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Can A Memory Palace Overcome Medicinal Side-Effects?



Dear Memorizers,

In this episode of the Magnetic Memory Method Podcast, you'll learn about using a Memory Palace even while suffering the crushing side effects of medication.

Program Notes:

Following from Magnetic Memory blog posts like The Dyslexic Memorizer Who Aced All His Exams and Memory Palaces vs. Alzheimer's, another question about using mnemonics, Memory Palaces and other memory techniques to help overcome mental "problems." In this case, it's the negative effects of taking medication on memory has come in.

Have you worked with anyone who was working against medications and/or an illness that randomly scatters chunks of memory?

I'm on an anti-seizure med for some fairly extensive nerve damage, and since I've been on it, my already compromised memory is suddenly like trying to catch butterflies with a hula hoop. Now I'm wondering if I'm just a hopeless case.

Thanks for any advice/thoughts!

I don't want to prattle on about myself, but I am one such person. In fact, my whole adventure into memory, something I've only recently started talking about, came from the devastating cognitive effects of lithium, which I was taking at the time to control Bipolar Disorder. Now I take something else that has less extreme effects, but back then, there seemed to be no alternative …

Until I found mnemonics.

In truth, I have only anecdotal evidence that mnemonics helps bring clarity into the mind, and I was also discovering a whole lot of other things at the same time, so the clarity that came into my mind through the use of Memory Palaces was assisted by things such as self-hypnosis, meditation and a better diet combined with fitness, improved sleep, writing down my dreams each and every morning, and spending some time writing down my goals and things that I'm grateful for on a daily basis. I learned a lot of these "hacks" from Richard Wiseman's 59 Seconds, as well as from taking hypnotherapy certification which was part of my doctoral research into friendship (sounds like a stretch, but it turns out that we do hypnotize each other in a certain way as we become friends).

But in terms of Memory Palaces strictly speaking, one of the biggest things that being able to command my memory brought was confidence. The stress and negativity that surrounded me as I worked to read some of the strangest and most obscure books of philosophy and cultural studies almost caused me to drop out of graduate school. And that's not counting the fogginess and poor concentration that made it very difficult for me to read in the first place.

And in truth, I still experience all of these things today.

The difference is that Memory Palaces cut through all of it, provided that I use them and use them in the right way. For me, the right way is the Magnetic Memory Method and it applies to just about everything I – or you – could ever want to learn. Of course, as I teach it, the MMM is a "method" and not a "system," which enables users to adapt the basic principles to their own learning style. Most people don't need to change much, but the whole purpose of how I designed it for myself was to make what really is impossible for a person with my frenzied brain possible. These techniques are an almost fool proof means of getting things into my mind so that I can find them whenever I want.

Think of it like thi


Published on 11 years, 6 months ago






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