The Time when World Memory Champion Alex Mullen made an Interview with Me

in #introduceyourself8 years ago (edited)

Hello Steemit, after eight days on Steem I am full on excited about being here. Hence I basically spend all day reading your posts and comment partly valuable and partly silly comments. Thank you for that. This was more input than I had in a long time - and I am generally a curious person who learns a lot. But Steemit put me on a whole new level. 

The most interesting part of Steemit is to meet you all. I haven't had much interest in my Facebook friends recently. Probably because Facebook sucks! This is why I wanted to write a second introduction, to give you a better idea who is behind @flauwy. So please be warned because I will show up on your comment wall eventually, leave my animated Coin Puppet and a few silly lines (productive only if you are lucky). 

post about Adobe Character Animator and many others excited about the LBRY project which might become a cryptocurrency YouTube killer. What is even better is that I started a new YouTube channel about Cryptocurrency as well as with a daily series about How to Remember Names. Because besides writing, cryptocurrency, design and animation I am a memory coach by profession. Like I did with @writewords creating a pile of sillyness that made @ackza lol. I got @creatr to appreciate my

But the craziest thing of them all is that one of my funny comments got upvoted to $14. For a comment. Do me a favour: Go to that comment and upvote it. For the lolz of it. Doesn't cost you anything, right? Let's see where it goes.

That brings me to the main part of this post: Below you will find an interview done by Alex Mullen, the current 2x World Memory Champion from the USA, with me. Yes, he interviewed me (I also did interview him but that is a different story). If you don't know who I am talking about watch this short clip, released a few days ago as a preview for the SuperHuman Show on Fox (USA):

Ok, THAT guy interviewed me for my activity in the memory sports community. Yes, I am also into memory sports. I think I can leave you to the interview now, because it is very detailed and gives a fantastic light about who @flauwy really is. I hope you enjoy!


The Interview

If  there’s anyone who knows the competitive memory world, it’s Florian  Dellé. Since his first competition back in 2003, the 36-year-old German  has worn just about every hat imaginable: competitor, coach, arbiter, commentator, memory website developer. The list goes on and on. Florian’s generally on the other side of the interview table (check out his 16 interviews here),  but I managed to snag him for a conversation about his own history with  memory, his new systems, a few of his favorite memory memories, and his  new competition: the Memo Games.        



Can you tell me a little about yourself: age, where you’re from, some favorite events, etc.?

I  was born in Berlin, West-Germany in 1980, right at the front of the  cold war but on the Coca-Cola-side. While my mother is German, my father  is English. My mother’s mother was Russian and my father’s father is of  Scottish origin. My family name Dellé derives from the French  Huguenots, Christian Protestants which fled from France to Germany after  the infamous St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre. So to sum it up I always  saw myself as a cosmopolitan. Today I live in Costa Rica with my Costa  Rican wife and our soon-to-come child.When  I started with memory techniques I loved Speed Cards the most. Over the  years I learned to like the language based disciplines Word and Names  more. I am still better at cards and numbers though but I am improving  by learning Spanish as my third language. I think that language skills  help in memory sports especially for Words and Names based disciplines. Building  systems and experimenting with memory palaces is my passion. I spend  about seven years on my Millennium PAO with 1000 people, 100 actions and  1000 objects. I was crazy about it and went ways that took me much  longer to develop it. I explain the entire thing in detail in an article  about the Pyramid Memory System, as I call my approach. (You can check  it out here)Somewhere  on the way I forgot about training at all. I didn't want to continue  with my old 2-digit PAO system but my new one wasn't ready. Finally I am  now concentrating on learning the ready system to a point, where it  will be useful in memory sports. It requires much more learning so I  believe I need to practice the system for another year.When  it comes to memory palaces I like to do unusual things. My latest one  is a sequence from the first 20 minutes of the new Pixar movie Inside  Out. I follow the story and mark important people and objects, which I  can easily remember, because they follow the story of the movie. I love  to learn something while I create new systems.

“It all culminated into me having the worst grades of  my life at the end of the twelfth grade and still one year to go. I had a  change of heart and I decided to finally give my best. I ended up being  the best student of my school in the last term. That changed my life.”

 

What about your origins with memory sports? How did you first get started?

