkeh
      @SniperMonkeh Před 7 lety +23

      Stephen Lester I have a test in 4 days. Btw, nice name man.

    • @daycoregod929
      @daycoregod929 Před 7 lety +11

      +Moe Lester
      lol wen u mention "nice name" i thought y is that even matter and its just a name
      and wen i saw ur last name lmao
      im died😂😂😂😂

    • @SniperMonkeh
      @SniperMonkeh Před 7 lety +7

      Daycore God I know, it's hilarious. I didn't know I would ever see another Lester on the internet.

    • @lipikabansal180
      @lipikabansal180 Před 7 lety +9

      who has a test tomorrow? lol XD

    • @davidbresnahan5986
      @davidbresnahan5986 Před 7 lety +5

      Finals start on Friday for me, it's actually insane how I found this

  • @mybiasissouthkoreasbestboo8479

    My professor taught this to us and even I was amazed. I thought mind palaces were Sherlock’s jam but apparently it’s my jam too

  • @jacobbyington5534
    @jacobbyington5534 Před 6 lety +12

    I used to do this in school to remember important facts and thought i was insane lol. I never knew other people did it. Awesome to see its a widely used technique! It works so well. You come up with a bizzare imagined scenario for whatever you must remember and its hard NOT to remember.

  • @bidox3
    @bidox3 Před 8 lety +134

    the book is called Super Memory Power by Dominic O’Brian

  • @asdfasdfwae
    @asdfasdfwae Před 7 lety +461

    I had so much fun memorizing the cards; that I became a gambler now.

    • @betramsbetrams3774
      @betramsbetrams3774 Před 7 lety +3

      Lol

    • @greysonwilliams7402
      @greysonwilliams7402 Před 6 lety +4

      Michael Hazle card counting

    • @cmacmed
      @cmacmed Před 5 lety

      and always face down, unless he were the one shuffling them

    • @alejrandom6592
      @alejrandom6592 Před 5 lety

      Quick glance to cheat at blackjack

    • @_Mr.D
      @_Mr.D Před 5 lety +1

      Ohhh yeah, now I remember your face. You were thrown out of MGM for counting cards

  • @saracaushi6172
    @saracaushi6172 Před 6 lety

    I am very glad that Albanians are marking their future in this direction. Greeting From Albanian IDRIZ ZOGAJ.

  • @aliciaferreyra7954
    @aliciaferreyra7954 Před 4 lety +4

    This video gives interesting advice to develop memory and remember when people like me need memorizing vocabularies, slangs, idioms, phrasal verbs, and so on that are the base to be fluent in whatever languages. Thank s you for sharing.

  • @Rcuwomen
    @Rcuwomen Před 9 lety +53

    The process of creating a story between the two items that have nothing in common is reminding us that we are creative. This example by Idriz is amazing!

  • @RightNow978
    @RightNow978 Před 8 lety +481

    Tough crowd

    • @ChrisPPotatoIDC
      @ChrisPPotatoIDC Před 8 lety +1

      +Joseph Petro
      Tough Love

    • @neithanm
      @neithanm Před 8 lety +42

      +Joseph Petro Good memorizer maybe. Bad speaker for sure.

    • @leondrecortez7817
      @leondrecortez7817 Před 8 lety +3

      +Joseph Petro ^ that made
      me laugh so loud

    • @chattyraven211
      @chattyraven211 Před 8 lety +76

      +Neithan He's not a bad speaker. He was very nervous, you can see it. I could feel his heart beat and his hands shake. Yet, he stood there, composed himself and got through it. I have stood in those shoes.I think he's very brave.

    • @xXxTr0nxXx
      @xXxTr0nxXx Před 8 lety +5

      +Chatty Raven Being able to give a speech doesn't make you good at it. He's brave yes, but he's still a bad speaker. That said, I personally could never speak in front of such a croud.

  • @ampadedoda5027
    @ampadedoda5027 Před 9 měsíci +1

    The fact that you can see in the audience the amount of aw when they realize that they remembered without trying is amazing

  • @SA-sd2np
    @SA-sd2np Před 6 lety

    god! i love tedx talk
    thank you so much idriz

  • @l2ebel96
    @l2ebel96 Před 9 lety +16

    The Number 1 fear most common among people is the fear of public speaking. So all those haters out there should acknowledge that this TED speaker at least spoke up before about hundreds of people, probably impromptu even. That's impressive enough. Another point is that this guy may not even be conveying his ideas in his native tongue. Lay down on the negative comments a bit, please. Thank you and have a splendid day. ^^

  • @priayief
    @priayief Před 8 lety +48

    One doesn't have to be a practiced orator to pass along knowledge, motivation and inspiration. This gentleman did it well and I applaud his efforts.

  • @canbogaz3783
    @canbogaz3783 Před 2 lety

    You are right,dude.This really true.I'm useing my memory better now!Thanks...

