Marie Claire UK - 10.2019

(Axel Boer) #1
79

Psyche

PHOTOGRAPHS BY GETTY IMAGES, GARRETT PARKER, VINCENT VAN ZALINGE ON UNSPLASH.


THE ART OF MAKING MEMORIES: HOW TO CREATE


AND REMEMBER HAPPY MOMENTS

BY MEIK WIKING (£12.99, PENGUIN LIFE);

GROW YOUR OWN HAPPINESS

BY DEBORAH SMITH (£12.99, ASTER BOOKS)

eaten before, can help to make
a memory harder to forget.
‘If an experience is emotional, it
sticks in our mind, whether it was
good or bad,’ explains Wiking. ‘Doing
something that scares us is like using
an emotional highlighter pen. When
making a decision, ask yourself, “What
will I remember in ten years’ time?” On
holiday, you might like to read a book,
but going on a jet ski for the first time
will be more memorable. Even though
you won’t always want to choose that
option, it’s important to involve your
future self in that decision.’
Staying present in each moment
also helps solidify memories. ‘You
could be in the most amazing place
in the world, but if your mind is still
back in the office, or going over
an argument you had with your
boyfriend, you won’t be fully
present,’ says Deborah Smith,
positive psychologist and author of
Grow Your Own Happiness. ‘We live in
two modes: the narrative and the
experiential,’ she adds. ‘When we’re
locked in the narrative mode – a
dialogue is going on in your head, or
you’re giving yourself a hard time – it
stops you being in the moment, no
matter how good it might be, which
creates a lot of anxiety.
‘The more you can bring yourself
back to the moment – into the
experiential mode – the better. Try to
be aware of your environment, really
seeing, hearing and feeling it, so that
all your senses are awake and alive.
Being mindful is like turning up the
volume of an experience and helps
embed it in your memory.’
If you’ve ever heard a song or
encountered a familiar fragrance and
been whisked straight back to another

time and place, you’ll know how potent
our senses are when it comes to evoking
memories, and harnessing this potency
can help cement them. The artist Andy
Warhol changed the scent he wore
every three months, then never wore it
again. He knew that whenever he
smelled it, he’d be taken back to that
specific period of time. And while
Warhol’s way of embedding memories
might be extravagant, we can apply the
same principle to our own lives.
‘Research shows that when people
with dementia are played particular
songs, it can help to trigger their

HAPPY DAYS

Fivequick tricks for making joyful memories stick

DON’TJUST SEE,
OBSERVE
Selectiveattention
means the brain filters
out anything it thinks
isn’t relevant. By
concentrating on the
details of a moment,
you’re more likely to
remember it. Practise
switching from the
narrative to experiential.

REMOVE
DISTRACTIONS
Oursenses are
continually bombarded,
so to keep your mind
focused on the
present, it helps
to remove other
distractions. Put
your phone away and
notice the difference
it makes.

SHARE
STORIES
Repeatinganecdotes
strengthens the ‘muscle’
of a memory. Talking
about a happy time
a week, month and year
after the event will
solidify it. It’s also
a great way of helping
kids form strong
childhood memories.

ENJOYTHE
JOURNEY
Aswell as remembering
hedonic pleasures,
think back to how you
felt when you strived
for a long-term goal or
went through a period
of personal growth.
So-called eudaimonic
pleasure adds meaning
to our lives.

ENDEXPERIENCES
WITH A BANG
Thepeak-end effect
means we remember
the peak and end of
an experience above
everything else. So, if
you weave a special
moment into the last
part of an event, you’ll
create a more positive
memory overall.

‘BEINGMINDFUL IS

LIKE TURNING UP

THE VOLUME OF AN

EXPERIENCE AND

HELPS EMBED IT IN

YOUR MEMORY’

memory,’explains Smith. ‘You can try
it yourself: put on a track you loved
when you were 16, and you’ll suddenly
rememberwhat you were doing and
who you were hanging out with.’
Making a playlist for special moments,
or linking them to a particular smell,
canhelp us recall them in more vivid
detail later on. Even listening to
a particular album on your commute
and switching it up every couple of
months can help you recall different
periods of time more clearly.
Of course, most of us use visual
cues to remember happy times. But,
Smithwarns, there’s a balance to be
struck between capturing memories
andruining the moment. ‘Research
has shown that our memory of an
event is actually stronger if we
haven’ttaken lots of photos,’ she says.
‘If you’re taking 100 pictures of
a sunset, you’re not really seeing it.’
Wiking advises setting up an
Instagram or Facebook account for
photos that might seem boring to
other people, but will work as
memory triggers for you. ‘What we
choose to post on social media is
partly influenced by what other
people will think,’ he explains. ‘But
the photos that will be meaningful
for us get edited out.’
Once you’ve got into the habit
of savouring your happy moments,
they’ll become easier to remember.
And, Smith says, it’s not just the big
occasions we should be committing to
memory. ‘Celebrate all your victories,
no matter how big or small. If you’re
striving for something, commemorate
each goalpost along the way. There are
so many lovely moments in life we
think don’t count, but if you pay
attention, every one of them can.’■
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