Size:
Nearly 700 verses, nearly 15,000 words
If you’re interested in memorizing this Gospel yourself, you’ll want
to get my forthcoming book Memorize Mark: How to Learn a Whole Gospel
by Heart. Register or subscribe to the
RSS feed to stay posted on when it comes out. The book
focuses on the best way to memorize Mark.
Here, I’d like to offer a “behind-the-scenes” perspective, and focus
more on what didn’t work, and how I fixed it. So often, aspiring
mnemonists learn one particular technique, then get so excited that
they think it will work for everything. That’s what I did. But you
need the right tool for the job.
The Gospel of Mark was my first big memory project. I began soon after
I started seriously researching memory techniques. As I learned more,
I kept realizing I had to change my strategy. The story of how I
memorized Mark is also the story of how I learned to combine memory techniques.
Basic loci method: Not enough
I can’t remember much about my first attempt. I used a vague kind of
loci method, with a mnemonic for each verse, but I petered out around
chapter 4. I may have been attaching a number mnemonic to each verse
mnemonic. The mnemonic for verse 1:1 had a 1, 1:2 had a 2, etc.
Because I kept reusing them, I got hopelessly jumbled.
Also, I had no idea that you had to review (none of the memory gurus
were mentioning it). I thought visual mnemonics made everything
magically permanent. Heh.
Still, it worked long enough for me to seriously impress my wife with
that first recitation.
Storing numbers by position in the loci
The next big discovery was that you could store multiple mnemonics on
a single object. Instead of only using, say, your bed, you could use
the headboard, the pillow, the mattress, and so on.
I knew I wanted to put each chapter of Mark in its own room of my loci
house. But most chapters in Mark have about 40 verses. I couldn’t find
40 unique items in each room. Even if I could, how would I navigate? I
didn’t want to attach a number mnemonic every time again.
The solution? I stored five verses on each object. I only had to
find about 8 objects, and I could easily count by fives to
locate a particular verse. Verse 10 would be on the second object, in
the fifth spot. Verse 31 would be on the seventh, in the first spot.
I attached navigational markers to the objects, too: 5 on the first
object, 10 on the second object, and so on.
It’s exciting when you can make the loci do double duty. Not only do
they store these mnemonics, they actually encode numerical information
as well. On the other hand, I’m not sure anymore that storing
mnemonics so densely is worth the effort. The classical loci system,
with one mnemonic on each object, may even be more effective.
Anyhow, I hunkered down, set up my loci, and tried to find nearly 700
unique mnemonics. Along the way, I developed some cool techniques
for generating unique visuals. Eventually, I realized that a little
repurposing was okay. A peach (“preach”) could mean one thing in
Chapter 13 and another in Chapter 16.
The magic of rhythm
However, each mnemonic still pointed to a long sentence, sometimes
multiple sentences. Without rhythm or rhyme, reciting these sentences
verbatim proved difficult.
Even the endurance mnemonist Dr. Yip Swee Chooi, who has memorized the
precise order and page number for 57,000 words in the
Oxford-English Chinese dictionary, didn’t try to memorize the prose
definitions verbatim. Memorizing prose is a beast.
I started to lose steam again. Then, while wandering the stacks at
Purdue library, I noticed a book called The Oral Style. (I would
later discover that this book is extremely hard to find in English.)
The author, Marcel Jousse, explained how the Bible actually teemed
with rhythms. The rhythms had been partly lost in translation, but
only obliterated with typesetting. The good news was that if you
smashed the constrictions of the typeset paragraph, you could hear
these rhythms again, even in English.
This discovery changed everything. Instead of the relentless focus on
visual memory, I could finally activate my verbal memory. I broke
every verse into rhythmic patterns, like a poem. The difference was
phenomenal. Verses began to click into place.
The necessity of review
With this technique, I got through the entire book of Mark, all 16
chapters. I wrapped up around Easter. I felt splendid. Months went by.
And I totally forgot it.
Well, not totally. I could say some of the verses. And I remembered
most of the mnemonics, which meant I could give you the gist of Mark
3:7. If you had told me in college that I would one day be able to
pluck out any of about 700 concepts by number, I would not have been
unimpressed. But that wasn’t good enough now. I had to review.
Although I was in the full flowering of my Linux geekhood, I
originally tried to implement spaced repetition using paper. I hated
the idea of depending on a computer to maintain my memories. I still
do; I just hate the idea of messing with all those paper flashcards
even more. Calculating the next review date for every flashcard you
study is not trivial. It’s good to know how, but in the same way that
it’s good to know how to kill and cook a deer.
Eventually, I made an Anki deck. Each verse got its own card.
Chunking dead bits back into a living tale
I thought that was it. Every so often, I’d have someone test me, and I
could usually get it right, though I might (like Dr. Chooi) choose the
verse before or after by mistake.
Then I finally discovered a subculture of other people who were trying
to memorize entire books of the Bible: the Network of Biblical
Storytellers. Two things struck me. One, most of them weren’t trying
to memorize entire books. They would memorize individual “stories.”
Second, they had no interest in the verse numbers. Their focus was the
story.
Later, I met another Biblical storyteller, Joey Endicott. He had
“only” memorized the first several chapters of John, but he was
walking along the Appalachian trail, and speaking John at schools and
churches along the way.
After I heard Joey speak a chapter, I realized that while the verse
numbers have their scholarly use, the main point was the whole. We
normal people wanted to hear the words. I may have memorized the
verses individually, but how easily could I speak the actual stories?
Not so easily. I had to hesitate on each verse to check the mnemonic.
I had to keep changing gears, from my oral to my visual memory and
back again. It was like rush hour traffic in a stick-shift.
All this time, I’d thought that breaking these texts into verses would
make it easier. But since the verses were rhythmic, I could get much
farther than one verse without a mnemonic. Maybe not the entire book,
but I didn’t need a mnemonic for every verse.
So, I added a new set of cards to my Anki deck: one card for each
chapter. After some initial skippiness, I was able to say each chapter
smoothly. I just needed to include it in my review schedule.
Mature Maintenance
I still maintain my deck of individual verse numbers. By now it’s a
trickle of 5 or less cards every day. And every so often, I get a card
to recite a chapter.
I definitely wouldn’t bother with verse numbers again unless I had a
really good reason. On the other hand, giving classes and talks on
memory is an excellent reason to have done it at least once. People get so impressed. Myself, I’m more amazed at how many verses you can string together with just rhythm and meaning. What is the perfect balance between chunking rhythmic verse and using visual mnemonics just when you need them? It’s an exciting field, and wide open.