  • @chivosadventures8171
    @chivosadventures8171 Před 6 lety +1

    I already forgot the title of the video and I'm watching it on my phone as we speak, I had to touch the screen just to remember it.

  • @Abcdefg-zz8qw
    @Abcdefg-zz8qw Před 7 lety +1343

    now how in the hell am i going to turn my chemistry notes into a story

    • @laurettagilbert2229
      @laurettagilbert2229 Před 7 lety +25

      Exactly lmao

    • @sherazkhan2802
      @sherazkhan2802 Před 7 lety +432

      Jennifer xxo Turn it into a story like you make friendship with sodium and you are a water molecule ... Then there is a fight between you two and sodium jumps onto you and then there is an explosion ....... END OF THE STORY .... You died now close the book.

    • @ravengaming4604
      @ravengaming4604 Před 7 lety +34

      I can visualize chemistry perfectly without having to make a story....think of it practically

    • @syeager2389
      @syeager2389 Před 6 lety +6

      Awesome video. Wow!! Very interesting I enjoy it very much! 💖👍👍

    • @loner8045
      @loner8045 Před 5 lety +34

      Once a upon a time negative and positive always hated each other due to them being oposites. But as time went on h
      They both learned to work together and set aside their differences. The end. Your welcome.

  • @alzheimerdinger1455
    @alzheimerdinger1455 Před 7 lety +190

    True story!
    This is why it is so hard to remember things for school.
    The odd memories never change.The boring ones go away.
    The funnier it gets, the harder to forget!
    Fun makes it easy.
    Boredom makes us busy.
    When it comes to the brain
    you need an inspirational rain
    The harder we try
    the easier it will fry
    Just add some fun to it
    and you'll get over it!
    I just thought of it!!!

  • @mattyhendo9100
    @mattyhendo9100 Před 5 lety +125

    When the ski and the giraffe came up all I thought about is
    "Say Colorado"
    "IM A GIRAFFE"

  • @smileamber7129
    @smileamber7129 Před 3 lety

    *Recently, I try to improve my memory skills because I had realized its importance and dominance in our high-quality life*

  • @BLOP888
    @BLOP888 Před 9 lety +13

    GREAT! Just finished memorizing all countries of Europe in less then 30 minutes by creating a simple story.

    • @henriandco
      @henriandco Před 9 lety +2

      BLOP888 well what is it?

    • @bigspence404
      @bigspence404 Před 9 lety

      BLOP888 Yes, do Tell :)

    • @swat22camden
      @swat22camden Před 9 lety +56

      he forgot the story

    • @user-kg3lm3wh2t
      @user-kg3lm3wh2t Před 9 lety +2

      swat22camden lol

    • @zeromailss
      @zeromailss Před 9 lety

      swat22camden indeed.that happen sometimes,and you need a trigger to remember the whole story again, like a song for example,you could sing it perfectly with its lyric but then there will be a time when its stuck,after some trigger like reading/hearing a random word that exist in the lyric you will or might remember it again

  • @micoyap100
    @micoyap100 Před 9 lety +107

    I’ve been looking for something like this for a long time.
    This is exactly what I do in school and I’ve always wonder if other people have done it. It makes studying extremely fun and you retain the material longer the stronger the story is. Emphasize on emotion (fun, sad, anger) as your brain will retain that information for a long time.
    For me, what I’ve done is I create fictional characters and tie them to a story and relate it to a material.
    For my personal example: I would link restriction enzyme (enzyme that cuts DNA) to a story such as one of my characters slicing a DNA with a sword. Now whenever someone mentions restriction enzyme I think of that.
    These fictional characters are precious to me and I absolutely love them. They came from a variety of genre that I enjoy. Now link a material to a story where that precious character dies and see if that material doesn’t engrave on your mind. I sound like a weirdo but it works for me.

    • @methemoglobin1068
      @methemoglobin1068 Před 9 lety +8

      Me too. thats how I got through med school. Assigning visual qualities often help. It makes learning fun!!! :)

    • @abhisheklimbu9609
      @abhisheklimbu9609 Před 9 lety +1

      what a bunch of weirdos!

    • @neoworld2
      @neoworld2 Před 9 lety

      Vanco Mycin did you do that for anatomy? :)

