Read How to Develop a Perfect Memory Online
Authors: Dominic O'Brien
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Self Help, #memory, #mnemonics
Everton reminds me of Eve; her action is tempting someone with an apple.
Score: Bryan Adams (2 = B; 1 = A). Complex image: I imagine Wendy Craig
walking slowly backwards down the driveway, tempting Bryan Adams with the lure of a crisp green apple. He is on his knees in beseechment, singing
'Everything I do I do for you'.
1910 Newcastle United vs Barnsley 2-0
Year: The tenth stage (1910) is the roundabout. Winner: Success at last for Newcastle United. I picture one of their most famous citizens, Spender, aka Jimmy Nail. Loser: Barnsley makes me think of barn dancing. Score: Bill
Oddie (2 = B; 0 = O). Complex image: I don't suppose that Jimmy Nail would readily accept an offer to barn dance with Bill Oddie, but I imagine them both doing a merry jig around the roundabout.
HOW TO STORE EXTRA INFORMATION
Sometimes there is more to the match than the final score reveals. In 1901, Spurs' 3-1 victory over Sheffield United was a replay, following a 2-2 draw. To memorize this extra detail, I imagine Charles Atlas (who is waiting for his supper, courtesy of Bob, my agent) beating on the goalposts crying, 'Order!'
In 1910, Newcastle were finally victorious after being runners up for three out of the five previous years. The 1-0 victory was, in fact, a replay, following a 1-1 draw. This sort of information is very easy to include in your complex image. All you have to do is add on an extra action to the storyline.
In this case, I imagine Bill Oddie being chased around the roundabout by a swarm of bees. This is the action of Arthur Askey, who represents 1-1 (A = 1; A = 1).
There is no real limit to the amount of facts that you can store. Enthusiasts memorize the entire line-up of each team, including substitutes, the goalscor-ers, the minute in which they scored, and no doubt the names of the referee's two children. If the will is there, it's perfectly possible. You just have to expand the geographical layout of your journey.
If you think all these images are ridiculous, I assure you that they are considerably more memorable than an uninviting mass of characterless facts and figures. I, for one, could not possibly begin to absorb huge amounts of raw, untreated information about football unless I used the techniques I have described.
Once you have committed the information to memory, you must spend some
time revising. Replay your 'video-tape' until you know the journey and all its little stories by heart. Highlight key landmarks along the way; they act as invaluable reference points when you want to access information quickly. If you automatically know where the 5th, 13th, 19th, and 26th stages are, for example, it makes locating the intervening stages so much easier.
If football's not your favourite sport, this method works equally well with other sporting information. You can use a simple journey to store data on horse racing, cricket, snooker, boxing, rugby, even haggis hurling if the facts are available.
REFERENCE TABLES
I have printed out below every FA Cup result since 1872, broken down into Year (stage), Winner (person), Loser (action), Score (person) to make it easier to memorize.
FA Cup RESULTS: 1872-1900
YEAR WINNER
LOSER
SCORE
1872
Wanderers
Royal Engineers
1-0
1873
Wanderers
Oxford University
2-0
1874
Oxford University
Royal Engineers
2-0
1875
Royal Engineers
Old Etonians
2-0 (1-1)
1876
Wanderers
Old Etonians
3-0 (0-0)
1877
Wanderers
Oxford University
2-0
1878
Wanderers
Royal Engineers
3-1
1879
Old Etonians
Clapham Rovers
1-0
1880
Clapham Rovers
Oxford University
1-0
1881
Old Carthusians
Old Etonians
3-0
1882
Old Etonians
Blackburn Rovers
1-0
1883
Blackburn Olympic
Old Etonians
2-1
1884
Blackburn Rovers
Queen's Park Glasgow
2-1
1885
Blackburn Rovers
Queen's Park Glasgow
2-0
1886
Blackburn Rovers
West Bromwich Albion
2-0 (0-0)
1887
Aston Villa
West Bromwich Albion
2-0
1888
West Bromwich Albion
Preston NE
2-1
1889
Preston North End
Wolverhampton Wanderers 3-0
1890
Blackburn Rovers
Sheffield Wednesday
6-1
1891
Blackburn Rovers
Notts County
3-1
1892
West Bromwich Albion
Aston Villa
3-0
1893
Wolverhampton Wanderers Everton
1-0
1894
Notts County
Bolton
4-1
1895
Aston Villa
West Bromwich Albion
1-0
1896
Sheffield Wednesday
Wolverhampton
2-1
1897
Aston Villa
Everton
3-2
1898
Nottingham Forest
Derby County
3-1
1899
Sheffield United
Derby County
4-1
1900
Bury
Southampton
4-0
1901
Tottenham Hotspur
Sheffield United
3-1 (2-2)
1902
Sheffield United
Southampton
2-1 (1-1)
1903
Bury
Derby County
6-0
1904
Manchester City
Bolton Wanderers
1-0
1905
Aston Villa
Newcastle United
2-0
1906
Everton
Newcastle United
1-0
1907
Sheffield Wednesday
Everton
2-1
1908
Wolverhampton Wanderers Newcastle United
3-1
1909
Manchester United
Bristol City
1-0
1910
Newcastle United
Barnsley
2-0 (1-1)
1911
Bradford City
Newcastle
1-0 (0-0)
1912
Barnsley
West Bromwich Albion
1-0 (0-0)
1913
Aston Villa
Sunderland
1-0
1914
Burnley
