President Obama's Healthcare Address
TJ Walker examines President Obama's healthcare speech.

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Reading vs. memorizing: How to make notes and use them properly

Reading a presentation versus memorizing a presentation—talk about a scenario where you are damned if you do and damned if you don’t! Both options are horrible.

Let’s take a look at the reading option. At first blush, reading seems easy. After all, you’ve been reading your whole life, if you get nervous all of your words are in front of you so it seems like this is the safest route, right? Wrong!!!

Reading a presentation in front of people is the absolute dumbest thing you could ever do if your goal is to give a pretty good presentation. Because unless you have been news anchor and reading a script for 3 hours a day for the last 20 years, you are going to be terrible. Why? Because when you read you destroy your eye contact with your audience, you become flat, monotone, boring and you speak at the same speed.

If you want to read a speech, please keep in mind that it’s really hard work. Even a master like former President Ronald Reagan would practice his State of the Union Speech 3 hours a night for a week and then still spend an entire day doing videotaped rehearsal—all so he didn’t seem like he was reading a speech! I really don’t think you want to spend the necessary time it takes to get good at reading a speech. And if you don’t spend all of that time, you will be awful and fall way short of your goal of being pretty good. So what’s the next option?

You could try to memorize your speech. Ya, right. In case you have forgotten middle school vocabulary tests or high school Spanish, memorizing stuff is really hard. And even if you are good at memorizing words for a test, that doesn’t mean you are going to be able to recall information when you add in the tension associated with having to speak while a bunch of people are starring at you.

The worst part of all is that even if you did successfully memorize your presentation, there is a great chance that you would sound canned, phony, flat, and robotic and memorized when people heard you. Yuck! No one would want to listen to you. There is a reason that Meryl Streep makes the big bucks—acting is really hard if you do it in such a way that it doesn’t seem like you are obviously acting.

Take my word for it, you don’t want to memorize anything—it’s too difficult and fraught with peril.

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Watch TJ Walker recap the highlights of the 82nd Academy Awards with Kelsey Hubbard from The Wall Street Journal

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