    • @Idrizzogaj
      @Idrizzogaj Před 9 lety +17

      To people like you I always say: CONGRATULATIONS! You have figured out how the brain works when it creates good and strong memories! By your self! In the Swedish national memory team we have a girl who has had "naturally good" memory as long as she can remember. She thought that everyone else was "strange" that could not remember things as good as she did. But when people started to call her "Weirdo" like ABHISHEK LIMBU (no offence) she kept quiet about it... Then something amazing happened... She found me on the internet and we started to talk memory, of course. I sent her my book, she read it and started crying when she realized that people trained them self to be as crazy as her! She is today one of the best memorizers in the world when it comes to names and faces (185 in 15 minutes!) and took several medals at the World Memory Championships 2014 as well as helping team Sweden to gold!
      It would be interesting if guy's would test my app ( Zogaj Memo Gym ) and particularly Chain play, that is very hard for people that have no techniques. Only the girl above has made it to 30 with "no techniques" (I later found out that she is using techniques but not in a perfect way). After just telling her how the techniques could be perfected she did 60! Only memory athletes can do 60 as far as I know. But please prove me wrong! :)
      This is also the reason why I write memory books for children and have made a game that requires memory techniques and is for children from 3-4 years old (like the app). Since I want ALL children to understand that getting a good and active memory is a choice you can make when you are little. Since most teachers in Schools do not train you on it. Hence why we can revolutionize the school system... Big dreams I know, but quite easy to conduct if we all just put a little effort to it. And you guy's are my proof... you got it on your own!
      Again, congratulations and keep up the good work!

    • @abhisheklimbu9609
      @abhisheklimbu9609 Před 9 lety +1

      Idriz Zogaj let me try your app, FYI i don't have a memory technique or something, but my memory isn't tht bad, i can have a glance at around 30 digits for a short while and can memorize it, am i good enough??? :) i would really appreciate if you can help me further

  • @vt4463
    @vt4463 Před 6 lety +5

    Συγχαρητήρια που ανέφερες τους Έλληνες! Συγχαρητήρια για τα επιτεύγματά σου. Είσαι άξιος!

  • @Rashhey
    @Rashhey Před 3 lety +3

    Our brain is fascinating... it is capable of more things that we think... I wish they were teaching all these super memory, fast reading techniques at school a lot.

  • @MsWatchdog
    @MsWatchdog Před 7 lety +45

    Nice to hear a pro talking like this coz at Uni we are told exactly the same.... I passed all of my exams using this technique and its ace and I swear by it... I teach it to my kids and they are all in the top sets

    • @MsWatchdog
      @MsWatchdog Před 7 lety +16

      believe it or not it is... i studied for two degrees at the same time. You just have to familiar yourself with things. For example, I studied for law and criminology, which means you have a lot of dates and statue and cases to remember. The one thing you can do is to write in your own words in short a very short summary of the case, then to remember the date and name of case you just think of who it may remind you of. eg, i can remember a case which i can remember as smith and doby, i familiarised this with Doby with Goby who is that alien type of thing in Harry Potter, so smith and the date automatically came up.
      Make home made flash cards, either out of cardboard or just A4 paper, write the whole name and date of the case on one end, at the bottom write what it sounds like or who it reminds you off, and at the back a really short summary. Trust me it really works... only a little hard work in making the flash cards but it really helps.
      My daughter failed her keyskill maths, so when she told me how bad she was at Maths I told her to make Flash cards. She had 3 wks to her GCSE Maths exams, and she passed with a C. To think she had previously failed in keyskills, and that as she was doing her A levels the teachers let her on coz she had a good study ethos, meant she had got the results she wanted.
      It really is easy as pie once you get grips with it. Try it and let me know

    • @chibi8894
      @chibi8894 Před 7 lety

      wait so how do you memorise stuff

    • @Esbheidhy
      @Esbheidhy Před 7 lety

      can u teach it to me!!!

    • @MsWatchdog
      @MsWatchdog Před 7 lety

      Beiidyʕ•́ᴥ•̀ʔっBeidy Hun all you need to do is to familiarise yourself with things mentally, if you cant do it this way then make yourself some flash cards and test yourself
      card like the ones you play with.
      for example if you are studying for exams, and you have a certain topic to study, then pick out bits of the topic which you feel are the one you need to study on. put the word on one side of the card and the other side put something you think it sounds like.... it might be a story or a favourite cartoon or even a family member which drives you out of your mind... anything.. promise it will get so much easier.. try it and let me know

    • @Esbheidhy
      @Esbheidhy Před 7 lety +1

      Naz Khan thats the thing i dont know what is the test gonna be about..

  • @naseerahmad5461
    @naseerahmad5461 Před 10 lety +45

    Muslim kids memorize a whole Quran at age 7. It is 600 plus pages and they retain the information. Now that is a real memory!

    • @naseerahmad5461
      @naseerahmad5461 Před 10 lety +24

      First of all, I did not bring that up in regards to superiority or inferiority. I simply wrote that to elaborate on the profound power of memory. Second point; you have many grammatical mistakes you need to work on, and my third point is; The issue regarding bombs and explosives is that those youth are being told the elders ( whom themselves do not know the proper meaning of the Quran) tell them to do it and they will go to heaven. Thats not what ISLAM AND QURAN is all about. It is nothing then a mere message of Oneness of God, good behavior, proper conduct, self discipline and a message of peace. Those who do evil acts in the name of ISLAM are fools and fools belong in the lower depths of hell.