I  came in contact with memory techniques only after school. My life as a  student was long and painful. I was that hyperactive kid with impulsive  behavior that 90% of all teachers immediately hate. On top of that I was  constantly bored at school and I barely did my homework. So I ended up  with bad grades and little confidence. Eight years of French passed by  like a weekend in Paris – I saw the Eiffel tower and heard a guy scream  "oui, oui", which wraps up all the French I learned in that time. I was a  terrible student, with less than mediocre teachers.It  all culminated into me having the worst grades of my life at the end of  the twelfth grade and still one year to go. I had a change of heart and  I decided to finally give my best. I ended up being the best student of  my school in the last term. That changed my life.After  school I signed in to study Biology but the German military service  came in-between. So I went to nine months of controlled mind numbing and  I was longing for something to feed my mind, which was on fire since I  successfully finished school. In the barracks I read about Dr. Gunther  Karsten, several times German Memory Champion (years later even World  Memory Champion) and his latest book about memory techniques. I bought  it and started creating my first Major System. Over the next months I  practiced it with paper flash cards, which I carried around everywhere  in my uniform. That was in 2003, before the arrival of smart phones and  flashcard apps. But luckily e-Mails were no problem, so I wrote one to  Gunther to thank him for his marvelous book. He replied and invited me  to the North German Memory Championship 2003 in Hanover. Two of my  closest friends from the military lived there, so it was perfect. I went  with absolutely no practice and clue and ended up being second last.  But I witnessed a group of massively impressive and friendly people and I  had the honor to stop the time of a successful Speed Cards attempt from  Steffen Bütow with 45.82 seconds. By then, this was one of the fastest  times in the world and certainly the craziest thing I have ever seen. So  I was hooked.In the following three  years I went to ten different memory championships, including the World  Memory Championships twice. It was a great time and I met many people I  call my friends today. Right after my first championship I joined the  German memory club MemoryXL and later became their main arbiter for the  regional memory championships. To see the sport from the other side made  me connect with it even more and I developed some kind of  responsibility for it. This was a massively important part for me to  stick with it for so long. Because my own results never really satisfied  me, I always wanted to be much better. But instead to train hard and  long, I got demotivated and lost track of my own training. And then I  got the chance to teach groups of gifted children at a club in Berlin,  which I continued for about a decade. My engagement as an arbiter, my  general interest in the techniques and me becoming a memory coach and  sending my students to competitions, always kept me close to the sport.

“Finally in 2013 I realized that memory sports has  given me more than anything else I did in my life and I decided that I  want to dedicate my life to it.”

 

In  2009 I returned and picked up from where I left of as a memory athlete.  Within a very short time of training I was better than before and I  went to four competitions in one year, getting 3rd place at the UK Open,  which is until today my best result. I was rank 79 in the world and  very focused on getting the Grandmaster title at the World Memory  Championships that year. In the same year I started Memory-Sports.com  and invested tons of time into that website. Before that there was  literally nothing about memory sports online, least in English.When  I came to the World Memory Championship I was excited to create the  first live-coverage from that event. My plan was to compete myself only  in the grandmaster disciplines and take pictures and videos during the  rest of the competition. But I wasn’t allowed to, because the  Grandmaster requires going through the entire events. So I had to make a  tough decision and went for not participating. It was a cool and unique  coverage and I don’t regret it but sometimes I feel a bit of a sting,  that I missed that chance. The memory sports council has now changed the  rules and the current Grandmaster is much more difficult to achieve.In  the following years I did less and less for my website, until it got  hacked and I left it alone completely. Finally in 2013 I realized that  memory sports has given me more than anything else I did in my life and I  decided that I want to dedicate my life to it. So I reactivated my  website and made it more beautiful than ever before. I am now an  independent memory coach and I teach online around the world, while I  organize memory championships like the US Open or my own Memo Games. I  plan to return to memory sports as an athlete myself, when I manage my  grand systems more appropriately.

You have a long history as a coach, arbiter, and competitor. What are some of your favorite memories (ahem)?

One  of my favorite memories is with Dominic O’Brien, 8x World Memory  Champion and an incredibly impressive character with a big mustache. We  were at the German Memory Championship, maybe 2005 or 2006 and Dominic  was the main arbiter in the room. He spotted one competitor cheating but  couldn’t really prove it. That competitor was writing down all numbers  and words on a sheet of paper during the memorizing phase. Later that  particular page was always taken away but the imprint on the notebook  remained. After thinking about it, we realized how obvious that was, but  only Dominic did had an eye for it. That competitor did brake the  German record for 30 digits with 1200 digits that day and had some other  very impressive scores (not with cards though, because that cheat  didn’t work there). So they confronted the athlete and gave the chance  to redeem oneself by redoing that discipline under control of an  official arbiter in the next months. It didn’t even have to be nearly as  much as the record to prove innocent. But that athlete was never been  seen again.

“And of course there are many more people interested in  watching the sport, which is crucial to make it become a financial  success. And I believe it must and will become a huge success, bigger as  many other sports we have today.”