Liverpool
1-0
1915
Sheffield United
Chelsea
3-0
1920
Aston Villa
Huddersfield Town
1-0
1921
Tottenham Hotspur
Wolverhampton Wanderers 1-0
1922
Huddersfield Town
Preston North End
1-0
1923
Bolton Wanderers
West Ham United
3-0
1924
Newcastle United
Aston Villa
2-0
1925
Sheffield United
Cardiff City
1-0
1926
Bolton Wanderers
Manchester City
1-0
1927
Cardiff City
Arsenal
1-0
1928
Blackburn Rovers
Huddersfield Town
3-1
1929
Bolton Wanderers
Portsmouth
2-0
1930
Arsenal
Huddersfield Town
2-0
1931
West Bromwich Albion
Birmingham
2-1
1932
Newcastle United
Arsenal
2-1
1933
Everton
Manchester City
3-0
1934
Manchester City
Portsmouth
2-1
1935
Sheffield Wednesday
West Bromwich Albion
4-2
1936, Arsenal
Sheffield United
1-0
1937
Sunderland
Preston North End
3-1
1938
Preston North End
Huddersfield Town
1-0
1939
Portsmouth
Wolverhampton
4-1
1946
Derby County
Charlton Athletic
4-1
1947
Charlton Athletic
Burnley
1-0
1948
Manchester United
Blackpool
4-2
1949
Wolverhampton Wanderers Leicester City
3-1
1950
Arsenal
Liverpool
2-0
1951
Newcastle United
Blackpool
2-0
1952
Newcastle United
Arsenal
1-0
1953
Blackpool
Bolton Wanderers
4-3
1954
West Bromwich Albion
Preston North End
3-2
1955
Newcastle United
Manchester City
3-1
1956
Manchester City
Birmingham City
3-1
1957
Aston Villa
Manchester United
2-1
1958
Bolton Wanderers
Manchester United
2-0
1959
Nottingham Forest
Luton Town
2-1
1960
Wolverhampton
Blackburn Rovers
3-0
1961
Tottenham Hotspur
Leicester City
2-0
1962
Tottenham Hotspur
Burnley
3-1
1963
Manchester United
Leicester City
3-1
1964
West Ham United
Preston North End
3-2
1965
Liverpool
Leeds United
2-1
1966
Everton
Sheffield Wednesday
3-2
1967
Tottenham Hotspur
Chelsea
2-1
1968
West Bromwich Albion
Everton
1-0
1969
Manchester City
Leicester City
1-0
1970
Chelsea
Leeds United
2-1 (2-2)
1971
Arsenal
Liverpool
2-1
1972
Leeds United
Arsenal
1-0
1973
Sunderland
Leeds United
1-0
1974
Liverpool
Newcastle United
3-0
1975
West Ham United
Fulham
2-0
1976
Southampton
Manchester United
1-0
1977
Manchester United
Liverpool
2-1
1978
Ipswich Town
Arsenal
1-0
1979
Arsenal
Manchester United
3-2
1980
West Ham United
Arsenal
1-0
1981
Tottenham Hotspur
Manchester City
3-2 (1-1)
1982
Tottenham Hotspur
Queens Park Rangers
1-0 (1-1)
1983
Manchester United
Brighton & Hove Albion
4-0 (2-2)
1984
Everton
Watford
2-0
1985
Manchester United
Everton
1-0
1986
Liverpool
Everton
3-1
1987
Coventry City
Tottenham Hotspur
3-2
1988
Wimbledon
Liverpool
1-0
1989
Liverpool
Everton
3-2
1990
Manchester United
Crystal Palace
1-0 (3-3)
1991
Tottenham Hotspur
Nottingham Forest
2-1
1992
Liverpool
Sunderland
2-0
19
HOW MEMORY
CAN IMPROVE
YOUR GOLF SWING
The attraction and frustration of sport is that there is always room for improvement. There are no absolutes. Sprinters can run the 100 metres faster, batsmen can score more runs, tennis players can play more passing shots, darts players can score 180 more frequently, and a golf ball can always be struck more sweetly.
Regardless of the sport, there are two fundamental ways in which you can improve your game: technique and practice. Memory plays a key role in both.
Golf, like chess, is a game of the mind, requiring high levels of concentration and mental composure. A good memory is invaluable for players of all
standards. Beginners need to remember a whole range of things before each shot (stance, grip, angle of clubface). And a professional, faced with an awkward lie perhaps, or difficult playing conditions, should always be able to refer back to a relevant precedent, possibly from many years ago.
I am going to concentrate solely on how memory can improve one aspect of the game: your swing.
DECLARATIVE AND REFLEXIVE MEMORY
If you are being taught how to drive a car, you are constantly trying to convert what the instructor is saying into physical actions. You make a conscious effort to remember the order of 'mirror, signal, manoeuvre', for example. Mental recall of this sort is known as 'declarative memory'.
In time, you will begin to check in your mirror, flick on the indicator and pull out without consciously recalling your instructor's words. Your actions become automatic and there is no longer any conscious act of recall. Memory,
however, still plays its part and is known as 'reflexive memory'.
Similarly, if you are being taught how to drive a golf ball down the centre of the fairway, you are desperately trying to convert what the instructor is saying into a respectable shot. In those early, frustrating weeks and months, your technique relies heavily on your declarative memory: what were the instructor's ten key points? How was the man standing in the golfing video at home? And what did it say about grip in that book you got for Christmas?
Wouldn't life become so much easier if your declarative memory was able
to absorb and recall all these tips in an instant? It would then be solely a matter of practice before they transferred into your reflexive memory. And think how much better your game would be if you could learn every piece of advice