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	<title>Soft Power &#187; Six Words</title>
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		<title>Got Soft-Focus Yet?</title>
		<link>http://www.softpower.org/got-soft-focus-yet</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Jan 2010 13:22:09 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baby Step]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brain]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comprehension]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Habit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Instinct]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Laser Beam]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Memory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Objective]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pace]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pacer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pacers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Peripheral Vision]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reading Speed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reading Systems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sentences]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Six Words]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Soft Focus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Words Per Minute]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[How to Triple Your Reading Speed &#8211; PermanentlyOur Eyes Automatically (instinctively), Follow a Moving Object1. Baby Step:a) To triple your reading speed, and double your memory (and comprehension), permanently – the first step is to create a habit of using a Pacer while reading.b) A Pacer is one of three types: a handheld Laser Beam [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><br/><br/>How to Triple Your Reading Speed &#8211; Permanently<br/><br/>Our Eyes Automatically (instinctively), Follow a Moving Object<br/><br/>1. Baby Step:<br/><br/>a) To triple your reading speed, and double your memory (and comprehension), permanently – the first step is to create a habit of using a Pacer while reading.<br/><br/>b) A Pacer is one of three types: a handheld Laser Beam (RasterMaster),<br/><br/>a Pen &#8211; and a using a Computer Cursor &#8211; produced with your Mouse.<br/><br/>c) The objective when using any of the three Pacers is to underline the words of the <br />sentences as you read. When you use your pen as a Pacer – retract the point or underline with the Pen one-half inch above the paper itself.<br/><br/>d) You will notice that the Pacer (RasterMaster, Pen or Cursor), always moves <br />f-a-s-t-e-r than your visual reading speed. It sets the pace for you to speed up your reading.<br/><br/>e) You have been reading one-word at a time since 3rd grade, reinforced daily <br />for many years. The Pacer drives you to read two-to-three words at a time instead of <br />your usual one-word-at-a-time. Notice how your eyes automatically try to catch-up with the Pacer (the moving object). It is a instinct of your eyes and brain.<br/><br/>f) You are creating a new-habit of moving your eyes in a Soft-Focus instead of a narrow Hard-Focus. You are learning to read using your wide-focused Peripheral Vision &#8211; instead the narrow Foveal-Vision you learned in 3rd grade.<br/><br/>g) Your eyes are focusing on the Top-Halves of the words – not the movement <br />of the Pacer you are using. Your eyes take in the underlining of the Pacer’s movement using your natural Peripheral Vision.<br/><br/>h) You own two-basic reading systems – one is Foveal-Vision: reading one-word <br />at a time (6 letters wide). You have been reading foveally since 3rd grade and <br />it is s-l-o-w – about 200 words per minute.<br/><br/>The second is Peripheral-Vision: it is 36 letters wide, and it permits you to read up to six-words at-a-time. The word – peripheral &#8211; means outside of the center – seeing the left and right sides in addition to the center, and what appears above and below <br />the center.<br/><br/>i.) Soft-focus is relaxing your eyes and widen your field-of-vision to see two or <br />more words simultaneously. The opposite of soft-focus is a narrowing of your <br />field-of-vision, and called hard-focus of Tunnel-Vision. A horse wearing blinders <br />sees with Foveal-Vision and a Hard-Focus.<br/><br/>Hard-Focus is how you see when using your computer, typing on the word-processor, viewing a movie, playing a video game, or holding a conversation while looking at the other person’s eyes.<br/><br/>We concentrate on the page, screen or person by narrowing our eye-focus to give the behavior (reading, surfing the Net, and watching TV), our full attention.<br/><br/>Using a hard-focus while reading causes us to snail because we can see only a single multi-syllable word at a time. It limits us to up to 200 words per minute.<br/><br/>Profound Fact: we spend up to 80% of our waking-hours using hard-focus, squinting and narrowing our field-of-vision. It is the basic cause of chronic-stress and dry-eye.<br/><br/>The solution is not to stop using the computer or TV, but to exercise your peripheral-vision for sixty-seconds every thirty-minutes. Look away from the screen, page or person towards the horizon, and widen your field-of-vision.<br/><br/>In reading it means to soft-focus – and read two-to-three words at-a-time.<br/><br/>2. a) Pick a page with text and circle each single multi-syllable word in a sentence. Notice how slow and boring it is to read that way. In the average sentence there are ten-words, and you read and mentally hear all ten-multi-syllable words.<br/><br/>You eyes stop at each word, you hear it, and then move to the next one. <br />Each stop is called an Eye-Fixation-Pause.<br/><br/>b) Take another page of text and circle each group of two-words in the sentence. <br />If there are ten-words you will have five-circles of two-words each.<br/><br/>Notice that you can easily look at the circle containing two-words, and see <br />both words simultaneously. If you can see them – you are using Soft-focus and widen your field of vision.<br/><br/>Your eyes can see up to six-words at a time, and transfer them to your brain for comprehension.<br/><br/>If you read two-words simultaneously – you double your reading speed <br />and can cut your reading time by 50% or read-and comprehend two books, <br />articles, and reports – instead of one. Guess what occurs when you read three- <br />words-at-a-time?<br/><br/>3. Draw a line down the left-hand side of a new page of text and indent about two-words in width; do the same – indent by drawing a line down the page on the <br />right-side of the page of text – about two-words wide.<br/><br/>Now use your Pacer to underline the Middle-Section of the text using a soft-focus. Your Peripheral-Vision will pick up and comprehend the words within the two indented areas – (lateral-left and lateral-right), and even above and below the center of your reading focus.<br/><br/>Practice reading a page of text you have indented to improve your soft-focus (widening your field-of-vision), and to widen your Peripheral-Vision span.<br/><br/>Endwords<br/><br/>Practice improving your soft-focus and peripheral-vision until they becomes <br />habits. Use your Pacer to move your eyes faster, and in 21 days of practicing just 15 minutes daily – you will double or triple your present starting reading speed with equal or better comprehension.<br/><br/>Yes, it will be frustrating in the beginning because you have been programmed <br />since 3rd grade to read one-word-at-a-time, and to stop to hear it in your mind.<br/><br/>You are creating a new habit of widening your focus and reading two-or <br />more words at-a-time. It requires daily practice for three-weeks, and then will <br />register on auto-pilot. Once they are habits you stop thinking about them, and add them to your mental programming.<br/><br/>Once you turn soft-focus and peripheral-vision into a habit, you will be able to easily <br />triple your reading speed and improve your comprehension and long-term <br />memory.<br/><br/>The secret tool is always using a Pacer to trigger the instinct of your eyes and brain <br />to follow a moving object. Your hand holding the Pacer – the RasterMaster, Pen, <br />or Cursor – always moves faster than your snailing reading speed. Your brain <br />begins to play – Catch-Up – and your reading speed and comprehension double <br />and triple compared to snailing at only one word at-a-time.<br/><br/>copyright © 2006<br/><br/><em>By: <strong>H. Bernard Wechsler							</a></strong></em><br/><br/></p>
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