Master of Memory: Accelerated learning, education, memorization - MMem 0560: Reprise: The biggest thing that makes memorization stick for the long term
Episode Date: April 29, 2016Reprise: The biggest thing that makes memorization stick for the long term What do you want to learn? Leave your question at http://MasterOfMemory.com/. Music credit: Maurice Ravel’s String Quart...et, 2nd movement, performed by the US Army Band.
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Hey guys, this is Timothy, and I'm publishing a book.
Now, this may not be new news to all of you,
but I bring it up because it's temporarily changing some things here on the show.
We're going to be running a series of reprise episodes for the next few weeks
due to my need to focus exclusively on this writing project.
The book is going to cover absolutely everything about language hacking
that I've learned from years of working directly with fluency coaching students and native speaking coaches to see what truly works and gets amazing results.
It's going to be a high-end book with the hardcover copy priced at around $40, and that's if I can keep it as short as I'd like to keep it.
But as podcast listeners, you can actually get a free digital copy of the book if you sign up early.
Just go to Spanishin1month.com, and you'll be on the early bird list to get access to the book the day that it's released.
Meanwhile, for now, enjoy this rerun of one of my favorite episodes from the last few months.
Welcome to Master of Memory.
I'm Timothy, and I'm here to answer your accelerated learning questions every day and to inspire and empower you to learn anything you want to learn faster than ever.
Chris wrote in an email, I'm able to memorize a telephone number using the major system,
but then an hour later, the memorization fades.
I just didn't know
if PAO created better pictures and a better story, which enhances the retrieval. So Chris, what's
going on here is you're asking whether you should learn PAO in order to store things in better
long-term storage, but I would argue that the difference between the major system and PAO,
or whatever system you use to memorize numbers, doesn't really have to do with long-term versus short-term storage.
You can create very visual images using either technique.
The benefits of PAO are actually just in the speed with which you can create those images in the first place and the efficiency with which you can store them because you have fewer images to store more information.
So the real answer to your question here is not switching to PAO.
It's actually something else.
What you need to do to make the memorization stick
is to think about your trigger
and to think about how you're going to store this stuff long term.
Someone tells you a telephone number
and you're able to turn that into a few images, that's great, but the issue here is how do you retrieve
those images and keep them from just blowing out the window of your car and
landing in a puddle somewhere and disappearing forever? And the answer to
that is, let's say you're holding this image, you actually need to put it
somewhere. And this is, it sounds a little bit weird,
but this is really the physical world and the mental world.
Our minds operate based on the way that they see the world around them.
And so the best way to take a memory that you've turned into a physical object
and store it long-term is to put it in a location.
If you can place your memory,
if you can place the image of that telephone number
that you've created in an actual location
where you can retrieve it later,
it's just like you've gotten some sort of possession
or somebody's handed you a piece of paper,
and instead of looking at it and then dropping it,
you actually put it in a particular pocket
or something like that,
so that the next time that you need it,
you don't just go looking around for it, you actually know exactly which pocket to
pull it from. That's the difference between short term storage, where you're
just holding something in your hands, and long term storage, where you put
something somewhere where you know you can retrieve it at another time just by
going to that same place. And so of course what I'm talking about here is
using a memory palace.
Now there are really two options for storing such a number depending on whether you're talking about middle length storage, as in remembering that number for a few days and the next time you need
it, or longer term storage, which means that you can store it indefinitely and you never really
want to forget it. You just want to keep it for, you know, indefinitely.
So for middle length storage,
you might just choose a location based on what trigger you think will work best.
If it's just a phone number
that you're going to have to call later that day,
you might think about where you'll be
when you're going to be dialing that number
and use that place where you're going to be as the trigger.
Let's say you're going to be in, I don't know,
you're going to be sitting on a bleacher somewhere at a game, and you're going to be calling somebody from there. Well,
associate that image with that bleacher so that when you go down and you sit on that bleacher and
you go, hmm, what was that phone number I have to call? You can just think about the bleacher
you're sitting on and go, oh yeah, I associated it with this bleacher. That'll work for short-term
storage and for, you know for middle-term storage,
so you've actually placed it somewhere.
But for actually storing something,
like keeping it in your house in a drawer or something,
if you want to own that number for the long-term,
you should have an entire palace
that's dedicated to information like this
so that you can find it.
It's categorized.
It's placed in some room
where you've placed all such important numbers.
And again, the bottom line here is just associate these numbers with locations.
Don't just turn them into images.
The image doesn't seem to be the problem here.
The image seems to be storage.
And the biggest thing that makes memorization stick for the long term
is just having it associated with a location
so that you can remember it associated with a location so that
you can remember it by remembering that location. And Chris, for more information about this,
I think you'd really benefit from going to masterofmemory.com slash start, which has a
complete guide for starting with mnemonics and for making information stick in the long term.
It has information about number mnemonics, but also about structuring memory palaces and just lots of great information. And for everybody who's
listening, you want to use the guide just to understand these episodes and to know what sort
of language I'm speaking when I talk about all these mnemonics and the memory palaces and PAO
systems and things like that. You'll find that in the guide at masterofmemory.com start.
Meanwhile, what do you want to learn? the guide at masterofmemory.com slash start. Meanwhile,
what do you want to learn? The world's knowledge can be yours. Leave your learning request at
masterofmemory.com slash question, and I'll talk to you again soon.