    • @FredIsMyName22
      @FredIsMyName22 Před 10 lety +1

      GIRAFFE! Dontgive ashit naseer ahmad The ignorance.... poor Naseer, not all Westerners are like this! We're not all bad! I promise!

    • @naseerahmad5461
      @naseerahmad5461 Před 10 lety +11

      I am a Westerner, I am an American, I am Muslim, I probably know the American culture more then you'll ever know. And I did not generalize, I know not all Westerners are like that, but you have to admit, the majority of people are pretty fu%$#@ ignorant, just like they are in the Middle East.

    • @aSexyDinosaur
      @aSexyDinosaur Před 10 lety

      Im english so yea you will know more than me :p

    • @Bardia323
      @Bardia323 Před 10 lety +3

      GIRAFFE! Don't generalize... I'm an atheist but your small racist brain makes me wanna puke!

  • @user-uv9bi3xz1o
    @user-uv9bi3xz1o Před 3 lety

    I thought the stories were ridiculous until I remembered every detail of them. Like dude I don't even remember what I ate 4hrs ago. Or if I locked the door for the 5th time. Wow. This is incredible and thnk you very much.

  • @TreBrickley
    @TreBrickley Před rokem +1

    From ChatGPT:
    In his TEDx talk "How to become a memory master," Idriz Zogaj shares some tips and techniques for improving memory:
    Use the power of visualization: Our brains remember images more easily than words or numbers. By associating images with the things we want to remember, we can recall them more easily.
    Use the method of loci: This technique involves associating the things we want to remember with specific locations in a familiar place, such as our home or a familiar street. By mentally walking through this place and recalling the associations we've made, we can remember the things we've memorized.
    Chunking: Breaking down information into smaller, more manageable chunks can make it easier to remember. For example, we might remember a phone number more easily if we break it down into groups of three or four digits.
    Repetition: The more we repeat something, the more likely we are to remember it. Zogaj suggests using a technique called spaced repetition, where we revisit information at increasingly longer intervals to reinforce our memory of it.
    By practicing these techniques regularly, Zogaj argues, anyone can become a memory master and improve their ability to remember information.

  • @bambooindark1
    @bambooindark1 Před 9 lety +24

    I learned a technique similar to this :
    1. Choose a room you're familiar with, and convert what you want to remember into objects.
    2. Put those objects into any place you want in this room respectively, like desk, chair, bed, shelf or somewhere else...
    3.You can use another room if you want.
    I found this method perform really great! I can still remember few things half a year ago !
    I'm not boast at all ! Actually, my memory is always sucks...

  • @XxKINGatLIFExX
    @XxKINGatLIFExX Před 8 lety +1304

    I clicked on this because I though Jason Statham was doing a talk.

  • @garyyang2887
    @garyyang2887 Před 6 lety +1

    I think that the main point is telling us that if you want to remember something new, you should make a fun,vivid and animated story of it. by doing this, it help you remember much longer.

  • @pianoforest5815
    @pianoforest5815 Před 4 lety

    it worked on me, i have pretty bad memory but ive successfully memorized all of the pictures and the exact order he showed just by watching this video once without any pause.

  • @pauloluciooliveirajunior5298

    This video was in my watch later list, but I forgot to watch it.

    • @leanhoven
      @leanhoven Před 8 lety +1

      +Paulo Lucio Oliveira Junior Irony

    • @marypoppins4394
      @marypoppins4394 Před 8 lety +2

      That happens to me all the time!

    • @SE-yt5yd
      @SE-yt5yd Před 7 lety +3

      Hahahhaha

    • @daysiflores2425
      @daysiflores2425 Před 7 lety +1

      same xD

    • @edymasta
      @edymasta Před 7 lety +2

      Paulo Lucio Oliveira Junior I always do the same, always ted talks too ;)

  • @jamesstables6636
    @jamesstables6636 Před 7 lety +193

    7:15 starts the exercise. you're welcome

  • @mindburstTV
    @mindburstTV Před 6 lety +2

    Great insight Idris. The human mind is so powerful that there's nothing it can't achieve if Harnessed.
    Thanks once again for that wonderful insight.

  • @timahfager6407
    @timahfager6407 Před 6 lety +1

    Always did this when I learned Kanji (japanese letters), made pictures. Works sooo good.

  • @instaminox
    @instaminox Před 8 lety +47

    STATHAM OF MEMORY

  • @AlexGLuque
    @AlexGLuque Před 8 lety +21

    I really enjoyed this talk. It's clear that brain can be trained, you just have to try. This idea of trying to make stronger connections seems so powerful. Thanks for sharing!

  • @dvdrn6
    @dvdrn6 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Michael for the quick summary.

  • @Darignobullseye
    @Darignobullseye Před 4 lety

    This was phenomenal!!!:-) THANK YOU!!

