4 Genius Memory Hacks To Stave Off Dementia

Information is only as good as what you do with it.

Hacks to remember everything jakkapan21, Jirapong Manustrong, fotosipsak | Canva
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If you read a lot but seem to forget most of the information you so eagerly soak up, this is for you. I’d like to give you three things today: A wake-up call, an explanation of why it’s necessary and how it’ll help you remember better, and four genius memory hacks to remember everything.

Don’t just learn for the sake of learning. Be a practitioner. Use the information you consume. It’s only as good as what you do with it. That’s what matters.

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Ironically, learning things just in time when you need them will also help you remember them better. Why? There are two types of memories:

  1. Memories you make a conscious effort to form.
  2. Memories you form unconsciously through experience.

The first type of memory is stored in your hippocampus. It’s what happens when your new neighbor John introduces himself to you and you go: “John, John, John, John, John…” in your head, over and over again, to not forget it.

The second type is stored in your neocortex. When you go to Disneyland with your grandparents for the first time, and get ice cream, it falls on the floor, and the nice lady behind the counter gives you a new scoop, this experience ends up there.

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Memories stored here are much stronger because each part of your memory is stored in a different section.

RELATED: The Quick Visual Test That Reveals If You Have Perfect Short-Term Memory

Here are 4 genius memory hacks to stave off dementia:

1. Spacing

Mumbling John’s name over and over again the first time you hear it won’t help you remember. It’ll make your brain bored. Research shows your brain needs breaks to remember things. Sending yourself a reminder with John’s name two days after you heard it the first time will be much more efficient. This is called the spacing effect.

2. The Zeigarnik effect

Your brain tends to remind you of things you’ve left unfinished. This is called the Zeigarnik effect. In learning, this means while you’re taking a break after a 4-hour hardcore math session, your subconscious keeps processing the last problem you got stuck on and the solution might come to you in the shower the next morning.

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So there’s a double benefit to taking breaks: the right input frequency will let the memory sink in deeper and your brain automatically reminds you of the information at the right time!

RELATED: The Low-Effort Activity That Makes People More Productive & Less Stressed

3. Chunking

1117200112241999 is tough to remember.

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But two consecutive dates aren’t: 11/17/2001 and 12/24/1999. Especially if I put them into context: my friend’s birthday and Christmas 1999. Chunk up large pieces of information into smaller bits and put them into context and they’ll be much easier to recall.

4. Unlocking the Memory Palace

While experiences are the most powerful way to remember, you can also create them in your head to observe a somewhat similar effect. Walk along a route you know well in your mind and place objects or things you want to remember along the way.

For example, imagine taking a walk through your house and putting your grocery list items in different places. The onions go in your sock drawer, bread on the kitchen table, and lemons in the closet. Then, once you’re at the grocery store, all you have to do is take your mental walk again and pick up all items as you go along.

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RELATED: 3 Psychological Tricks To Get A Photographic Memory So You Remember Everything

Niklas Göke writes a daily blog for dreamers, doers, and unbroken optimists.