MotherNature  
Looking for Natural Remedies?
SAVE 15% at MotherNature.com today!
Click here for details.
Home Vitamins Minerals Supplements Herbs Home & Grocery Diet & Fitness Body & Bath
View Cart Check Out Quick ReOrder Your Account Help Center

Search


Ways To Shop



Chapter List For:
The Doctors Book of Home Remedies:
  1. Introduction to Doctors Home Remedies
  2. Acne
  3. Allergies
  4. Angina
  5. Athritis
  6. Asthma
  7. Athletes Foot
  8. Backache
  9. Bad Breath
  10. Bed-Wetting
  11. Belching
  12. Bites
  13. Black Eye
  14. Bladder Infections
  15. Blisters
  16. Blood Pressure
  17. Body Odor
  18. Boils
  19. Breast Discomfort
  20. Breastfeeding
  21. Bronchitis
  22. Bruises
  23. Bruxism
  24. Burns
  25. Bursitis
  26. Canker Sores
  27. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
  28. Cellulite
  29. Chafing
  30. Chapped Hands
  31. Chapped Lips
  32. Cholesterol
  33. Colds
  34. Cold Sores
  35. Colic
  36. Conjunctivitis
  37. Constipation
  38. Corns and Calluses
  39. Cuts and Scrapes
  40. Dandruff
  41. Denture Troubles
  42. Depression
  43. Dermatitis and Eczema
  44. Diabetes
  45. Diaper Rash
  46. Diarrhea
  47. Diverticulosis
  48. Dry Hair
  49. Dry Skin and Winter Itch
  50. Earache
  51. Ear Infection
  52. Earwax
  53. Emphysema
  54. Endometriosis
  55. Eye Redness
  56. Eyestrain
  57. Fatigue
  58. Fever
  59. Fissures
  60. Flatulence
  61. Flu
  62. Food Poisoning
  63. Foot Aches
  64. Foot Odor
  65. Forgetfullness
  66. Frostbite
  67. Genital Herpes
  68. Gingivitis
  69. Gout
  70. Hangnails
  71. Hangover
  72. Headaches
  73. Heartburn
  74. Heat Exhaustion
  75. Hemorrhoids
  76. Hiccups
  77. Hives
  78. Hyperventilation
  79. Impotence
  80. Incontinence
  81. Infertility
  82. Ingrown Hair - 10 Ways to Get a Clean Shave
  83. Ingrown Nails
  84. Insomnia
  85. Intermittent Claudication
  86. Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  87. Jet Lag
  88. Kidney Stones
  89. Knee Pain
  90. Lactose Intolerance
  91. Laryngitis
  92. Menopause
  93. Menstrual Cramps
  94. Morning Sickness
  95. Motion Sickness
  96. Muscle Pain
  97. Nausea
  98. Neck Pain
  99. Night Blindness
  100. Nosebleed
  101. Oily Hair
  102. Oily Skin
  103. Osteoporosis
  104. Perfect Posture
  105. Pet Problems
  106. Phlebitis
  107. Phobias and Fears
  108. Poison Ivy and Oak
  109. Postnasal Drip
  110. Premenstrual Syndrome
  111. Psoriasis
  112. Raynauds Syndrome
  113. Restless Legs Syndrome
  114. Scarring
  115. Shingles
  116. Shinsplints
  117. Side Stitches
  118. Sinusitis
  119. Snoring
  120. Sore Throat
  121. Stained Teeth
  122. Stings
  123. Stress
  124. Sunburn
  125. Swimmers Ear
  126. Tachycardia
  127. Tartar and Plaque
  128. Teething
  129. Tendinitis
  130. Tmj
  131. Toothache
  132. Travelers Diarrhea
  133. Triglycerides
  134. Ulcer
  135. Varicose Veins
  136. Vomiting
  137. Warts
  138. Wrinkles
  139. Yeast Infections
From the Rodale book, The Doctors Book of Home Remedies:
Edit id 2882

Forgetfullness


Previous Chapter Foot Odor
Next Chapter Hair Loss


Forgetfulness

24 Handy Ways to a Better Memory

Do you have a hard time remembering names, phone numbers, and important dates? Are you constantly losing your car in parking lots? When you leave for vacation, do you have to turn around 20 miles down the road to make sure you shut off all the appliances? Do you sometimes forget how to spell common words? If you can answer yes to most of these questions, here's some very good news: Forgetfulness is curable!

