The human brain weighs about three pounds and is roughly the size of a grapefruit, yet it contains some 100 billion neurons, or nerve cells, all of which form an incredibly complex network. Indeed, just one neuron may be connected to 100,000 others. The brain potential process is being allowed and store data much due to the connection of the neurons, but the test is, of course, that an individual remembers recall information as soon as they require it. A lot of people with little secular schooling, excel at this. For example, in West Africa, not literate tribal chroniclers called griots can say the names of many generations in the villages. Griots enabled American author Alex Haley, whose book Roots won a Pulitzer Prize, to investigate his family tree in Gambia back through six generations. Consider the famous Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini, who was discovered at age 19, when asked to pay another tenant. In spite of his poor eyesight, he was able to conduct the entire opera Aida from memory! Truly it astounds us; yet most people have the ability to recall much more than they expect they can. Memory consists of three phases: encoding, storage and retrieval. Your brain encodes information when it perceives it and registers it. The data that have been gather will be kept for later use. Memory loss happens once any of these three phases disassembles. Once you learn something new, combining one of you already know. Associating things to memories already stored in your brain will makes recalling more at ease. For example, if you are a shooter and want to remember pebbles, associate them with cast bullets. Association is fun to remember well, to cut short, we must think of the people and things we want to remember.