Is it possible to memorize an entire book




















Word for word. You just need all the important parts. Like, months of your life easier. About keeping what you read. How many shelves of books have you read? How many hours did it take to accomplish that feat? I bet the both answers are impressive, but … how much of all that reading do you remember?

Yes, the idea has a certain appeal. Keep a list of the titles you feel best match these criteria I do something similar on my recommendations page. Note down the total number of pages as well as any of the major pros and cons you come across. Image-based books are great because they tend to convey ideas and concepts in a more memorable way. Either way, these are the types of books that will be much easier to memorize compared to gigantic textbooks.

Look at this project as a goal to understand rather than memorize. Learning compounds. Concepts build on top of one another. Understanding reduces time spent re-memorizing. Compare each and pick the one that seems best suited to your own personal tastes and preferences. As well as helping you interlink the concepts. You can use things like whiteboards or tablets to help with this.

If you prefer the old-school method of pen and notebook try and index your question prompts taken from your reading and space out how often you plan on reviewing them. Memorization takes time. A good system is a day, weekly, fortnightly, monthly system. But do whatever feels best. This means answering questions. And lots of them. Thankfully good textbooks will have example questions, testing the material you read, included inside. Otherwise, you can practice with topic-based resources you can find all over the web.

Today, if anyone would quote long passages from the Bible, then this would seem extraordinary. The good news is: anyone can develop an outstanding high-performance memory. NOT through hard work… but rather through patience, slow and steady progress. You will not use any memorization tricks aka mnemo-techniques with this method. If you follow this system, you will treat your memory as a muscle. Do you have a favorite poem? Or do you want to memorize a textbook? Do you want to commit parts of the Bible to your memory?

Or any piece of literature that makes you smile, inspires you, charges you with positive energy or gives you cheerful goosebumps?

Remember, this method is based on taking baby steps. So, even if you feel confident with doing more than suggested, please proceed with patience. Patience will pay off big time in the end and keep you motivated. Day 1 : Chose the text you want to memorize. Start by learning just the first phrase or verse of your chosen book. Read it out loud — slowly — and commit it to memory, piece by piece… until you can remember the whole part without checking your text.

Speak out loud from memory. Repeat it out loud from memory. Now you may add two sentences or verses per day to your memory. Then, a few weeks later perhaps the 2nd month , 3 sentences or verses per day… and so on. This has, of course, its limitations. If, later on, you find yourself spending too much time reviewing because of the growing amount of text memorized , you can split it up into two parts.

Review one part today, the other part tomorrow. Just make sure you keep reviewing something every single day in order to keep your recollection-muscle in shape.

Follow these simple steps and surprise yourself and your friends with your brain power and the amount of information you can burn into your memory with this simple method. Something of great personal value to you. Open it up and start with your first sentence.

I have been working on memorizing the book of Philippians and stumbled upon this article. Both are 30 verses long. Have you ever tried starting from the end and memorizing backwards? Yes, I tried memorizing backwards, but also in regard with music pieces for the guitar.

But nonetheless, here the same principle applies as with memorizing long texts though no one wonders about this memory stunt. When learning new pieces of music, we gradually add new material gradually… piece after piece, till, after a couple of years, we may be able to play dozens of songs.



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