Sign in to see this course
Courses are study paths that bind to your account. You can practise the open chapter of any theme without an account; courses become available after you sign in.
Create a free account105 min · 7 chapters
Foundations of Masonic Memory
Ragain's Keys in seven practiced sittings.
Why this course matters
Most brothers describe Masonic memory work as the hardest part of the Craft. The reason is almost never that the brother is bad at memorizing. It is almost always that he was handed one method (rote, by ear, alone, hours at a stretch) and that method does not fit how his particular mind actually stores information. Brian Ragain's 2020 book Keys to Masonic Memorization names five different methods, all of them in published use somewhere in the American Craft, and asks the reader to find the one that fits him.
This is the published method-by-method walk through the techniques, with a short exercise after each one and a working weekly schedule at the end. If you finish the course and feel relief at how few of the five worked for you, that is the published outcome: you only need one to fit. The other four exist so that the men whose minds work differently than yours can also do the work.
Goal
Internalize five published memorization techniques and a working weekly study routine.
Brian Ragain's Keys to Masonic Memorization (2020) is published in five chapters; this course walks them in order, with every method drilled by its own short exercise set. Start with why memory work matters at all. Move through Rote and Chunking, the Memory Palace, the Peg System, and the chunked-deep-processing technique from Kim March's 5 Minute Ritualist. Close with the practice (schedule, partner, daily habit) and the move from study to delivery. Built for a brother who wants tools, not theory.
Suggested habit
When after the evening dishes are done, one ten-minute drill from this path.
The path
Start with "Why Memorize?" →- 1. MemorizationWhy Memorize?
Why memorize at all. The case.
- 2. MemorizationRote Memory and Chunking
Rote and chunking. Phone-number patterns for long lectures.
- 3. MemorizationThe Memory Palace
The Memory Palace. Lingerfelt's Solomon's Memory Palace technique.
- 4. MemorizationThe Peg System
The Peg System. Anchoring sequences to rhyming numbers.
- 5. MemorizationChunked Deep Processing
Chunked deep processing. March's 5 Minute Ritualist method.
- 6. MemorizationBuilding a Memorization Practice
Building a memorization practice: schedule, partner, place.
- 7. MemorizationFrom Study to Delivery
From study to delivery. Chaney's paper-to-podium process.
What if (after you finish the path)
Reflective prompts
- Of the five techniques, which one fit the way your mind actually works? Use that one on the next lecture you have to learn.
- Which of the five fits worst? That is worth knowing too, so you do not waste hours on a method your mind will fight.
Where to go next
- Get better at memorizing Masonic work
The same path under its help-framing entry point.
- Building a Memorization Practice
Building a Memorization Practice. The schedule and habit chapter that survives the course.
- From Study to Delivery
From Study to Delivery. The final published step: in front of a Lodge.