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Health & WellnessHow to Improve Your Memory

How to Remember Passwords

Transcript

This is my password for my website, powerfulmemorysecrets.com. It looks pretty complex, but in reality, it’s not. Here’s how it evolved.

I’m going to start with my childhood dog, Sparky. I’m going to make him all lowercase for the moment. Now I’m going to turn it backwards, Y-K-R-A-P-S. That’s very untechnical but imagine if you’re using that for a basis for all of your website visits, you’ll know it in no time, automatically. The next thing I’m going to do is take the third and fourth letter of the name of the website, capitalize them and put them in the third and fourth place of the name. The third and fourth letter of powerful, W, E capitalized now goes over here. The next thing I’m going to do is take the first vowel and assign it a number. You’ve probably done this all throughout your school days. A is the first vowel, E is 2, I is 3, O is 4 and U is 5. The first vowel in powerful is the O. That’s the number 4 and that goes on the end of my new password. I’m going to append a 4 on the end of that password.

I now have a virtually indecipherable password with three of the four possibilities that the experts tell us about, capital letters, lowercase letters and numbers. If you want to feel more secure, put a dollar sign into your passwords wherever you like. That is pretty unbreakable.

Here’s an interesting tip. If you think you may have a problem for the first few days or week or so of learning this system, create a sample. Create a password for an imaginary password called sample. You’re going to take your dog’s name or your old friend’s name and turn it backwards lowercase. You’re going to take the third and fourth character. The third and fourth character of sample is the m and the p. You’re going to slug those into the third and fourth place of your password. You’re going to take the number that represents the first vowel in sample. A, 1, the first vowel and you’re going to append that to the end, and you know what? You can write that out and tape it right on to your monitor. No one will know what it means but you, and if anybody finds it, even if they know it’s the idea of your password, they won’t know how to do your others.


Lessons in this Guide

About Memory Expert Barry Reitman

How to Remember Foreign Words & Phrases

How to Remember Planets by Size

What Is Rote Memory?

How to Remember Where You Parked Your Car

How to Understand “It’s On the Tip of My Tongue” Syndrome

Why Can’t I Remember What I Study?

Short-Term Memory vs. Long-Term Memory

How Alcohol Affects Memory

How to Keep Your Memory Sharp

How to Know if Your Forgetfulness Is Normal

How to Remember a Change in Your Morning Schedule

How to Remember to Take Something with You in the Morning

How to Memorize the Presidents

How to Memorize a Speech

Connection between Sleep & Memory

How to Use the Alphabet List Technique

How to Use the Mnemonic Technique

How to Use the Link or Story Method

How to Use the Peg System

How to Use the Loci Technique

How to Remember a Word or Name You’re Blanking On

How to Remember the Months with 31 Days

How to Remember Why You Walked Into a Room

How to Remember Where You Put Something

Top 3 Tips for Improving Your Memory

How to Use the Body Part System

How to Use the Memory Palace Technique

How to Use the Major Memory System

How to Remember Planets

How to Remember Birthdays

How to Remember Passwords

How to Remember Numbers

How to Remember Lines

How to Remember Names & Faces

How to Remember Everything You Read

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