  • @AestheticCapybara
    @AestheticCapybara Před 9 lety +2165

    Jason Stathams final form

  • @TheRaid98
    @TheRaid98 Před 8 lety +3

    this has absolutely changed how I study. as a Senior I cannot emphasize how much this will help me, I got one of the books already and it tested me on a lot of stuff. i did poorly. then later after learning a strategy I did exceptionally well. Thanks so much.

  • @myatmoat4249
    @myatmoat4249 Před 2 lety

    thank you for such precious approach!

  • @bobboob7079
    @bobboob7079 Před 2 lety

    Nghe xong bài này cái thấy tâm trạng buồn và nặng nề kinh khủng. Nhưng lại cứ phải replay hoài cả ngày😍

  • @TheBabijonas
    @TheBabijonas Před 9 lety +67

    Statham did not kill anynone in this scene....

    • @souhailkaoussi6415
      @souhailkaoussi6415 Před 9 lety +1

      i was thinking the same.

    • @Idrizzogaj
      @Idrizzogaj Před 9 lety +11

      Are you certain...

    • @souhailkaoussi6415
      @souhailkaoussi6415 Před 9 lety +2

      oh , hello Idriz .. i'm supporting you dude , you are awesome :D

    • @OG_Hera
      @OG_Hera Před 9 lety +1

      Idriz Zogaj Hi! This is great advice, I didn't know this was an actual methods, I always associate what am studying to silly stories in my Gross Anatomy class and I always get As in that class. I would definitely like to improve on this skill, any books that you would suggest?

    • @Robdahelpa
      @Robdahelpa Před 9 lety +2

      Grace Owino moonwalking with einstein is a good book on memory palaces written by joshua foe

  • @lastcall9998
    @lastcall9998 Před 8 lety +6

    Thank you TEDx Talks, for making a world a better one with your chosen speakers (I know, they do it willingly and they just need to have an idea).

  • @mahjongyin6517
    @mahjongyin6517 Před 6 lety +1

    Thank you for your inspirational experience

  • @duhawmakhiangte2362
    @duhawmakhiangte2362 Před 4 lety

    of all the ted talk he might not be the smoothest explainer but for some reason, I get what he means I have seen other said the same thing about memory but this one struck my brain 'Let your brain have fun' this makes me realized something important and I know what to do.

  • @noorshafi6772
    @noorshafi6772 Před 7 lety +24

    I have tried it, and it works . you just need to believe

  • @jchawkins9643
    @jchawkins9643 Před 9 lety +14

    Here are is another one for y'all.
    How to remember the 5 Great Lakes between Canada and the USA.
    What do you think of when you think of a Lake? That's right HOMES. Big Beautiful homes overlooking the lake.
    H - Huron
    O - Ontario
    M - Michigan
    E - Erie
    S - Superior
    When I was in the Military (USAF) I had a hard time remembering the 4 different types of Generals. Then a friend said think of like this.
    Be - Brigadier (1 - Star)
    My - Major (2 - Stars)
    Little - Lieutenant (3 - Stars)
    General (4 - stars)
    Hope you have fun with these.

  • @playplayplay456
    @playplayplay456 Před 3 lety

    Thanks you soooo much. It really worked for me. I learnt 500 english words in a week. ⚡⚡

  • @abbichoa145
    @abbichoa145 Před 6 lety +1

    when i was on elementary school, my dad gave me supermemory books. He told me everytime i do nothing, just to read the book and keep it in mind. And it worked to me. So, brain loves imaginations-creative thinking.

  • @kemchobhenchod
    @kemchobhenchod Před 7 lety +519

    man this talk would have saved me a lot of bullshit in school if I had found it 20 years ago

    • @DXPAlien
      @DXPAlien Před 7 lety +12

      this wasnt even released 20 years back ._. nigga you need some breakfast .-.

    • @wetree9939
      @wetree9939 Před 7 lety +30

      +Onim Dip he said if he knew doesn't have to be out he's just saying smh

    • @DXPAlien
      @DXPAlien Před 7 lety +2

      SnakeGaming ow.. ow.. dude... thanks for letting me know lol.. maybe i was drunk or something idk x'D that dude wrote the whole thing in past tense xD so ... ya it's okay

    • @kemchobhenchod
      @kemchobhenchod Před 7 lety +6

      conditional past tense is different than past tense.. used to talk about imaginary scenarios. btw this stuff works, try it with memrise.

    • @kemchobhenchod
      @kemchobhenchod Před 7 lety +1

      hugo ñanculef beltran yeah they also hate your bullshit spam

  • @francesca2341
    @francesca2341 Před 7 lety +264

    I wish I only had to remember snails and doors in college

    • @lijincancer
      @lijincancer Před 6 lety

      Francesca me too!!
      I think it's a better idea.... relating something @ something works for me well....I also wish you would be able to!!!

