Marie Claire UK - 10.2019

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Rememberinghappy moments is key to our sense of self and overall well-being, so

how do we hold onto them in our tech-overloaded lives?Rosie Mullender reports

It’shappened to the best of us:
those moments when a laptop freezes
or a phone dies, and we feel a wave of
panic as our brain scrambles to
remember when we last backed up



  • and which memories have been lost.
    From photos of life’s big moments to
    lists of the books we’ve read and films
    we’ve seen, we’re increasingly reliant
    on technology to keep our happiest
    memories safe. So-called ‘cognitive
    offloading’ – outsourcing our need to
    remember things to the internet – is
    changing the way our brains store
    information and eroding our ability
    to recall them for ourselves.
    But, being able to make and recall
    happy memories is crucial to our
    overall well-being, and is the subject


of a new book by Meik Wiking,
a researcher at the Happiness
Research Institute.The Art Of Making
Memoriesaims to boost the number
of experiences we can turn into happy
memories and, crucially, teach us
how to remember them.
‘Happy memories form the
cornerstone of our identity, and
can help with combating depression
and loneliness,’ says Wiking. ‘They
influence our happiness in the current
moment, as well as providing a
framework for our hopes and dreams
about the future.’ Nostalgia makes us
happy, increasing self-esteem and
strengthening social connectedness,
so the more vividly we remember the
good times, the happier we are overall.

When it comes to memory, says
Wiking, researchers have identified
a ‘reminiscence bump’ – the years
in early adulthood that we remember
most vividly. The decades in which
we tend to experience the most ‘firsts’


  • first kiss, first job, first home – are the
    most memorable. By comparison,
    when we enter the daily grind in our
    thirties and forties, memories tend to
    blur together. ‘Finding ways we can
    continue to achieve new experiences
    is a good strategy for making
    memories that will last for decades,’
    says Wiking, but that doesn’t have to
    mean spending a fortune on exotic
    travel, or ditching your job. Stepping
    out of your comfort zone, even if that
    just means trying food you’ve never

Free download pdf