+ 1

How do you take it all in?

How do you take it all in I mean I remember the basics, but I seem to be always going back to check Somert because I have forgotten how to do something?

10th Dec 2016, 12:16 AM
Chris Welham
Chris Welham - avatar
6 Answers
+ 7
apply what you learn. modify and make stuff, and you'll remember better.
10th Dec 2016, 5:28 AM
Ahri Fox
Ahri Fox - avatar
+ 6
It's OK to not remember every single thing you learned. For me, I use the tags I have the most trouble with, alot. I also expand my knowledge with books
10th Dec 2016, 12:28 AM
Aquarius
Aquarius - avatar
+ 4
http://fed.wiki.org/journal.hapgood.net/concept-triangulation/alex.au.fedwikihappening.net/concept-triangulation It's Feynman. Don't worry so much forgetting and memorization; when you forget how to do something, you can still know so much about the subject and related information (i.e., branch out) that you can reconstruct what you need to know or do it a different way (that you do remember, or simply create). Feynman called it triangulation.
10th Dec 2016, 12:50 AM
Kirk Schafer
Kirk Schafer - avatar
+ 2
No problem; I'd been meaning to get that into an answer but hadn't found the YouTube lecture again. I'm glad you asked and happy the text works :)
10th Dec 2016, 1:11 AM
Kirk Schafer
Kirk Schafer - avatar
+ 2
I write important modules and tags in a small notebook and txt files...it works 100%
10th Dec 2016, 2:03 AM
Sun
Sun - avatar
+ 1
that blog is so good thank you so much
10th Dec 2016, 12:59 AM
Chris Welham
Chris Welham - avatar