Memorizing things is like putting toys into a toy box, if you know where they go, you’ll always find them again.
Imagine you have a big bag of colorful marbles, and each one has a letter on it. You want to remember the letters A, B, C in order. So, you pick a red marble for A, a blue one for B, and a green one for C. Every time you play with them, you say their names out loud. Soon, you’ll know exactly which color goes with which letter.
Making it fun
You can also turn memorizing into a game! For example, if you need to remember the order of the days in a week, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and so on, you could imagine each day as a character in a story. Maybe Monday is a sleepy bear, Tuesday is a fast rabbit, and Wednesday is a clever fox.
Or think about your favorite song or rhyme, like the one that goes “Hey Diddle Diddle.” You can use parts of it to help you remember things, just like how you use the words in a song to sing along.
By using simple tricks like these, memorizing becomes more like playing with your friends, fun, easy, and something you’ll always enjoy! Memorizing things is like putting toys into a toy box, if you know where they go, you’ll always find them again.
Imagine you have a big bag of colorful marbles, and each one has a letter on it. You want to remember the letters A, B, C in order. So, you pick a red marble for A, a blue one for B, and a green one for C. Every time you play with them, you say their names out loud. Soon, you’ll know exactly which color goes with which letter.
Examples
- Creating a silly sentence to remember a list of items
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See also
- How to Memorize Paragraphs, Sentences?
- How Does Aphantasia: Why Some People Can't 'See' Mental Images Work?
- How Does 2-Minute Neuroscience: The Hippocampus Work?
- Are Your Early Childhood Memories Actually False?
- How Does Déjà Vu Work?