The single
greatest misconception people have about memory is
that it works like a camera. That would imply that
your brain automatically creates objectively accurate
records of everything it experiences.
Nothing could be farther from the truth. In many
cases, your brain will not remember something until
it has interpreted it in a personally meaningful
way. For the most part, remembering something demands
your full, active participation. “Objective memory”
is an oxymoron.
Never underestimate your ability
to forget. Your whole life — at age 5, 15, 35 — you’ve demonstrated
expert skill at forgetting things, and you’ll remain
that way until the end of your days. How does it help
to know that? For one thing, it changes the questions
you have to answer. Instead of asking “Why do
I forget?” maybe what you should
really be asking is “Why do I remember?” That
question has many answers, but if you’re worrying
about your memory the simplest answer is probably this:
because you paid attention.
The memory systems of concern
here – the ones that most people are concerned about
– are ones that are accessible to consciousness.
Those are the memory systems that handle memories
of facts about the world (sometimes known as “knowledge”)
and more personal memories of doing a certain thing
with a certain person at a certain time. |
The
older you get, the more knowledge you have, for the
most part. So why do people complain about their memory
as they age?
In part because it becomes
harder for the brain to learn and remember new
things. That seems surprising, in a way. After
all, if you remember things by interpreting them
in a personally meaningful way, the more experiences
you have had in your life the easier it should be
to do that. The main reason it becomes harder to
learn new things is that your brain’s processing
speed gradually slows. It becomes harder to do more
than one thing at once, so it’s easier to get
confused. Your brain may also become less flexible,
so it’s harder to change learning strategies
in mid-stream. All these things mean it becomes harder
to focus.
There’s nothing you can do to change your brain’s
processing speed. So far, researchers haven’t
found a way to upgrade your brain’s hard drive
the way you can do with a computer. But there’s a lot
you can do to increase your learning performance even
if your processing speed has slowed. It’s all in the
techniques you apply. |