    • @daregeorge
      @daregeorge Před 6 lety +2

      He is not saying remember snails and doors... turn the information infront of you to a story, let them relate to something... i still rememner that the snail opened the door for me and the birds was building walls with the bricks ..lol . .. he said it too, we put lot of info into our brains as students. The question we should ask is, how many of this info do we actually use in the real world. How many Algebra, calculus have we engage as individuals in our day to day living. Should we really be storing this info? Believe me, the only reason you wanna lear them is so you can pass your exams...may be the new model should be, to get us interact with these info, discuss them but doesnt have to cram them into our brains.. then we choose our core area of interest as we grow old. just think... Havent I spent last 20years of my life learning things I will never use... Doesnt that easily pass for junk? (if you see any error, forgive it...I simply didnt go back to edit...lol...)Dare George

    • @edgarsvilums1550
      @edgarsvilums1550 Před 6 lety +5

      Algebra and calculus are pre-requisites to statistics which are used (if you are any good) at these fields: Economics, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, everything related to computers, Bookkeeping, making any kind of predictions about the future, Demography, Politic campaigns, Finances and trading, Engineering, idk... tons more. So I guess if you clean dishes at the local cafeteria you don't need that. Or if you are mediocre in your field. But anywhere except the arts, there is place for that information.

  • @tracymiller1149
    @tracymiller1149 Před rokem +10

    Thanks for the fun and informative video about memory. I have hundreds of memory palaces that I use for different purposes. I've used houses, apartments, and dorms I've lived in, schools, parks, neighborhoods, workplaces, and even movies and TV episodes as memory palaces. I used them to memorize Pi to about 5,600 places, and have used them in the Long-Term Memory events of the USA Memory Championship, which I've competed in 4 times, finishing as high as 3rd place in this year's competition.

    • @pixiqpixiq
      @pixiqpixiq Před 4 měsíci

      Yes but how do you remember binary or songs in an indigenous language that I don’t know the meanings of all the words

  • @teresitamunar9635
    @teresitamunar9635 Před 6 lety

    Love watching ..that’s all an additional knowledge that we can have..

  • @artug874
    @artug874 Před 8 lety +1657

    Thanks Jason Statham

    • @cezz86
      @cezz86 Před 8 lety +7

      That was a good one.

    • @Arramah
      @Arramah Před 7 lety +1

      hahahahaha I was looking for his name bellow, nice shot dude

    • @akshayraut580
      @akshayraut580 Před 7 lety +2

      Seriously... :D

    • @sneakycheeky531
      @sneakycheeky531 Před 7 lety

      Er Polat I only went on this vid to say something like that :(

    • @artug874
      @artug874 Před 7 lety +1

      +Amateur Dragon I'm sorry bruh :( start upgrading your speed and one day you will be the Usain Bolt of commenting

  • @AmtojS
    @AmtojS Před 9 lety +3

    I have not made associations and stories like this since I was a child. And it makes perfect sense. I am 23 now and a "grown up" and never before looked back on applying methods I used when I was younger,
    So cheers to the genius and creativity of our childhood.

  • @scottfalkirk714
    @scottfalkirk714 Před 2 měsíci

    This works in 2 ways, one is that your brain is better at remembering happy experiences .The second is as follows, imagine a brain cell with many arms. Every new memory you create which passes through that brain cell by using it in memory recall causes it to reach out and join with another neuron around it. The more connections in makes with different neurons, the more connections that have to be broken for you to forget. You can keep trying to strengthen the connection between the same two neurons but lots of connections will be better than fewer connections that are a bit stronger.

  • @zahidahabdullah4218
    @zahidahabdullah4218 Před 6 lety +1

    I love him... 😊 i know he will get better in presenting .. I believe

  • @smol_chilli_pepper
    @smol_chilli_pepper Před 9 lety +85

    How could you made a story out of a deck of cards. That seems so difficult.