 

Later  that day we went to a restaurant with Dominic. While we were talking  and waiting for the food, he made an anagram out of the competitor’s  name. It said: “Found real cheater”!



What are your thought on the sport’s direction?

Memory  sports are developing very fast now. Each year we hear something new.  When I started, there were maybe six events around the world each year  and most were affiliated with the World Memory Championships. I am  excited to see the sport explode at the moment. It is getting faster,  wilder and more diversified. There are really good people from all over  the world now and not just from Germany and England any more. And  everyone is training much harder and efficiently now, because techniques  have developed a lot in the last decade. And of course there are many  more people interested in watching the sport, which is crucial to make  it become a financial success. And I believe it must and will become a  huge success, bigger as many other sports we have today. Mental sports  are the sport of the 21st century, together with online games. We are  now bringing these two worlds closer together, with memory championships  becoming digital and online. I dream of a giant event in 2020 which is  like a massive online memory gaming event. But for now I concentrate on  the immediate future. My goal is to host the US Open and Memo Games in  2016 again and expand into Latin America. Over here there is basically  no sport at all at the moment. I want to change that with the Costa  Rican Open and hopefully other countries as well.

Could  you tell me more about your coaching involvements? What sort of  students do you work with? What's your #1 bit of advice as a coach?

Today  I am a self-independent coach with students, who contact me through my  website. Most are from the United States, but I have some students from  other countries as well. I usually practice a mix of memory sport  disciplines and learning methods. My best advice is always that there  are a million ways to memorize anything. So my methods are only examples  of how it could be done. In the end each student must learn how to use  the memory on its own and even develop new techniques. When my students  leave, I want them to feel confident enough about their memory to handle  anything. I am most happy if I get students, who want me as their  memory sports coach because that is really my specialty. Just recently  one of my students from Spain became the current Spanish Memory  Champion. (You can learn more here about doing personalized memory training with Florian.)

“In 2016 the Memo Games will return as a worldwide  event. I want that everybody can go to a nearby hotspot and compete from  there, with the other competitors being at different hotspots in other  countries and continents. ”

 

Can you tell me a little more about how the Memo Games came to be? How did you first conceive the idea?

I  wanted to create my own memory competition for about a decade now and I  still have many more thoughts on that subject than I covered with the  Memo Games. The idea was to add some new events, which are different and  exciting. In 2014 I started to prepare the first US Memory Open for  2015, still following the established standard. I got the idea to use  that event and try something new. I designed four new disciplines that  are focused on speed (Memo events) and three that focus on high scores  (Rush events). I like the Speed Cards and XMT idea, where everyone is  memorizing a fixed amount of information as fast as possible. What I  don’t like about it though, is the perfect accuracy that is required.  Often enough memory athletes loose valuable points because they confused  or forgot a few things. But they still had memorized tons of  information. Why shouldn’t that count for their score? And why is  someone winning a match at the XMT, who memorized 80 digits in 60  seconds, while the opponent memorized 78 digits in 20 seconds? I give a  penalty time instead at the Memo events, so that a fast attempt with a  few mistakes is still a relatively fast attempt, instead of a total  failure. The Rush events are even cooler in this regard because they  don’t have any penalty whatsoever. A correct card or digit is worth a  point, no matter how many have been omitted or are incorrect. Another  thing I wanted for the Memo Games is to make them digital. Luckily I  was able to team up with MemoCamp.com, which developed the events after  my ideas. We had very little time and finished the last discipline on  the day of the first Memo Games. It was tight but it worked.Finally  I also wanted to create something for the memory sports community. I  consider the Memo Games as something that belongs to everyone and not  just to me. Therefore I am happy to improve the event year by year with  the help and suggestions of memory athletes around the globe. The first  step into that direction will come next year:In  2016 the Memo Games will return as a worldwide event. I want that  everybody can go to a nearby hotspot and compete from there, with the  other competitors being at different hotspots in other countries and  continents. This will be a nice alternative to an otherwise very  expensive sport, which requires athletes to travel from country to  country. Now they only need to travel within their own country. Since it  is all digital we can see and compare results immediately. For 2016 I  will start with only a handful of selected hotspots, to make sure we can  handle it. If this concept works, we can expand it in the following  years until we have hotspots in all countries with memory athletes.  Imagine a memory competition where hundreds compete all at once, with a  live stream connecting hotspots, athletes, organizers and fans with each  other.

Thanks for your time, Florian.  


Ok, thank you for your interest and time. Please upvote this post and follow me. I have much to tell and you might learn one or two things. See you in your comment sections and hopefully in mine.


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Interesting read and great effort!

Thanks, you must be a Speed Reader. ;)

Haha:) Be good to see more coming!

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