How to Remember Everything You Read : The Ultimate Memory Method

Reading something twice and still forgetting it isn't a focus problem — it's a method problem. In this video, I break down 5 science-backed memory techniques that convert passive reading into durable long-term retention, and explain exactly why each one works at the level of how your brain actually stores information. Here's what you'll learn: → Why reading and rereading produces familiarity but not recall (and the difference between them) → Hack 1: Active recall — the testing effect and why retrieval attempt is the act of encoding → Hack 2: Spaced repetition — the forgetting curve and the optimal review schedule → Hack 3: The Memory Palace — how to exploit your brain's spatial memory system → Hack 4: Chunking — how to work with your working memory limit of ~7 items → Hack 5: The Feynman Technique — the method that reveals what you actually don't know yet (start with this one) Based on the research of Hermann Ebbinghaus (forgetting curve), George Miller (working memory capacity), the testing effect (Roediger & Karpicke), and Richard Feynman's learning method. Stay until Hack 5 — it's the one that makes all the others work better because it forces you to find out what you actually know vs. what just feels familiar. —— Drop which hack you're trying first and what subject you're using it on in the comments. Share this with a student who's putting in real effort but not seeing the results they deserve. —— #memory #studytips #howtostudy #activerecall #spacedrepetition #memorytechniques #Feynmantechnique #memorypalace #learning #selfimprovement