The test for successfully placing something into long-term memory requires:
- A flexible imagination
- A strong desire to succeed (practice)
- Awareness of the ‘tingle power’ test
- An elapse of time (amount will vary)
- A memory-recall trigger
- Answer key (to check your answers)
Do you have a flexible imagination? Most children, artists, and everyone who enjoys reading fiction do. (If you don’t, you can develop a flexible imagination –
and a strong memory – with practice.) You either want to be able to memorize or you don’t. If you do, you’ll practice – and – if you don’t you won’t.
Tingle Power:
Safety Finish Alligator Snowflake X-ray Sunglasses Call Push Ottoman Surface I Heart Balance Cassette Picnic Tingle Power Shadow Explosion Ephemeral
These 20 example words consist of unrelated nouns, verbs, adjectives, and a pronoun; some are simple to visualize (alligator, sunglasses) others are difficult (ephemeral—
something which disappears quickly isn’t easy to picture in your imagination).
First you need to form a chain of images related to each word. The more
exaggerated and
unusual each image is, the easier it will be for your memory to recall.
Now, in your mind, explain the links until the chain is complete:
A huge
safety pin, with a checkered
finish-line flag attached to it, is piercing thru a white
alligator which is in-turn biting into a massive
snowflake, which fades into the
x-ray body of a woman wearing a pair of
sunglasses for a bra; in one hand she’s making a
call on an old phone while she
pushes the safety pin with the other. Her head is a square
ottoman; on every
surface of the ottoman there are drawings of
eyes on top of
hearts. Above the ottoman is a
balanced large music
cassette. On top of the cassette is a
picnic table. The surface of the picnic table is covered with the words
Tingle Power in a funky font, as well as the sharp-edged
shadow of a nearby
explosion which has caused a ring of
ephemeral smoke to appear.
Repeat the mental image from beginning to end. Focus on the
actual words you want to memorize instead of the
stand-in words you decided to use in the story (finish-line flag = finish; pushes = push; eyes = I; balanced = balance; picnic table = picnic; ephemeral smoke = ephemeral). Now—
list the words; not the linking story. Can you do it in reverse? Having difficulty remembering some words?...maybe one (like
surface) isn’t unusual enough; if so, draw attention to how weird-odd that word is (you should think about surface as
her-face—her
face’s surface.)
The memory recall trigger can be the first image or (as in the example) the only written words:
Tingle Power.
Wait a few minutes or hours. Test yourself and determine if you can recall the mental images in order. Ask someone to help you check your list as you say the words aloud. Repeat this process in a week. Do it again in a month.