Use These Five Tricks To Never
Forget Something Important Again
“We all have a good memory; the problem is no one taught us how to use
it,” says four-time USA Memory Champion Nelson Dellis.
Forget
to send that email? Return a call? Meet a deadline? If you chalk up memory
mishaps to having too much to think about, you might be making excuses. “We all
have a good memory; the problem is no one taught us how to use it,” says four-time USA Memory Champion Nelson Dellis.
Dellis
says he always had a mediocre memory, and didn’t think he had
championship-caliber memory potential. Today, he’s the record holder for
remembering the most names, memorizing 201 in 15 minutes. He was inspired to
train his memory after his grandmother passed away in 2009 with Alzheimer’s
disease. “She had been of sound mind just 10 years before,” he says. “I didn’t
want that to happen to me. I wanted to find something I could do now that would
prolong my brain health.”
Dellis
decided to enter the championship as a way to measure his memory gains. While
you might not be interested in remembering a couple hundred names, you can use
Dellis’s favorite tools to improve your memory and focus.
MAKE IT EXCITING
One
of the best ways to boost your memory is to take advantage of what the brain is
naturally good at: remembering the extraordinary. “Most people can recall a
traumatic or memorable event,” says Dellis. “It’s not some sort of super human
memory; in those instances, there was something special and our brains absorb
that better. Ninety percent of your day is non-interesting; you need to turn it
into something memorable.”
Trick
yourself into making things exciting. It helps to understand that your brain
works well with pictures instead of abstract ideas. If you want to remember to
pick up pizza on the way home, for example, picture the cheese sizzling and
then burning your mouth.
“Give
it a color and make it as real as possible,” says Dellis. “If you want to remember
a name, come up with picture of what the word could represent.”
For
example, picture someone named Nelson turning into Nelson Mandela. Once you
have a picture, it’s more easily stored in your mind, says Dellis.
USE A MEMORY PALACE
Dellis’s
most tried-and-true technique is creating a memory palace, which involves
creating pictures and memorizing them along a path through a space that you
know well, such as your home or office. “You could probably walk through with
your eyes closed,” he says. “If you want to remember grocery items, link each
one to that space.”
For
example, imagine toilet paper covering your front door, then make up a story
about why it’s there. “Did kids come by and throw it on your door?” asks
Dellis. “Take it as far as you like. If the next item is milk, imagine a cow
spraying milk all over the door. Continue to create mental pictures through
your house. When you get to the store all you have to do is think of your house
and mentally walk the same path, and the pictures will be waiting for you. All
elite competitors use some form of memory palace.”
LINK THINGS
Another
memory tool is using a linking method. “You’re still coming up with pictures,
but the way you store them is different,” he says. “A linked list connects each
item to the next, so it’s a narrative.”
For
example, if you need to reply to an email, call the IT department about
computer issues, and schedule a meeting, imagine the person you need to email
is involved in a crime ring after receiving dozens of stolen computers and you
need to go to a meeting to decide what should be done with him.
“The
more bizarre, over the top, hilarious, or vulgar it is, the easier it is to
remember,” says Dellis. “We remember things that are truly out of the
ordinary.”
GET READY FOR INFORMATION
A
lot of memory is about paying attention. “It sounds obvious, but we live in a
day when our attention span is very fickle, because there’s so much coming at
us all the time,” says Dellis. “Force yourself to be laser-focused on one thing
at a time.”
For
example, when Dellis meets people and wants to learn their names, the first
thing he does before asking their name is to mentally ask himself, “What is
this person’s name?” over and over.
“This
process, as insignificant as it seems, does wonders,” he says. “You’re not
thinking about what to say or noticing something across the room. You’re paying
attention to the person in front of you, getting ready to accept their name.”
DAILY PRACTICE
Tools
and tricks can help you remember things, but the key to building a strong memory is practice. Dellis
recommends a few websites that will help. MemoCamp is a paid site that tests you on remembering
names, numbers, words, and more. Dellis uses it to get ready for competition.
Another tool is MemRise, a free site that helps you memorize words with
games. Anki is
another app Dellis uses for memorizing language. And Dellis is also the
cofounder of Art of Memory, a website that helps you learn and practice memory
techniques.
Give
your brain a daily workout by ditching to-do or grocery lists, suggests Dellis.
“It’s easy to write something down,” he says. “I love the fact that I’m using
my own memory power, exercising my brain, and taking a moment of the day to
stretch brain muscles. Commit a speech to memory. Memorize a poem or a deck of
cards. Whatever your interest, it helps your memory.”
BY STEPHANIE VOZZA
https://www.fastcompany.com/40524058/use-these-five-tricks-to-never-forget-something-important-again?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Daily&position=4&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=02022018
1 comment:
Spaced repetition is very useful. However, there is a limit to the methodology of flash card types such as Anki, which can be applied directly corresponding items only(such as words and their meanings). LearnObit is Anki's add-on to solve this problem. Please check it once.
https://learnobit.com/
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