For cultural treasures, I hope that babies can be familiar with reading, reciting and attentively from an early age. In mid-June, 5438+065438+ 10, my baby and I started a journey of the Book of Changes.
Children seem to have much more memories than adults. I will read a few paragraphs to my baby before going to bed or when I get up every day. Then play the audio. Inadvertently, babies under three years old can already recite a lot.
But for me, a middle-aged old mother, it is very difficult to recite. After turning off the lights at night, lying in bed, my son will ask me: Mom, read me the Book of Changes. Every time I start, my son takes it. Where I am not skilled, I have to have the cheek to ask the baby to stop and repeat it to me.
I decided to learn the Book of Changes by heart instead of forgetting it after reading it.
Later, I learned about Feynman's reading method.
Feynman is a Canadian physicist and a genius. He taught himself calculus at the age of 13. Joined the Manhattan project at the age of 24. When Feynman's sister was in junior high school, Feynman gave her a college astronomy textbook and told her to read it from the beginning, keep reading it, and when she didn't understand anything, read it again until she fully understood it. This is Feynman's super reading method. So according to this method, word for word. If you don't know the place, look it up. Read for a short time every day, and then write it in dictation.
Although it is slow, I can recite everything I have read, and even punctuation marks are deeply engraved in my mind.
The happiest moment, the baby lies in my arms at night, and we recite the Book of Changes together. Although the baby's speed is much faster than mine, I can still keep up with the baby's holiday where I have worked hard.