Ditch your multi-tasking ways. Think you can successfully study the details of a report while talking on the phone and reading your horoscope? Think again. You need at least eight seconds of focused energy to digest information and store it in the brain’s memory centre. So hang up the phone, find a quiet place and focus, focus, focus!
Stay organized. Many people overlook this critical step and end up missing important appointments, deadlines or critical details. Put pen to paper (or finger tips to a keyboard) and record important dates in a calendar, in a notebook or on your Blackberry. Recording and arranging data will help ingrain it in your memory, and gives you a point of reference in case you do forget.
Get hooked on mnemonics. Mnemonic devices boost memory through associations. Depending on the material and learning style you might use visual images, e.g. a black cat stuck in a well to remember the name “Blackwell,” rhymes and alliteration (30 days has September, April, June and November is a prime example), acronyms, such as HOMES to remember the Great Lakes (Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie and Superior), or even jokes to recall important information. Chunking of data—such as breaking numbers into groups of three for information like your Social Insurance Number—is also a good way to help the brain stay on track.
Take a guided tour. Another old but proven mnemonic device is the ‘method of loci.’ This involves using a familiar route, e.g. the pathway through your home to your bedroom or the way to the corner store, as a way of remembering key details of a speech or the order of a complex task. Use each room or landmark on your journey to ‘signpost’ different parts of the speech or each step of the process you need to remember.
Take a fresh perspective. Neurobics help exercise and strengthen underused brain pathways. Keep those brain synapses firing by taking a new route home from work, using your non-dominant hand to brush your hair, challenging yourself with a crossword puzzle or taking a class in a completely foreign field of study.
Stay active. Physical exercise boosts the amount of oxygen to your brain and can help lower your risk for diabetes, heart disease and depression—all of which can impede memory. It also promotes sleep, which can improve focus and help consolidate memories.
Eat Right. Foods rich in B vitamins—including legumes, spinach, broccoli, strawberries and citrus fruits— Omega-3 fatty acids—like tuna, salmon, herring, flaxseed and walnuts—as well as antioxidants (vitamin C, E and beta carotene)—sweet potatoes, tomatoes, berries and green tea amongst others—are thought to improve brain function.
A great way to realize the potential of your brain and even increase your memory and learning abilities is based on the idea that by reflecting on how you think or ‘thinking about thinking’, you can learn how you best absorb knowledge. By making a conscious effort to review how you are thinking, consider how this way of thinking or storing information is working for you, and then ask yourself how well you did in recalling this information or how you could use your memory differently next time. In other words, use your personal experiences and strategies to memorize that seem to be best for you.