    • @KLOHSEF
      @KLOHSEF Před 9 lety

      1210Nique haha yeah youve got the point :D

    • @HandballNinja
      @HandballNinja Před 9 lety +123

      1210Nique
      Assign a person, place, and thing to each of the 52 number-suit combinations.
      It may also help to have a system to help memorize these 52.
      Here is a system I use:
      2's are n's because they have two down strokes
      3's are m's because they have three down strokes
      4's are r's
      5's are L's or V's like the roman numerals
      6's are g's cause a six is a rotated g
      7's are K's cause two 7's put together and rotate make the letter K
      8's are F's
      9's are B's
      10's aka 0's are z's because 0 starts with z
      Jack's are anyone whose name has 'Jack' in it
      Queen's are females that embody their suit
      King's are those with 'King' in their title.
      Ace's aka 1's are d's because they have one downstroke
      And for the suits
      spades are sportsmen
      clubs are entertainers
      hearts are religious/social figures
      diamonds are personal development authors
      So if I see a 2 of spades, I think of a sportsman with 'N' in his name, which for me is Nadal the tennis player. Rafael Nadal is known for his topSPIN shot on CLAY surfaces. Raphael Nadal is also a SPAINiard and a LEFTY. The words 'Nadal', 'Spin', 'Clay', 'Spain', 'Lefty' can all be used in the "story" I create for my deck whenever I see 2 of spades.
      If I see a 10 of clubs, I think of an entertainer with 'Z' in his name, which for me is jay-Z the rapper/entrepreneur. My favorite jay-Z song is "Star is Born" so when I think of a 10 of clubs I think of Jay-Z giving BIRTH to STARS. Jay-Z also is part owner of the NEW JERSEY nets. The words 'Jay-Z', 'Born/Birth', 'Star/Stars', 'Jersey' can all be used when I see a 10 of clubs.
      If I see a King of Hearts I think of martin luther KING whose famous speech is "I HAD a DREAM" once wrote a letter from BIRMINGHAM jail. Martin, King, Had/Have, Dream, Birmingham, etc.
      If I see a Jack of Diamonds I think of JACK Canfield, author of "CHICKEN SOUP for the SOUL" books. Jack Canfield, the words can or field, chicken, soup, soul, etc
      For each of the 52 number-suit combinations I have a person, adjective, thing, and place. I also have a word made by the combination of the first letter of the suit and number sound together. For example, 8 of Hearts put together can form H8 aka 'hate', 4 of Diamonds put together can form D4 aka 'door', 9 of spades put together S9 aka 'spine'
      So if the first seven cards in the deck are
      2 of spades
      8 of hearts
      10 of clubs
      4 of diamonds
      King of hearts
      9 of spades
      Jack of diamonds
      I would memorize them as,
      SPAIN HATES giving BIRTH to DOORS that DREAM of SPINE CHICKEN
      or
      NADAL HATES NEW JERSEYs DOORS. MLK's SPINE is weak as SOUP.
      Ultimately you come up with your own system, and with practice, you get better and memorize lists in an increasingly efficient manner.

    • @zeromailss
      @zeromailss Před 9 lety +7

      Ebiye Jeremy Udo-Udoma dang,thats cool

    • @jinyow5581
      @jinyow5581 Před 9 lety +5

      Wow your every where i go i take it you love to learn to that makes you even more beautiful to me i think i have found my dream girl

    • @blastedburrito110
      @blastedburrito110 Před 9 lety +33

      Jin Yow dafuck

  • @rafaelsoriajr
    @rafaelsoriajr Před 8 lety +37

    my story was....theres a big pink flamigo shitting bricks and laying them. brick laying flamingo. lol

    • @HickoryDickory86
      @HickoryDickory86 Před 8 lety +3

      +rafael soria OMG, that was mine too!!! Hahaha

    • @rafaelsoriajr
      @rafaelsoriajr Před 8 lety +2

      HickoryDickory86 great minds think alike hahaha! awesome

    • @RubixB0y
      @RubixB0y Před 8 lety +4

      +rafael soria I imagined a line of flamingos walking in and crouching down till they turn into the bricks.

    • @needarandomname4330
      @needarandomname4330 Před 8 lety +1

      RubixB0y Well that's unique

    • @kutyakeksz
      @kutyakeksz Před 8 lety

      +rafael soria Great idea, i really like the way you think. Haha

  • @SinfulUnicorn
    @SinfulUnicorn Před 5 lety

    It's really a mixture of imagination and memory when it comes to this sort of thing. Our brain....how fascinating :)

  • @raymahesta3935
    @raymahesta3935 Před 2 lety +1

    I heard it for 3 minutes and jumped to comment section , thank God it savedbmy time ,i just read the conclusion 😀

  • @Cyberdactyl
    @Cyberdactyl Před 7 lety +730

    To save viewers time, he doesn't get around to actual technique until around 6:10 .

  • @ArnoldVeeman
    @ArnoldVeeman Před 8 lety +3

    just because he may not be such a good speaker doesn't make his opinion wrong.
    If you are able to read (listen) between the lines there is a treasure of information really...

    • @adi_turner
      @adi_turner Před 8 lety +1

      Its pointless talking to the vast majority of people on the net. They just troll at everything. People take things all too lightly and make fun of people by appearance and social awkwardness. But yes this video does inspire me. Believe that your brain can do it.

  • @maylenesantiago5607
    @maylenesantiago5607 Před 2 lety +2

    You have to be creative and think gigantically.the more inpossible the more you remember..today it's not hard for me to memorize cell numbers associating the number with the person who owns it..i only read the book once and listened to the tapes and i gave it to my friend because the author is really good in pointing out everything

  • @danieloraseanu
    @danieloraseanu Před 5 lety +27

    or download the book - Dominic O’Brien - How to develop a perfect memory

    • @zkyafq1103
      @zkyafq1103 Před 4 lety +1

      Thank You Mr. Stranger

    • @tobydude7462
      @tobydude7462 Před 4 lety +1

      @@zkyafq1103 Did you check out the book Zakiya?

    • @zkyafq1103
      @zkyafq1103 Před 4 lety +4

      @@tobydude7462 I got it today...
      Edit: Do you want a review? Or, the book?

