A while ago, I got insomnia and instead of counting sheep, I tried mentally listing the 50 U.S. states in alphabetical order. When I had the list down, I switched to the capital city. After that, I did the countries of Africa. By associating each with a state, the list was easier to learn. Next I did U.S. presidents.
I want to use what I have done so far to memorize more stuff. What does the SDMB think are cool lists?
I’m currently on the elements. I am considering these things next:
Top 50 Home Run hitters
Best picture Oscars
More Geography
Counties of England? Perhaps capitals of the African countries. bones
Largest Corporations
suggestions? (other than “get a life”. No, when I am falling asleep, I don’t have anything better to do! )
The 88 constellations
Breeds of dogs
Super bowl teams (and winners)
NCAA teams by conference
Major battles of the Civil War
Major battles of WWII
Major battles of Viet Nam
British monarchs
Brands of toothpaste
These should give you a leg up in Trivial Pursuit.
Got those already. What I may do next is use that to learn the opponents in the elections (Who did FDR beat in '32, '36, '40, '44?) or the Vice-Presidents.
Counties by U.S. state. Start with Delaware and work your way up to the 254 Texas has to offer.
States/provinces/equivalent administrative divisions of other countries. Australia (six states and two territories) is easy, as is Canada (ten provinces, three territories). India, Mexico, Germany and Brazil (all of which have states) are tougher, as are Japan (prefectures), Spain (provinces), and Russia (a melange of regions, administrative districts, republics, territories, and more).
There was a nerd at my high school who worked in the front office and memorized the birthdays of every student at the school, whether he knew them or not. It was pretty cool when you’d run into him randomly in a hallway and ask him your birthday and he’d tell you. Of course, nowadays they keep that kind of personal information out of the hands of students, I hope.
ronincyberpunk, I just bought Mind Performance Hacks on Amazon. I found it at this site you provided, read a couple of the linked PDF “Hacks” and was intrigued/hooked. Thank you.
I knew a guy in high school who had memorized the numper pi out to 300 decimal places 3.1415…etc,etc… He could write it down for you, and then repeat it all from memory.
Weird…
[ul]
[li]66 books of the Holy Bible[/li][li]Periodic table of elements, including abbreviations.[/li][li]Discographies of various rock bands. Bonus points if you know the track names in order on each one.[/li][li]Area codes[/li][li]Zip codes of major cities for your home state[/li][li]County names for your home state (easy if you’re in Delaware, difficult if you’re in Texas).[/li][/ul]
Vice Presidents
The states of Mexico
Presidential and Vice Presidential nominees for the two big parties
The big six Oscars (Best Picture, Director, Actor, Actress, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress)
The Roman Emperors
Disney animated feature films in order of release
The Popes (bonus points for memorizing their real names)
NFL number one draft picks
British monarchs
All 100 serving Senators
All 435 serving Representatives
Playboy playmates of the year
Bonus nerd points
All members of the Avengers/Justice League of America/X-Men
Hugo and Nebula Award winners
D&D character classes
Monty Python/Star Trek/X-Files episodes
There’s also the elements song (though there are some missing, and they’re not in periodic-table order) and I believe the Animaniacs have some songs of countries and capitals.
Or, along these lines, any sort of series of books, movies, etc., such as
All the James Bond movies, with the year of release & who played Bond
All the plays/novels of Shakespeare, or Dickens, or Stephen King, or any other particular writer
All the albums released by the Beatles (or any other artist), with complete track listings if you want a real challenge.
Where Alph, the sacred river, ran
Through caverns measureless to man
Down to a sunless sea.