Er, let's see, where were we? Ah, yes. We checked with a few professional memory experts, and a few whose professions require excellent memories. We even checked with a 13-year-old national spelling bee champion. They told us their secrets for building an iron-clad memory.

"With a few simple devices, it's within most people's power to have a super memory," says memory expert Michael Pressley, Ph.D., professor of human development at the University of Maryland.

What kinds of devices? Glad you asked.

MEDICAL ALERT


Keep These Symptoms in Mind

Most skin lumps are not cancer, and most slips of memory are not Alzheimer's disease. "But people tend to be hard on themselves, particularly so as they get older," says Stanley Berent, Ph.D.

When is your forgetfulness so serious that you should see a professional about it? Dr. Berent suggests the following guidelines:

  • Do you lose contact with reality? It's one thing to forget today's date, another to forget the year. If you lose track of where you are, can't remember if it's evening or morning, or have forgotten the name of your spouse (as opposed to someone you just met), a doctor should be consulted.
  • Are you uncomfortable with yourself? If you're feeling anxious about your recent memory lapses, don't sweat it out—seek a doctor's advice.
  • Are you performing your day-to-day roles efficiently? If forgetfulness is affecting your work, your role as a parent or grandparent, or any of your other life activities, you may need help.

Above all, says Dr. Berent, know that your memory doesn't have to be perfect to be okay. Some forgetfulness is just part of life.

Think of remembering as re-membering. Say you're appearing on a television game show and you're on the verge of winning an all-expense-paid trip around the world. All you need to do is remember the name of the battle in which Napoleon was defeated. You know the answer. It's on the tip of your tongue. How to get it off?

"Try to reinstate as much as possible of what you know surrounding the issue," says Robin West, Ph.D., a professor of psychology at the University of Florida. Thus, Napoleon may lead to Josephine, to France, to the Napoleonic Code, to battles, and (eventually) to Waterloo. "The more connections you make, the better your chances of finding the right pathway," says Dr. West.

Are There Any Pills for Forgetfulness?

Scientists have long looked for relationships between nutrients and your brain's ability to learn and remember. They know that a lack of certain nutrients can lead to memory and other cognitive failures, but whether supplemental nutrients can lead to supplemental memory is still a mystery.

Research over the past several years has focused on the following nutrients, all of which seem related to memory: vitamins B1 (thiamine), B6, B12, and C, choline, folate, niacin, calcium, copper, iodine, iron, magnesium, manganese, potassium, zinc, and—above all—lecithin.

Some research from the Institute of Physiology in Sofia, Bulgaria, raises questions and hopes about a new, exotic nutrient. Scientists there, experimenting with mice and ginseng, have determined that something in the root of the Chinese plant improves both learning and memory. At least with mice.

So it appears that the day may come when forgetfulness can be cured by popping a pill every morning. Of course, some of us will inevitably forget to take our pills.

Take a picture. The average American, in the course of a lifetime, spends a full year looking for misplaced objects. Want to save yourself a year of your life? You can. Take a good look at those keys as you place them on the table. "Raise your hands to your eyes, miming a camera, and click the button," suggests Joan Minninger, Ph.D., in her book Total Recall: How to Boost Your Memory Power.

Talk to yourself. Go ahead, don't be shy. Give yourself an aural as well as a visual image to remember. If you leave your car at the end of the parking lot, under the huge oak tree, go ahead and say, "I'm leaving my car at the far end of the parking lot, under the huge oak tree." Say it out loud. "It's another way to reinforce the memory," says Irene B. Colsky, Ed.D., a memory expert and adjunct professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning at the University of Miami.

Tie a yellow ribbon around the old oak tree. Afraid you'll remember your car is under an oak tree, but you'll forget which oak tree? Use physical reminders—they are "very efficient ways to remember," says Forrest R. Scogin, Ph.D., an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Alabama. The "yellow ribbon" on the oak tree could just as well be a rubber band around your wrist (to remind yourself to buy tissues), a wristwatch on the "wrong" arm (to remind yourself of Aunt Bertha's birthday)—or just about anything you can think of.

Make lists. Wherever and whenever possible, jot down on paper what you need to remember. "Our short-term memory has limited capacities—there's only so much space available," says Dr. Scogin. By making lists, you not only are assured of remembering what you wrote down, but it frees your mind for more important things.

