Sunday, September 28, 2025

The Memory Palace technique of Storytelling

 The Memory Palace Method of Storytelling

 

If the mind was an abandoned palace, and the hero of the story was thrown away into that palace, what he would do? He would walk through the palace, explore it, investigate the details, and ultimately, find a way to escape and return to his original world. The technique of “Memory Palace” allows your characters to do just that.

 

“Memory palace,” also called as “Method of Loci,” is a creative writing technique used to remember vast amounts of information. In storytelling, the technique can help the writer craft a character or even the entire story by delving into the intricate structures and mechanisms of their mind.

 

The technique relies on putting the character in a tangible, imaginary landscape and then scanning different parts of that landscape, investigating what part mirrors which aspect of your character’s personality.

 

It could be a real or imaginary space, such as a library, a museum, a fantastical castle, a garden, a hilltop forest, a shop, a market, or anything. Consider this place as your “Memory Palace.” The next part is to walk through different parts of this “memory palace” and look deeply. Each part of this imaginary palace represents a different aspect of your character’s life or a major theme of your story.

 

A kitchen might serve one purpose while a bookshop the other. A garden might serve one purpose for the character while an airport might open up interesting possibilities for you to take your story forward.

 

If you are willing to delve deeper, you can also assign different imaginary objects in this imaginary landscape to represent or explore different attributes of your character or storyline. The object could be a simple as a blade of grass or a wall clock.

 

Consider this example: Lila’s Memory Palace

 

Lila sat at her desk, the blank pages of her new notebook yawning before her like an abandoned attic. She wanted to write a list of goals, tasks, and to-dos to organize, but what she really desired was to carve out a picture of her life’s universe. When swarms of thoughts buzzing and rumbling in her head became too noisy for her to actually jot down any words in the notebook, she closed her eyes and started an inner journey into the halls of her “Memory Palace.”

 

The Grand Hall

Sitting at her desk with closed eyes, in a meditative mode, Lila took a mental trip into the “Grand Hall” of her “Memory Palace.” A giant silk banner unrolling before her on a wall and an enormous wooden table in the center were some of the details she could see. On top of the table was a glowing orb. Taking a mental note, Lila placed her ambition on this orb: Write a novel. At this point, the character of the writer had set an intention to accomplish a goal.

 

The Conservatory

The next room in Lila’s Memory Palace turned out to be her “Conservatory,” a garden where she stored all her creative ideas and projects. While walking in this garden, she imagined a giant blank notebook in place of the soil. Suddenly, the blank pages began to sprout with colorful flowers, grasses, tiny bugs, and trees, that represented ideas, stories, and the projects she desired to work on.

 

The Library

The long corridor of “Library” in her “Memory Palace” was sprawling with shelves of books. These, however, were not typical books. In Lila’s inner world, each book represented a collection of memories, dreams, desires, thoughts, everything she liked or disliked, loved or hated, the chronicle of her individual self.

 

The Observatory

Finally, Lila stepped into the “Observatory” of her “Memory Palace” and started peering through the telescope to project her greatest and the best self in the stars and the galaxies. A famous writer with dozens of successful, published novels, a house filled with pieces of art, a mini library of her own, a garden of solace.

 

By the time Lila opened her eyes, she had navigated a landscape in the “Memory Palace” of her mind and now she was ready to jump into her notebook and scribble down all the details she saw in that dark, inner world, tell a story no one but only she could see. 



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The Memory Palace technique of Storytelling

 The Memory Palace Method of Storytelling   If the mind was an abandoned palace, and the hero of the story was thrown away into that pal...