Read How to Develop a Perfect Memory Online
Authors: Dominic O'Brien
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Self Help, #memory, #mnemonics
A few years ago, I spent a short time in Accra, the capital. Located on the coast, it represents a tiny part of the country, but I now have several lasting key images of Ghana. Every time I hear or read about it, I immediately associate the news with one of them. For example, a story on the BBC's World
Service about Bolgatanga in northern Ghana might remind me of the hotel I stayed at in Accra, 600 kilometres away. The image is quite irrelevant, of course, but it's enough to make me remember the story.
By contrast, I am not attentive to a news item on Liberia. There's no inher-ent reason why its affairs should be less interesting than those of Ghana. It's just that I've got nothing to go on. Until I have a key image of the country, Liberia will remain a word.
A DIET OF IMAGES
The ideal way to study geography would be to work your way around the
world, building up accurate mental pictures of every country as you go. Sadly, this rather grand approach to learning is beyond most people's means, and we have been obliged to adopt less costly methods of studying the planet.
For example, the first thing we do when we want to find out about a remote country is look it up in an atlas. Even though it's two-dimensional, the image on the page helps the brain to process the information. The country is no longer just a word; it has shape and size. Not much, but it's a start.
We endeavour to get our bearings from other sources as well, building up a portfolio of images from newspapers, magazines, and TV. A glossy Sunday
supplement full of gut-wrenching photographs of a drought in Sudan might provide us with our only image of the country. A TV drama on the battle for Goose Green might leave us with our only mental picture of the Falkland
Islands.
Sometimes our sole insight into a country or city is through the eyes of a filmmaker. Our images of Italy might come from
Death in Venice,
or
The
Italian Job. A
scene from
Out of Africa
could provide us with our one abiding picture of Kenya. Perhaps
The French Connection
is all we have ever seen of Marseilles.
Not surprisingly, we begin to forge crude associations between countries and their key national images. Mention Britain to a foreigner and they might well think of Big Ben. If I hear someone talking about Egypt, I immediately picture the pyramids. I am sure we all have key images for well-known countries: the United States, the Statue of Liberty; Australia, the Sydney Opera House; India, the Taj Mahal; France, the Eiffel Tower; Russia, Red Square; and so on.
However stereotyped and unfair these key images are, they serve a purpose.
An association flashes across our mind every time the country in question is mentioned. The problems start when the mind is a blank, void of all images.
Visual deficiency of this sort makes learning geography particularly
difficult. If we haven't visited a country, or read about it, or seen it on TV or in a film, how can we possibly be expected to remember facts about its capital, population, rivers, mountains, languages, religion, and culture? The brain craves mental imagery. Feed it!
A NEW METHOD FOR LEARNING
GEOGRAPHY
Next time you are faced with learning large amounts of information about unknown places (the plight of most geography students), by all means turn to your atlas, but you should also turn to your imagination. As I said in Chapter 2, it is the key to a perfect memory.
Someone tells you, for example, that the state capital of Idaho in the United States is Boise. You have never been there in your life and you have no images of the place, from books, magazines, TV, or films. The chances are you won't retain the information for long.
If, however, you use your imagination to create your own key image, based on simple associations suggested by the words themselves, the information is much more likely to stick.
To remember that Boise is the capital of Idaho, imagine an old lady called Ida (it's a very old-fashioned name) hoeing a flowerbed. A row of school boys are peering over her front wall, giggling behind her back.
Or take another example: you want to remember that the capital of South
Dakota is Pierre. This time, a key image of the state flashes across your mind: the famous rock sculptures, known as the Mount Rushmore Monument.
Perhaps you've seen it in a magazine or in a film. It's a vague recollection, but it's enough to form a backdrop for your own image, which you are about to create. Look at the word 'Pierre'. What does it suggest? Imagine a seaside pier jutting out from the rockface carvings.
MENTAL WAREHOUSES
On those occasions when key images spring to mind, you should always use them to set the scene, however distant or hazy they may be. If none are forthcoming, and you have to invent your own key image, you must be a little more resourceful in your choice of location. Try storing them all together in one place that has an unmistakenly American theme or feel to it.
The bar area from the TV series
Cheers
is currently a favourite 'mental warehouse' of mine. I have crammed it full of American facts that I can't deposit elsewhere. The old lady called Ida, for example, is now hoeing in the street, outside the bar window.
HOW TO REMEMBER THE STATES OF
AMERICA
Have a look at the following list of American states and their capitals.
Displayed like this, they look a fairly formidable prospect to learn. If you use your imagination, however, together with key images that you might already have of the places, it becomes a relatively easy task.
STATE
CAPITAL
STATE
CAPITAL
Alabama
Montgomery
Montana
Helena
Alaska
Juneau
Nebraska
Lincoln
Arizona
Phoenix
Nevada
Carson City
Arkansas
Little Rock
New Hampshire
Concord
California
Sacramento
New Jersey
Trenton
Colorado
Denver
New Mexico
Santa Fe
Connecticut
Hartford
New York
Albany
Delaware
Dover
North Carolina
Raleigh
Florida
Tallahassee
North Dakota
Bismarck
Georgia
Atlanta
Ohio
Columbus
Hawaii
Honolulu
Oklahoma
Oklahoma City
Idaho
Boise
Oregon
Salem
Illinois
Springfield
Pennsylvania
Harrisburg
Indiana
Indianapolis
Rhode Island
Providence
Iowa
Des Moines
South Carolina
Columbia
Kansas
Topeka
South Dakota
Pierre
Kentucky
Frankfort
Tennessee
Nashville
Louisiana
Baton Rouge
Texas
Austin
Maine
Augusta
Utah
Salt Lake City
Maryland
Annapolis
Vermont
Montpelier
Massachusetts
Boston
Virginia
Richmond
Michigan
Lansing
Washington
Olympia
Minnesota
St. Paul
West Virginia
Charleston
Mississippi
Jackson
Wisconsin
Madison
Missouri
Jefferson City
Wyoming
Cheyenne
Before you go any further, open a map of the United States. Console yourself by checking the whereabouts of the few states and capitals you already know.
