...but he is building what appears to be a phenomenal Q map unlike any other I've seen. I'm copy pasting bits of his posts below.
Starts here: https://x.com/Stav_888/status/1739429259075359110
Stav:
"I came across a 'Mind Mapping Software' which sparked my curiosity.
My initial thought went back to this 'Q Post' and a few of the lines:
"What is a map?" "Why is a map useful?" "When does a map become a guide?" "Map provides picture." "Picture provides 40,00ft. v." "40,000ft. v. is classified." "Why is a map useful?" "Think direction." "Think full picture."
Within a few months, I had developed a system using the software to Map the 'Q Posts' in a way that they could be further analyzed and have attachments and notes added to them."
https://x.com/Stav_888/status/1739429262191624231
Slav:
" I have just recently started a new Map with new systems and techniques, for investigation the 'Q' body-of-work.
Here is a basic overview.
First we start with the 'Q - Post' arranged into 'Years'.
This is the backbone of the chronology of the posts."
https://x.com/Stav_888/status/1739429264838267185
This fella continues to build this out in a fashion I have not witnessed before. His research both narrows and enlarges in intimately linked ways.
Check him out please.
Will it allow me to remember what I had for breakfast? :)
Hehe...Yes, you remember everything you actively engage with while actively mapping. Quality/resolution can fade if a particular ‘map’ is not used for a while. If you are already a strong “visual learner” it is more effective. Some things like photographic memory shots of actual studied maps do not fade for me. Once I study a map and then go to that location and overlay the real world map onto the drawing map in the brain, I remember it forever.
“Verbal learners” (like most women) can use ‘language mapping’ in a similar way to create the equivalent of a photograhic memory. Memory works best if you attach it to periodic knowns such as days of the week. If you have the same or similar breakfast on Tuesday all the time, then it stays with you and only differences will be highlighted in your mind.
Once re-engaged the whole map comes back, not just pieces. It is stored as a single interconnected web of information kinda like an archive you “open up” when needed.
I'm often quoting the line from the movie "The Mummy", the one with Brendan Fraser, not the HORRIBLE one with Tom Cruise (so bad, I had to stop watching after about 15 minutes), where he says, "I'm the map!". :)
"Once I study a map and then go to that location and overlay the real world map onto the drawing map in the brain, I remember it forever."
This sounds a bit like the Roman Room technique.
https://artofmemory.com/blog/roman-rooms/
Yeah. Nothing really new here. I was just doing it before I knew what it was called, so I describe it as above. All theoretical techniques must be applied repeatedly to understand how they actually work for you. The human brain is quite a powerful thing when trained properly and physical toxins are removed.
Fascinating...I learn something new here everyday.