Wouldn’t it be great if you could experience memory improvement …
… almost on auto-pilot?
Here’s the good news:
Even if you don’t use elaborate memory techniques and mnemonics, the following 5 ways will help you improve your memory almost without effort.
Go to sleep with the sun.
Seriously. What have you got to do after dark anyway?
Netflix? How boring.
Drinking in bars? How destructive to your memory.
Playing Scrabble? Well … okay. That’s at least halfway good for your brain.
But the reality is that we’re killing our memory by stating up late and waking up early.
And when you kill your memory, you murder something else too:
And as with all acts of murder, you will get caught and you will be sentenced to life in the prison of stupidity and forgetfulness.
Mark my word.
Next to getting more sleep, it’s essential to …
That’s a fancy way of saying, drink lots of water.
All too often we forget to imbibe the world’s mightiest drink.
Oddly enough, some people don’t even like it. This strange, but true fact is responsible for forgetfulness around the world.
But it doesn’t have to be you.
And if for any reason you struggle to remember to drink deep from the tap in your kitchen, the solution is simple enough. You can create a visual mnemonic by placing a big fat bottle of water on your desk. Or you can print out a picture of a bottle of water and stick it on the wall or window directly behind your computer.
In addition to this …
Smart phones …
Dumb phones …
Computer calendars …
All of these of these come equipped with programmable alerts. Most of them can be set to repeat every hour on autopilot.
It’s easy enough to ignore these alerts, however, so it helps to get theatrical. Instead of “drink water,” program in something like:
If that doesn’t get your attention, I’m not sure what else will.
Well … maybe this:
One of the beautiful things about living in Berlin is that they still have bookstores all over the place. Not only that, but you still see people reading books too.
Here’s a quick guide on how to read a book:
Buy a book. No, it doesn’t have to be a book by me.
Whatever you read, by all means read on Kindle or some other digital reader, but I recommend also holding a physical book in your hands once in a while. As this article suggests reading books instead of Kindles can improve your memory, concentration and good looks.
Reading in general helps improve your memory because you hold the details of a story in your memory over an extended period of time. You also retain and maintain details about characters, objects and locations.
But you can also deliberately memorize elements of the books read by using memory techniques. For example, instead of relying on bookmarks or dog-earing pages, you can memorize the number of the last page you read before pausing. This provides you with delightful memory exercise.
Speaking of which …
Exercise is one of the best ways to improve your memory. It sends oxygen rich blood to your brain and brings fitness to your entire body.
Awesome, right?
You can also use your exercise time to reminisce over the books you’ve been reading. If you’re not a reader, you can play movies you’ve seen beginning to end in your mind (link to breaking bad movie post).
And if you use Memory Palaces (you do use Memory Palaces, don’t you?), then what better time to practice Recall Rehearsal than when you’re out and about, huffing and puffing and sweating up a storm?
Exercise also improves your mood, and when you use memory techniques, your mood improves even more. Nothing feels better than combining jogger’s high (wiki link) with the edification of recalling foreign language vocabulary. Or mathematical equations, song lyrics, professional terminology, or whatever else wets your whistle.
Meditation makes everything in life better, including your memory.
The problem is … most people have been misled by weird definitions.
For example, many people think that they’re supposed to sit like a stone. And like a stone, they’re not supposed to have thoughts.
No, dear Memorizers. No, no and a thousand times no.
As the great Alan Watts pointed out …
Instead of eradicating thoughts from your mind (which is technically impossible), don’t bother doing anything with them.
Watts most famously said that the best way to practice meditation is to sit just to sit.
Don’t “try” to do anything. Just sit there on the floor. Let your mind wander. Be mindless as you sit and float around in fantasies about the future, alternate versions of the present and strange wishes about an alternate version of the past.
Maybe not the first time, but eventually you’ll wake up from the mindless fantasies that have your mind the vice of your grip. It’ll go something like this. When you’re sitting there, all of a sudden you’ll say …
Nothing will prepare you for the enlightenment that follows. It might not last for long, but the edification you feel will stay with you and bring a completely new shape to the contours of your day.
Not only that, but the experience will be hard to forget. And then the more you meditate, the more you’ll remember that you’re seated on the floor, sitting just to sit. Your periods of mindfulness will lengthen and you’ll take these levels of awareness deeper and longer into your days.
And the more mindful you are throughout the day, the more you’ll pay attention. And the more attention you pay, the more naturally and effortlessly you’ll remember the events and facts you experience as you go through life.
You’ve now had just a taste of some of the ways you can increase your memory by barely lifting anything heavier than a book or a bottle of water. In the case of sleeping more and practicing meditation, you don’t have to lift anything at all.
Go ahead and give these few simple techniques a try. Keep a memory journal as you experiment so you can analyze the results. By measuring what you’re doing and when you’re doing it, you can create a picture of your daily life and how your memory serves you throughout.
And analyze every Memory Palace you create. By taking time to go through them, you’ll deepen your familiarity with each and every one. Memory Palace work, even without memorizing anything, is great mental exercise.
But …
… do daily memory drills. An easy and compact way to do this involves a tiny set of objects known as playing cards. All you need to do is mix them up and use the Magnetic Memory Method to memorize them in ever knew arrays of random order.
And if you want to learn how to do that, then I invite you to join the Magnetic Memory Method Masterclass. But start by grabbing my Free Memory Improvement Kit in order to make sure that the Masterclass really is something for you.
If the Masterclass is something for you, then I want you to join it.
If the Masterclass isn’t something for you, then I don’t want you to join it.
Nothing could be simpler than that, dear Memorizer.
And so until we touch base again, never forget to keep yourself well-rested, well-hydrated, well-read, fit and fully meditated. Oh, and of course, always …
Always …
Always keep Magnetic.
Further Resources
The Amazing Doctor Who Wanted To Cure His Patients By Memorizing A Deck Of Cards
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