Table of Contents

Memory Craft, hands-on:

Theun:

Lynne Kelly's tips:

From Lynne Kelly, Memory Craft

First order your data:

No matter what topic you choose, as soon as you have your information structured into some sort of order, you are ready to go.

Repeat:

I make new associations at a rate of perhaps a few a day, and revise them later that day, the next day, in a week, and again in a month if I need to.

(Theun: I do at least 5 to 10 reviews the first days for longer sequences, before it really starts to settle, but apparently with practice this becomes quicker.)

Don’t worry there is enough detail:

I kept expecting to strike trouble making up images or puns or other ways to make the families and species memorable. But whenever I pondered for a moment, playing with the name and letting my mind wander, I always found a link to the bead or shell, or the position on the board, or the grain of the wood.

Naming places:

My Prehistory Journey posed a problem: I couldn’t instantly recall the dates of most of the locations that I had chosen as the key divisions. I knew where the locations were, but I had noted them in the spreadsheet as ‘edge of the fence’ or ‘blue house’. Not exactly memorable. The driveway at 65.5 million years ago, when the dinosaurs were wiped out, is now ‘Dead Dino Drive’.

How to deal with dates or numbers:

I have Friedrich Nietzsche philosophising from the stone fence of a house across the road from home, so I already know he was born sometime between 1840 and 1850. To remember his year of birth and year of death, I need to add together my person for the number 44 (4=A, 4=A, Andre Agassi) and my object for 00 (0=O, 0=O, Old Oldfield).

Just remember the story scene:

The images flash into my head momentarily when I walk the History Journey and it is exactly that, just a flash. That’s the beauty of the system: I don’t decode the image unless I need it. I have an endless array of images which I can call up and decode at will. As long as the image exists, I can always work out the dates.

Using characters:

It is not necessary for you to conjure up a perfect photographic image of these characters / monsters / people. You just need to recognise them for what they represent. The best way to do this is to assign an action and prop to each one.

Handhelds, the Lukasa (board with beads):

How to store a whole duck family in one bead, create a story:

Tactile works too:

It’s not just the look of a memory board that will serve your purpose. As I recite the board, I naturally touch each shell or bead. Their feel and position on the wood helps to make each unique. An illustrated design will still work, but you can make a lukasa even more powerful with a tactile response.

Eventually you may not need the board:

My lukasa soon became so familiar to me that I didn’t need to have it with me in order to use it. I occasionally sketched it to burn it into memory, but I now have it with me all the time, safe in my imagination.

How to change data once stored:

This is not a problem. You just need to add to the story. Do not try to un-memorise (also known as forgetting) what you’d previously learned—it won’t work. You need to incorporate the change within the story until eventually the old knowledge fades and you are left with the new.

If the data becomes too much, set up a mind-palace for it:

Adding new information is just a matter of adding more to your stories. If there is so much information that your story has become too complex, then you can link it to a memory palace. I have done that for our honeyeaters. The 36 birds encoded in a single story to a single bead was fine until I wanted to add lots of detail about identification, behaviour, habitat and breeding for each species, many of which are very similar. So I created a honeyeater memory palace. The board and the palace work together seamlessly. Or you could use multiple boards.

Carved neolithic balls:

Greek mythology, objects on a tiny stage:

The tiny stage is not about total recall, but about the inner relations or when there is no neat linear format:

My purpose for this specific memory task was not to be able to reel off all the stories in order and give hours of performances for anyone else. The purpose was for me to be able to think about any character and recall his or her story in their mythological context. A memory method employing performances on a miniature stage with objects is a particularly strong method when your information will not fit into a neat linear format.

Applied to radioactive decay:

Cross generational:

The entire knowledge system of Aboriginal peoples is bound up in stories and songs, taught through performance. If the songs and stories are entertaining, that is good. If they stir the emotions, that is better. And if they educate, that is best of all. So, sing and dance and tell stories about the teachings you want to remember.

part of: memory_code and monster_code