5 Simple Tricks to Improve Thinking and Memory

Don't Forget
Don’t Forget

You might be surprised to learn that more than 100,000 chemical reactions go on in your brain every single second! Like a radio, the brain is a transmitter, which sends out measurable electrical wave signals to your organs, endocrine and skeletal system. Surprisingly, the brain continues to send out these signals for as long as 37 hours after death! This perhaps makes sense of ‘phantom pain.’

Your brain is a mobile chemistry set. It generates more than 50 active drugs that have been identified. No doubt there are more. Some are associated with memory, others with intelligence and some are sedatives.

So how can we release our brain’s memory chemicals?

Did you know that all memory is state based? Meaning — if you feel down, you will release monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A) — an enzyme that breaks down chemicals like serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine, which are usually found in people with untreated depression. This makes sense as to why we more easily recall ‘down’ times in our lives when we were low in energy, feeling sad or just simply feeling down.

So in order to improve not only your memory, aim to get into the state that you may have been when taking the information into your mind in the first place. For example; if you were calm when you were studying Neuro Linguistic Programming, get yourself calm and you will more easily recall the information. If you learned about how to anchor (to change your state) where you were highly energised and excited, to recall what you learned, get yourself back into that highly energised and excited state and notice how easy it is to recall what you learned.

The fascinating thing about our education system is that this information is fairly well-known, yet we still teach our children in our classrooms where they are mostly relaxed and then they go into our exam rooms where they quickly become tense, and we wonder why they don’t do so well.

So here are a few tricks to improve thinking and memory…

1. Relax and Remember

Prior to learning anything, it is useful to get yourself into a state that you can replicate easily. I personally like to get myself calm, because that’s easy for me. To recall the information again, I get myself calm. The moment we get stressed, we release the ‘stress hormone’ Cortisol which is an important in the body. It is secreted by the adrenal glands and is present in the body at higher levels in the morning, and at its lowest at night. Small increases of cortisol have some positive effects, such as for a quick burst of energy for survival reasons and to suppress pain.

  • Recall a time that you were blissfully relaxed (in your mind, See it, Hear it and you will likely Feel it)
  • Summarise the memory of that blissfully relaxed moment and summarise it in a word or two. Now repeat that word over and over in your head.Now relax and let the memory come to mind. Be patient with yourself and trust that it will come at the perfect time. If you allow yourself to get stressed, you will immediately change your chemistry.

2. Get into E-x-p-a-n-d-e-d Awareness

Look at your computer screen now. How much of it do you actually see as you are reading this information? Can you see all of it? Part of it? Just this word and the next one? Can you see all the way across to your left and right ears? Probably not. We’re not taught to take in that much.

The Hawaiian Kahunas taught a way to take in more information and to recall things easily. It’s an ancient way to expand one’s consciousness called ‘Hakalau.’ Hakalau is a state of joyful awareness or meditative trance used to increase the ability to perceive, enabling remarkable feats in learning and awareness.

  1. Look forward and pick a spot in front of you about 20 degrees above eye level.
  2. Focus every part of your attention on this spot while letting your mind relax.
  3. Slowly expand your field of vision, take in the sides as well as the front, while still focusing in front of you.
  4. While still looking in front of you. Now place all your awareness on the peripheral portion of your vision – at the sides.
  1. Stay in this state for as long as you can. Observe any states of heightened awareness or deepened understanding. If you can read books like this or study like in this state, you will improve your recall massively. We teach our entire Neuro Linguistic Programming, Life Coaching, Speaking and Trainers Training classes this way and our students are amazed at how much they recall.

3. Repeat Colourfully

One of the old rules of learning and memory is repeat, repeat, repeat. However to improve the old model, the brain also responds to novelty so repeating something in a different way or at a different time will make the most of the novelty effect and allow you to build stronger memories. Examples of using repetition include:

  • Taking notes in different coloured pens.
  • Repeating a name after you hear it for the first time three times is preferred. The brain remembers more easily in patterns of three. So if you meet a new person for the first time, say their name three times in conversation. If you can also say it in three different ways, you’ll improve your chances of remembering it dramatically (say it high, say it low, say it quickly, slowly, etc)
  • Repeating or paraphrasing what someone says to you. You can start by saying, “If I get you correctly, you (believe/said/think, etc).”

4. Jot and Organise

While this one is a no-brainer, I thought it needed to be included here. A day planner or smart phone calendar can help you keep track of appointments and activities and can also serve as a journal in which you write anything that you would like to remember. Writing down and organising information reinforces learning.

  • Try jotting down conversations, thoughts, experiences.
  • Review current and previous day’s entries at breakfast and dinner.
  • If you use a planner and not a smart phone, keep it in the same spot at home and take it with you whenever you leave.

5. Visually Enhance

Learning faces and names is a particularly hard task for some people. In addition to repeating a person’s name, you can also associate the name with an image. Visualisation strengthens the association you are making between the face and the name. Equally, the more animation and detail you add to recalling someone or something, the more easily you will recall it. For example:

  • Link the name Sandy with the image of a beach, and imagine Sandy on the beach. If you want to make it even easier to remember Sandy, give her a big T-shirt and put her name on the T-shirt and start by making the ‘S’ out of a snake. You might even have her write her name in the sand next to her.

An old belief that still exists in some people’s belief system is, you can’t teach an old dog new tricks, but when it comes to the brain, scientists have discovered that this old adage simply isn’t true. The human brain has an astonishing ability to adapt and change—even into old age. This ability is known as Neuro Linguistic Programming or fashionably known as neuroplasticity. With the right stimulation, your brain can form new neural pathways, alter existing connections, and adapt and react in ever-changing ways.

Click Here: To discover how to master your brain and so your career and your life!

 

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