Categorize. When pencil and paper are unavailable, you'll have to list things in your head—but don't do so randomly, says Dr. Scogin. If you're on your way to the grocery store and you know you need 20 items, you'll probably never remember all 20 unless they are logically grouped. Think: five vegetables, four paper goods, three fruits, etc.

Chunk. "Chunking" is like categorizing, but you do it with numbers. If, for instance, you had to remember the numbers 2, 0, 2, 4, 5, 6, 1, 4, 1, 4, you'd probably have a rough time of it. Remember (202) 456-1414 (the phone number of the White House) is quite a bit easier. Phone numbers come naturally chunked, as do social security numbers (001-00-1000). You are free, of course, to "chunk" not only these but any numbers you like.

Make up a silly story. If you've got several items to remember and you're afraid you never will—no problem. Just make up a tale involving your items, says Dr. Pressley. Say you're on your way to the market and you need pork chops, apricots, milk, and bread. Tell yourself a story in which a pig is drinking milk, in a wheat field, under the shade of an apricot tree.

To remember names, think of faces. Perhaps the most difficult memory task we're faced with is remembering the names of people we've just met, says Dr. Scogin. The trick is to etch in your mind a permanent association between the name and the face. Better yet, find a prominent feature on the face and focus in on that. If Budd Luzinski, that new guy in the office, happens to have a long nose—visualize a tiny man skiing down that long nose. Imagine that little man losing (Luzinski) those skis.

How to Avoid Stage Fright

For most of us, keeping a dozen or so phone numbers, an occasional shopping list, and the starting times of our favorite television shows under our cap is about all we demand of our short-term memory.

But what do you do when you have to remember a sales pitch, a speech, or the lines of a play? Or how to spell at a moment's notice any word in the English language? Professional Shakespearean actor Edward Gero and 13-year-old national spelling bee champion Rageshree Ramachandran of Sacramento, California, have a few tips for remembering words and their spellings.

From Edward Gero:

  • "Before I memorize my lines, they have to make sense to me. I will read Shakespeare's lines to myself, putting them into my own words."
  • "I look for rhythm patterns. 'To be, or not to be'Édum de, dum dum de dum."
  • "I look for any alphabetical keys. For instance, in MacBeth, I had to say the following line: 'But, I have none; the king-becoming graces, as justice, verity, temp'rance, stablenessÉ' It helped me to remember the order by knowing that the first two, justice and verity, are in alphabetical order, and that the second two, temp'rance and stableness, are in reverse alphabetical order."
  • "I try to associate lines with movements, so that in The Merchant of Venice, I say, 'and let my liver rather heat with wine' as I'm reaching for a glass of wine."

From Rageshree Ramachandran:

  • "A lot of spellers just try to memorize a list of words for spelling bees—that doesn't work. It's not just memorizing, it's learning the words. I make a new word part of my everyday vocabulary."
  • "Spelling is mostly logic. If a word is unfamiliar, I'll look for a part of it that I can understand. I can spell elegiacal, for instance, because I know it comes from elegy. (Elegiacal means expressing sorrow.) I can spell mhometer because I know that mho is the reciprocal of ohm, and a mhometer measures ohms (a measure of electricity)."
  • "A lot of memory is visual. It helps me to remember a new word if I write it down several times."
  • "There are often little tricks to help spell a word. Take curliewurly (a little squiggly shape). I had to remember that it was curliewurly, and not curlywurlie. The solution was simple: ie comes before y in the word—just like in the alphabet."

Make name associations. It's always easier to remember names if you have something to associate the name with. If you have to remember the name of someone who has no big nose or mole on the cheek, make up a little story. Picture someone named Bruce Taylor sitting in front of you with a pair of scissors, a measuring tape, and a piece of chalk. Someone named Feinstein, you might picture sitting before you holding a huge stein full of beer. Someone named Pressley? Imagine him reading the Pittsburgh Press or shaking hands with Elvis, says Dr. Pressley.

Look for "markers." Things that happened to you long ago did not happen in isolation from other events, says Dr. Pressley. Say, for instance, you forgot when it was that you worked at the ABC Construction Company. Think of any markers or cues that might help your focus. You may recall that you were dating so-and-so at the time, and that so-and-so and you would often go to the movies, and that one movie you saw together was Jaws. You may then recall (or your local librarian can help you find out) that Jaws appeared in the theaters in 1975.

