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Memory Magic
All of us have good memories. We see, hear, and speak thousands of words in our own
language with good understanding. But many of our memories are untrained. Improved memory
can help us prepare for a mission, give talks, and teach lessons. It can help us gain
self-confidence, meet and remember people, and be well informed and well organized. This
activity is designed to help us gain mastery of our memory power.
Preparation
In advance, assign a family member to teach one of these memory-power techniques.
- Visualization. Picture in your mind the things you want to remember in a
systematic way. Pretend you are going shopping. You need to buy the following things:
A large ball-point pen
An apple pie
A bottle of glue
A box of matches
A pair of sunglasses |
A can of red paint
A new hat
A mouse trap
A jar of mustard
A hammer |
Now that you have read these items, see how many of them you can recall without looking
at them. Take forty seconds to write down as many as you can. How many did you remember?
Now reorganize the list this way:
Visualize an empty table. Then picture yourself standing a large ball-point pen
on end. Then balance the apple pie on it. You then pour the glue on the
pie, letting it drip on the table. Around the table edge stand the matches and
start them burning. Then picture a friend standing beside the table pouring red paint
from the new hat. Just as you are ready to clean up the mess, you hear a loud
snap and glance around. You see a mouse trap closing on your new sunglasses.
It has broken one lens and the other is smeared with mustard. Someone is beating
on the lens with a hammer.
Now take another forty seconds and see how many you can recall. You will do better than
before.
- Association. By associating, or linking in your mind, an unfamiliar thing with
one that is familiar or easy to remember, you can remember the unfamiliar thing better.
Rhymes, codes, initial letters, and familiar songs are all good memory aids.
Almost everyone knows the rhyme, "Thirty days hath September." Many of us
still use this to help us remember the number of days in a given month. Rhymes like this
one can effectively improve memory.
Codes can also be very effective memory aids. For example, to recall the names of the
spaces on a treble music clef, just remember that FACE spells face. To call the names on
the lines on the treble clef, remember "Every Good Boy Does Fine" which stands
for EGBDF. Make up your own codes for things you have to remember.
Using initials can also be helpful. For example, to remember the capitals of the six
New England states—Boston, Concord, Hartford, Augusta, Montpelier, and
Providence—think of the cities' initials—BCHAMP. Then think to yourself, "Boston
is largest, so B is the champ."
You can also use initials to help you remember outlines for Church and public speeches.
If you had to give a talk on salesmanship, for example, and the points you will include
are fairness, intelligence, gratitude, honor, and truth. These spell fight when
the initials are put together.
Set the words of a list you need to memorize to the music of a song you know. For
example, the books of the New Testament can be sung to the tune of "Praise to the
Man" (Hymns, no. 147).
Activity
Have the assigned family member introduce the memory aids he has studied. Then try one
or more of these exercises:
- Try to remember mom's shopping list using visualization.
- Have an older child invent a code for remembering the Articles of Faith.
- Memorize the books of the Book of Mormon by putting them to music.
- Use the principle of association to remember family birthdays or other special events.
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