    • @joeyp.1354
      @joeyp.1354 Před 4 lety +1

      @@zkyafq1103 you're selling the book?

    • @zkyafq1103
      @zkyafq1103 Před 4 lety +1

      @@joeyp.1354 Not selling... I have the pdf version. So I can sent it via e mail.

  • @frozenqueen2645
    @frozenqueen2645 Před 7 lety +5

    Wow first I thought he's boring but then I concentrated automatically. I really loved it . Thank u so much you really helped me.😍😍

  • @gabrielsuarez1645
    @gabrielsuarez1645 Před 9 lety +10

    Using this approach is how I got all the way to graduate school to research molecular biology and biochemistry. But, although it makes studying much more fun and effective, creatively linking everything we learn is painfully time consuming.

    • @lapatria100
      @lapatria100 Před 9 lety

      I hope it works for me!

    • @TiGrATeZi
      @TiGrATeZi Před 9 lety +1

      Gabriel Suarez He didn't say you would master it over night. Like everything else you make sacrifices and in this case time would be your sacrifice.

  • @mrsgdolanw1334
    @mrsgdolanw1334 Před 5 lety +2

    Okay I need to try something like this for my upcoming exams. Thank you for this!

  • @artiawhale3807
    @artiawhale3807 Před 5 lety +15

    This is so helpful
    Now I remember how every rock in my field looks like!

  • @tomcat4704
    @tomcat4704 Před 8 lety +35

    Some people thought he's Bruce Willis while some is Jason Statham. I thought it was Krillin.

  • @erusyado
    @erusyado Před 8 lety +5

    This is what we call, a genius.

  • @LeuelAmare
    @LeuelAmare Před 9 měsíci

    It's fascinating,you are a dynamic mind.

  • @samchen9951
    @samchen9951 Před 7 lety +295

    16:41 that's when the important part starts. You're welcome.

  • @CUT3FRI3NDLY
    @CUT3FRI3NDLY Před 10 lety +8

    I have a weak memory and I always forget. I have listened (not thoroughly) up to the examples you have given (the snail+door etc) and then paused and continued to browse the internet for over 20 minutes but returned to the video and I was able to recall (vividly) the examples he had given (in which order as well). This is incredibly exciting and I will read the recommended book and put in the necessary effort to master this. Thank you so much, this is amazing! :D

    • @Thiigso
      @Thiigso Před rokem

      Hello! Do you mind me asking how your memory is after these years? Has it improved?

    • @Thiigso
      @Thiigso Před rokem

      @@siliconecorpse are you fr?

    • @encephalongi8184
      @encephalongi8184 Před rokem +1

      @@Thiigso no she is alive. and she won the memory championship in 2018.

    • @HansBeaver
      @HansBeaver Před rokem

      @@Thiigso yeah you did'nt see news ?

    • @Thiigso
      @Thiigso Před rokem

      Oh man... I must have missed it, glad she is doing alright!

  • @aloeterranourishments7460

    Very helpful session! We are very grateful!

  • @MrWiiSeamus
    @MrWiiSeamus Před 6 lety

    Passion really shows in ted talks

  • @ChrisMarchian
    @ChrisMarchian Před 10 lety +49

    Jason Statham has a brother ! A pretty smart too ! Thanks !

    • @ChrisMarchian
      @ChrisMarchian Před 10 lety +6

      I'm smiling like a little girl rIght now after seeing you reply to my comment :D thank you for the tips I fInd them very usefull now that I got some exams ahead!

    • @nuwanliyanage5684
      @nuwanliyanage5684 Před 10 lety +1

      LOL I was about to say the same thing.

    • @gta97
      @gta97 Před 10 lety

      I was thinking the exact same thing! The thumbnail of this Statham look alike-ish face is what brought me here :D.

  • @TheCheeseburrrger
    @TheCheeseburrrger Před 8 lety +8

    I can tell just by looking at him that he has a big brain.

  • @jackeline155
    @jackeline155 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you so much Idriz😍😍🥰🥰💙

  • @BluesLicks101
    @BluesLicks101 Před 5 lety

    I keep coming back to this video, not quite sure why. Oh, yeah... now I remember.

  • @ProGamerSergiu
    @ProGamerSergiu Před 8 lety +107

    What is Jason Statham doing on the scene?

    • @liawatson5789
      @liawatson5789 Před 8 lety

      LOL

    • @gentritsylejmani2346
      @gentritsylejmani2346 Před 8 lety +2

      +ProGamerSergiu He is Albanian. This makes him Albanian Jason Statham.

    • @tomcat4704
      @tomcat4704 Před 8 lety +2

      +ProGamerSergiu Shaving the remains of his almost bald skinball.

    • @KabooM1067
      @KabooM1067 Před 8 lety +1

      +ProGamerSergiu I only clicked because I thought it was him LOL.