You've got a rough idea, perhaps, that New York is on the east coast and that Florida is further south. Stay with the coastline and take a wander. Try to orientate yourself by noticing where certain states are in relation to others. Do they border mountains, lakes, seas, other countries?
Make a note of any associations that spring to mind during this preliminary stroll. What key images are sparked off by the names on the map? New York, the Statue of Liberty perhaps; Arizona, The Grand Canyon; Kansas, the OK
Corral; Nevada, the gambling halls; Florida, Disneyworld.
If you can't picture any, give your imagination a free rein. Let the words themselves suggest associations. It doesn't matter how bizarre your images are: the more unusual, the better. Is there any link between Helena and Montana? I happen to know someone called Helena. My key image is of her playing the card game Montana red dog (Helena/Montana). I can also imagine a fey-looking Santa Claus wearing a brand new Mexican sombrero (Santa Fe/New
Mexico). My girlfriend Caroline is riding a Raleigh bicycle, heading north (Raleigh/North Carolina). And so on.
Once you have loosened up, it's time to concentrate on the list itself. Here is how I memorize some of the states and their capitals:
Jackson, capital of Mississippi
I have a good key image of the Mississippi river, so I imagine Michael Jackson trying to wade across it, struggling against the strong flow.
Frankfort, capital of Kentucky
No key images of Kentucky state spring to mind. I do, however, immediately think of fried chicken and frankfurters. I therefore create my own key image of Colonel Saunders tucking into a hot dog. I imagine his perpetrating this trai-torous act in a Kentucky Fried Chicken shop next door to the
Cheers
bar.
Albany, capital of New York
The Statue of Liberty is hard to beat as a key image of New York. I picture her with 'auburn' coloured hair. It doesn't matter if the association produces an imperfect match. 'Auburn' sounds sufficiently like 'Albany' to remind me of the name.
Tallahassee, capital of Florida
When I hear the name Florida, I always think of Disneyworld, which provides me with an excellent key image. I imagine a very 'tall' model of the dog Lassie erected at the main entrance to the theme park. Again, the phonetic
approximation of 'tall' and 'Lassie' is a sufficient reminder of the capital.
Austin, capital of Texas
I have a number of key images when I think of Texas: rocket launching at Cape Canaveral, the Houston Astrodome, J. R. Ewing's house, all of which make good locations. Austin makes me think of an Austin Maxi. I imagine a group of astronauts being taken to the space shuttle in a battered old Austin car, put-putting its way across the tarmac to the launch pad. (I also think of Austin Mitchell, the Labour MP. Perhaps he is wielding a Texas chainsaw in the
Cheers
bar...)
Juneau, capital of Alaska
TV news footage of the Exxon Valdiz oil disaster left me with a number of lasting key images of Alaska's polluted coastline. Juneau reminds me of the actress June Whitfield. I imagine her helping to mop up some oil on the shore.
Again, 'June' is a sufficient reminder of Juneau.
FADE TO GREY
Don't be worried about cramming your head full of bizarre images. Mnemonics of this sort are servants, and can be hired or fired at will. Their sole purpose is to act as aides-memoires until the information has been properly absorbed, at which point they will fade away, leaving the data firmly in place. Facts will soon be rolling off the tongue without a moment's thought: Boston
Massachusetts; Phoenix, Arizona; Washington, D.C. You certainly won't have to keep referring back to your galaxy of strange images.
USING A JOURNEY TO REMEMBER GROUPS OF
COUNTRIES
South America
You are told to learn the capitals and population of all thirteen countries in South America. Unfortunately, you have very little knowledge of any of them, so ready-made key images are thin on the ground. Time is also short, and this is how you are presented with the information:
COUNTRY
CAPITAL
COUNTRY
CAPITAL
Argentina
Buenos Aires
Guyana
Georgetow
Brazil
Brasilia
Paraguay
Asuncion
Bolivia
Sucre
Peru
Lima
Chile
Santiago
Suriname
Paramaribo
Colombia
Bogota
Uraguay
Montevide
Ecuador
Quito
Venezuela
Caracas
French Guiana
Cayenne
Faced with this sort of problem, you could do what you did with unfamiliar American states: form your own key images based on word association and
place them all in a mental warehouse. One place, however, is likely to get a bit congested. A more efficient alternative is to store them using a simple journey.
Step 1:
Choose a familiar journey with thirteen stages, but this time try to make it a loop. In other words, you want to end up where you started, having travelled round a small circuit. The journey might be around a park or just around the block.
Step 2:
Have a look at your atlas. If you start with Venezuela at the top of South America, it is possible to work your way around all the countries going clockwise: Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, Brazil, Uruguay,
Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and finally Paraguay, which is in the middle.
Step 3:
Look at each country and let the name suggest an artificial key image to you.
Stay with the first association that comes to mind, however strange it may be, and don't worry if they are only rough approximations. This is what I imagine: Venezuela
Venison
Guyana
Guy Fawkes
Suriname
Schoolmaster (Sir) with a nan bread on his
French Guiana
Guy Fawkes wearing a beret
Brazil
Brazil nuts
Uruguay
Corned beef (Fray Bentos)
Argentina
Silver (argent)
Chile
Chilli peppers
Bolivia
Bowl of liver
Peru