Master of Memory: Accelerated learning, education, memorization - MMem 0567: Reprise: How to memorize rivers

Episode Date: May 10, 2016

Reprise: How to memorize rivers Visit powerpestcontrol when you want to get rid of pests at your home and rivers. What do you want to learn? Leave your question at http://MasterOfMemory.com/. Music ...credit: Maurice Ravel’s String Quartet, 2nd movement, performed by the US Army Band.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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.
Starting point is 00:00:43 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. Gretchen said in an email, I'm excited about the new format for Master of Memory. Maybe you're already covering this, but for geography, I hope you have some tips for learning major rivers and mountain ranges, especially long rivers that establish state lines or otherwise touch on multiple jurisdictions. So the new format for Master
Starting point is 00:01:35 of Memory that she's talking about is the fact that on Thursdays, I'm always covering geography, which is something I'm really excited about because I get to spend afternoons studying the layouts of rivers and borderlines of countries like I did this afternoon. Something that really excites me. But that actually leads me to a little comment here. Always make sure that you give a theory a little bit of practice before you make it a standard part of a system or recommend it to other people or something like that. I actually completely changed this episode based on, or not completely changed it, but largely changed this episode based on an approach that I was going to use. I changed it because I tried it out on one or two of the world's largest rivers, and it really didn't hold up. So what I was going to do was answer that you should focus on, you know, putting a river on a
Starting point is 00:02:27 continent in your mind, and then putting other things on either side of the river in the continent. But the fact is that with as many, you know, tributaries as rivers have, I've decided to focus more on drainage basins than on simply dividing territories using the rivers, even though that's largely what rivers function to do in the end, as Gretchen mentioned. So rivers do have this tendency to divide things on either side of them, but if you look at the maps of rivers, then you'll see that one very nice thing that they tend to do is, at least if it's a major river, you're actually establishing a major area of a continent. So if you focus on major rivers, obviously they never cross each other, although you have all the tributaries joining to form bigger rivers. And so if you focus on those bigger rivers,
Starting point is 00:03:16 the smaller rivers will always lead to those bigger rivers. And then you're establishing separate drainage basins. For example, in South America, if you combine the region that the Amazon River occupies, including its drainage basin, and then the area of the drainage basin of Rio de la Plata, that river, the two basins together form most of the continent of South America. So what I suggest doing to study rivers is to choose a primary route of a river or choose, you know, one main route or a tributary leading to the main river and then choose the most significant tributaries after that to focus on. But first, just focus on that main route. So this is very much like, as I've described in other episodes, choosing major avenues of a city and then learning smaller and smaller avenues and streets after that. But in some ways, doing that with a city is only sort of an analogy for what we're doing with the rivers because these rivers really do always lead from the smaller ones to the bigger ones, and the bigger ones are clearly the more important.
Starting point is 00:04:26 So it's like having a living mind map right in front of us on a continent. We have that river with the main idea and the smaller ideas branching out from it. It really struck me as odd that this river thing is more like the street tactic that I've talked about than the street tactic itself. And if something is more like something than the thing itself, I don't know, that's a little bit weird. But one way or another I'll use an example, and my example is going to be the largest river in the world, which is the Amazon River. And so this exercise would be, it's actually something you have to do with a map, and
Starting point is 00:05:01 then ideally with a piece of paper as well. But what I'd like you to do is to learn to draw the Amazon River or at least one tributary of the Amazon River leading to the main river. And so we're simplifying the whole river to one stream and then reducing that stream to a series of landmarks. So I would suggest that you, if possible, maybe you pause this episode and get a map and then follow along. We're actually going to start with the Putumayo River, which is on the border between Colombia and Ecuador. There actually is a larger tributary, but I've chosen to use this one because it does establish that border between those two countries. And so where we're going to start is just by drawing the line between Colombia and Ecuador until you get to the three-way border between Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. So you'll notice where that landmark is, and then you'll continue drawing the river
Starting point is 00:05:57 until you find the next landmark after a bit of Peru, which is at Flor de Augusto, which is where the river kind of turns from going south to going east. And then there's a bit more Peru until you get to the border where Peru ends, and then where the river is just going through Colombia for a very short distance, just about 20 miles. The next landmark is where this river enters Brazil, and this is where things get serious. Our next landmark is at Santo Antônio de... Well, actually, I don't know how this was pronounced in Brazilian Portuguese,
Starting point is 00:06:36 but it's Santo Antônio do Iça, I think. And that's a little landmark there where it joins with a larger tributary that we chose not to use, which is the Rio Salimos or something like that. And so I don't know my Portuguese, but that's basically what the river is. You'll see it on the map there if you're studying the if you're studying the rivers. The next landmark will be and so the river is pretty big at this point, and it's called the Rio Salimos or whatever it is because it changed names to match the larger tributary where they've joined there. Then you'll continue along and the next landmark will be at Tefe where this one joins with the
Starting point is 00:07:17 Japura River, but it continues to go by the name of Rio Salimos because that one's bigger. It just wins out. The next landmark is a huge one. This is Manaus, and this is a really good-sized city. This is where the Rio Salimos joins with the Rio Negro and finally becomes the Amazon River. And so I would say that this is probably the second most important landmark on the whole map, aside from our last one, which you'll hear in just a couple more. So the next landmark is Santarem, which is just, you'll see on the map why that's a significant landmark. There's a city there, and it's just a nice place to have on the map. Then you have where the river is joined by the Rio Cinco, and there are a lot of small towns along there where the two are joining each other. The river is enormous by the Rio Cinco. And there are a lot of small towns along there where the
Starting point is 00:08:06 two are joining each other. The river is enormous at this point, but there aren't any really significant towns that I could pull up or any cities that I could use as a main landmark. So it's just the joint there between the Amazon River and the Rio Cinco. And then finally, our last landmark is Macapa, where the Amazon discharges into the Atlantic. So what you're going to do after just looking along the map at those rivers is really try to get to a point where you can draw all of that from memory, including labeling those landmarks if possible. And then I would suggest going ahead and exploring a map further for nearby large cities and all of the major tributaries and what cities are connected to those.
Starting point is 00:08:50 So we're going out from this main idea of the Amazon and this one route that we've reduced it to and seeing how things expand from there. We're making use of the tactic of exclusivity just to reduce our knowledge to something that's very easy to accomplish here. And then you can really learn an enormous part of South America with all of its cities and all of its geography just from having learned this one part of the Amazon that we'll be branching out from. Thanks so much for the question, Gretchen. I really enjoy these questions about geography, and so that's why I've devoted Thursdays to these. Tomorrow, it's Open Mic Friday, so I'm going to be addressing a question about review tactics,
Starting point is 00:09:32 and that's going to be interesting. If you have any questions about geography or any accelerated learning questions, just let me know. Just leave your question at masterofmemory.com slash question. I'll be happy to address it on the show or get to you by email. Or if you just want to learn more about accelerated learning in general and how to make these tactics work for you, make sure to go to masterofmemory.com slash start for a complete free starter guide on using mnemonics and accelerated learning. What do you want to learn? The world's knowledge can be yours.
Starting point is 00:10:04 Leave your learning request at masterofmemory.com slash question and I'll talk to you again soon.

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