Balance Book Anyone read this book? http://www.balancethelostsense.com/insidethebook.shtml
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Re: Balance Book Hi dude,
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Re: Balance Book Hi dude, yeah, is a priority to me get back (well maybe i never had it in the first place!) my orientation/navigation skills .. i always gets a hard time remember how to get at x places and lost the orientation very easily (probably that get worst when you don't have a good attention skills, i get distracted easily too, but i think that is improving slowly with meditation)
Can you explain this exercise a little more? you mean just go around you street and start "exploring" and drawing along you are walking and turn around your body and walk, and turn around your map to work your orientation skills etc? And how about Mental rotation exercises? complement this skills too? If the rotation is 2d images trains N2 , and 3d trains N3? |
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Re: Balance Book Sakiro wrote:
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Re: Balance Book Here an abstract about the benfits of sign language and chinese characters on spacial memory.
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Re: Balance Book Mnemo Wrote:
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Re: Balance Book
from www.etymonline.com Orient as a noun, c.1300, "the East" (originally usually meaning what is now called the Middle East), from Old French orient "east" (11c.), from Latin orientem (nominative oriens) "the rising sun, the east, part of the sky where the sun rises," originally "rising" (adj.), present participle of oriri "to rise" and as a verb c.1727, originally "to arrange facing east," from French s'orienter "to take one's bearings," literally "to face the east" (also the source of German orientierung), from Old French orient "east," from Latin orientum (see Orient (n.)). Extended meaning "determine bearings" first attested 1842; figurative sense is from 1850. this makes intuitive sense in that we would have naturally described or communicated spatially where something was to another person, based the direction of an event or physical thing rather than a concept like North, or South. |
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Re: Balance Book Hi dude,
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