The Memory Palace or Method of Loci - Learn how to remember anything with Memory Techniques

This is a repost from an old article of mine. It will give you an insight in the amazing  techniques of all mental athletes, starting with the famous Method of Loci. You will learn how to memorize numbers, cards, names and words and discover the fascinating world of Memory Sports.  

The Method of Loci

This technique is as old as ancient democracy: The method of loci,  used by Greek and Roman senators to hold their intoxicating speeches in  front of the senate. It was proscribed to use any kind of notes, so  they were using this brilliant technique to jack up their memory.  Rhetorical geniuses like Cicero went through their  palaces, gardens and any other kind of locations (Latin: loci) and  memorized  the order of every single object in their paths.   To remember a speech, they broke it into peaces and created symbols  for every single part. Then they put those symbols into the different  loci . To recall them they visualized the path and went from one station  to another, where they remembered the symbols and translated them back  into the speech. According to Cicero in “De Oratore”, the method of loci  was invented by the Greek poet Simonides about 500 BC:   

Cicero (De oratore,  ii. 86) tells the story of the end of Simonides relations with the  Scopadae. His patron, Scopas, reproached him at a banquet for devoting  too much space to a praise of Castor and Pollux in an ode celebrating  Scopas’ victory in a chariot-race. Scopas refused to pay all the fee and  told Simonides to apply to the twin gods for the remainder. Shortly  afterwards, Simonides was told that two young men wished to speak to  him; after he had left the banqueting room, the roof fell in and crushed  Scopas and his guests (XXV. c. Simonides). During the excavation of the  rubble, Simonides was called upon to identify each guest killed. He  managed to do so by correlating their identities to their positions at  the table before his departure. (Quote: Wikipedia)   

What Simonides did is easy to reproduce, since remembering a route from A to B in its detail has once been part of the survival strategy of mankind.  You can try it yourself: Close your eyes and remember the objects in  your room. You will know exactly where your bed, your sofa, your table  and your computer are. Imagine to go outside your room – can you see the  corridor and the other rooms? Can you even leave the house and wander  through your garden? Maybe you can jump to your workplace and see your  office. You just discovered the method of loci! 

The Power of the Elephant Path

Why  is the method of loci so powerful? On one hand it is using your natural  memory for locations. Even if you have the feeling to easily loose  orientation, you still are able to remember your own room in its  detail. On the other hand it provides a logical order. You just have to  walk through your room clockwise or counterclockwise and all the objects  will be in a specific order.   I will call each route we create with this method an “elephant path” (or just “path”). It is a track created by animal footfalls and represents the most easily navigated way between an origin and a destination.  Each time it is used, it becomes stronger and grows wider. A memory  athlete is using his paths over and over again, too. And since the  elephant is also a symbol for a strong memory, it seems like a perfect  name for the easiest way to a better memory. A beautiful harmony, don’t you think? 

Step 1 – Pick your Location

Make your first path To use this technique and become a memory athlete, you have to choose your first location. It can be anywhere you like  but you should pick the one you know best for your first elephant path.  That could be your room, your flat, your house or your workspace. If  you like, you can also create an imaginary path. But it is harder to  memorize in the beginning, so I advise you to choose a real location  first. A memory athlete creates several paths for championships. But for  starters one should be fine.   

Step 2 – Define the Way-Points

When  you picked your first location, you have to define all the objects you  want to use as way-points in your elephant path. They will be the  stations you have to pass, each time you are memorizing any kind of  information with it. The number of way-points will determine the length  of your route – and therewith the amount of information you can store on  it. You can have ten stations or a thousand. One single room can easily  include twenty way-points. I suggest that your first elephant path should have about fifty stations.  If you stick to some rules, your path will become more efficiently. But  those rules are just a guideline – you can break them whenever you  like. Since every person got a different mind and different affinities,  you probably have to bend the rules to make them match your personality. By the way: This regards every single aspect in memory techniques!    

  • Do imagine your way-points in every detail
  • Pick the way-points you first think of – they are in most cases the best
  • Keep a certain order of the way you walk your path (i.e. clockwise)
  • Use noticeable way-points every 10 steps to create proper segments
  • Don’t make your way-points too small (i.e. a pencil)
  • Don’t make your way-points too big (i.e. a house)
  • Don’t make them to close together
  • Don’t make them to far away from each other
  • Don’t use similar way-points in the same path

Step 3 – Memorize your Path

An umbrella can be a great way-point Since  you already know the location and you’ve finished defining the  way-points, it will be very easy to memorize your new elephant path.  Just try to recall it in your imagination. If you miss a few points, try  to imagine yourself walking through your path and count each and every  single way-point on it. Do that repeatedly and you will strengthen your  path each time. After a while you can increase your speed dramatically:  With a well trained path you wont need longer than a split second for  each way-point. This process is quick and natural.       

Step 4 – Use it!

With your new elephant path you are able to associate information like words with every way-point. It will help you to remember the correct order  and can easily be used over and over again for different purposes. This  is because you are naturally forgetting your associations after a  while, if you are not recapitulate them again. This happens in a short  period of time and depends on your memory. Some brilliant memory  athletes will remember their images for up to two weeks without  repeating them. Personally I have the mindset to never recall my  associations a second time after training or a championship. I don’t need the information any more so I can let my brain forget it. That  sounds counterproductive but it helps a lot to use my paths again as  soon as possibly (in my case about a day). 

If you are looking to  memorize something for the rest of your life, a simple path wont probably be enough, because you could not use it again for other  information. There are different methods to do so, like Mind-Maps or the  Self Enhanced Memory Matrix (SEM³) by Tony Buzan or the Wardrobe System by Dr. Ullrich Voigt. If you are asking yourself, how the whole association thing works, you should continue reading about The Perfect Association

Learn more about associations and how to make better stories in this article: https://steemit.com/life/@flauwy/the-seven-mental-elements-of-memory-techniques

Learn about how to memorize names in my daily series: https://steemit.com/education/@flauwy/how-to-remember-names-chris-hemsworth



I am using the hashtag #whalepower to enter this amazing program.

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