Outline your thoughts. Many college students become intimately involved with a pink, yellow, or green highlighting marker. But you don't need a highlighter to outline your thoughts. You can do it mentally. "Select what is important and what is not," says Dr. Pressley. You're far less likely to forget what you read, he says.

Read, read, and read. If your problem is forgetting words, it's probably because you don't use them enough, says Frederic Siegenthaler. As a senior interpreter at the United Nations, he must store an enormous vocabulary in his memory and keep it ready to pull out at any moment. In English alone (and Siegenthaler is also fluent in French, German, Russian, and Spanish), there are as many as 200,000 words available, although we typically use fewer than 5,000 on a daily basis. So if you can't seem to find the right word, your vocabulary is likely to be a bit rusty.

Solution? "Do as much reading as you can," says Siegenthaler. "I recommend good fiction, particularly classics of the English language, such as those of Charles Dickens, Jane Austin, or Somerset Maugham.

Test yourself. "People generally aren't very good at knowing how good they are at remembering," says Dr. Pressley. "It's very common that someone may think he remembers something, but he doesn't." You've probably experienced this in the middle of an exam. The way to make sure it doesn't happen again is to give yourself a quiz before the exam, says Dr. Pressley. "A practice test will let you know if you have it down or not."

Keep calm. Stress and anxiety can clearly disrupt memory performance, says Dr. Pressley. "You need your consciousness to encode things. Anxiety eats that up."

If you're a forgetful person, it may be that your mind could use a vacation. Patricia Sze of Berlitz International Language School in New York City claims that her school's success in teaching students foreign languages lies largely in the nonthreatening environment of soothing colors, no grades, and no testing.

Check your medicine cabinet and liquor cabinet. Dozens of things have the potential to contribute to forgetfulness, says Stanley Berent, Ph.D., director of the Neuropsychology Program and an associate professor in the Department of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Neurology at the University of Michigan Medical School. At the root of your forgetfulness may be the booze you're drinking or certain drugs you're taking, such as diet pills, blood pressure medication, or antihistamines.

PANEL OF ADVISERS


Stanley Berent, Ph.D., is director of the Neuropsychology Program and an associate professor in the Department of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Neurology at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor.

Irene B. Colsky, Ed.D., is an adjunct professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning in the School of Education at the University of Miami, Florida, where she also teaches "Brainpower," a popular course on learning and memory techniques to students, business professionals, and members of the community.

Edward Gero is a professional actor who has played major roles, such as Henry V and MacBeth, in many of Shakespeare's plays. He performs at the Shakespeare Theatre at the Folger in Washington, D.C.

Michael Pressley, Ph.D., is a professor of human development at the University of Maryland in College Park.

Rageshree Ramachandran of Sacramento, California, is the winner of the 1988 Scripps-Howard National spelling bee.

Forrest R. Scogin, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, where he teaches courses on memory.

Frederic Siegenthaler is a senior interpreter at the United Nations. He has been a professional interpreter for the past 25 years.

Patricia Sze is an executive with Berlitz International Language School in New York City.

Robin West, Ph.D., is a professor of psychology at the University of Florida in Gainesville. West is author of Memory Fitness over Forty.

Previous Chapter Foot Odor
Next Chapter Hair Loss

Home | Shop | Library | About Us | Security & Privacy Policy
Ordering Help Shipping & Returns Have Questions? Other Services
NexTag Seller PriceGrabber User Ratings for MotherNature.com
Accept Credit Cards Online
creditcards

Order By Phone 1-800-439-5506

Information on this site is provided for informational purposes and is not meant to substitute for the advice provided by your own physician or other medical professional. You should not use the information contained herein for diagnosing or treating a health problem or disease, or prescribing any medication. Information about each product is taken from the labels of the products or from the manufacturer's advertising material. MotherNature.com is not responsible for any statements or claims that various manufacturers make about their products. We cannot be held responsible for typographical errors or product formulation changes. You should read carefully all product packaging. If you have or suspect that you have a medical problem, promptly contact your health care provider. Information and statements regarding dietary supplements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.All discounts are taken from suggested retail prices.

Please see our Terms of Use
Copyright © 1995-2008 Mother Nature, Inc. All rights reserved.

bot ban