Chunked Deep Processing
Why this matters
Kim March published the 5 Minute Ritualist because he saw too many brothers either give up on memory work or torture themselves trying to swallow a whole lecture in one go. His insight is straightforward: break the lecture into bookmark-sized chunks of four to seven lines, read each chunk a few times, then progressively reduce it to first-letter shorthand until your mind fills in the rest.
This is the most concrete pencil-and-paper method in the published memorization literature. Sensory memory, working memory, long-term memory: March puts a tool in your hand for each. If rote-with-chunking is the foundation, March's method is what most brothers actually use once they've found their rhythm. The 5 Minute Ritualist is the published deep dive.
What this chapter is
The technique Ragain reports from Kim March's The 5 Minute Ritualist breaks a passage into bookmark-sized chunks of four to seven lines, then progressively reduces those chunks to first-letter shorthand. Sensory, working, and long-term memory each get their own role. It is one of the most concrete pencil-and-paper methods in the published book.
How to practise it
A lesson walks the same seven steps every time. Read the intro, study the material, then drill it through Quick Fire, Matchup, Sequence, Flashcards, and the Mix capstone. Each step opens to the next; no choices to make in the middle of the work.
Habit loop
- Learn
Finish this step. - Plan
Decide the next sitting. - Do
Carry one part into action. - Reflect
Log what changed. - Teach
Pass one point on.
Learn, plan, do, reflect, teach
The lesson itself is only the first fifth of the pattern. Carry it through the full loop so the work becomes habitual.
-
Learn
Work Chunked Deep Processing
Move through the seven-step lesson until recognition becomes recall and use.
Continue the lesson -
Plan
Prepare the full text and the first-letter card
Set up the passage in both forms before you begin alternating between them.
Plan the reduction pass -
Do
Alternate the full text and reduced text
Work the passage until the first-letter line starts calling the full wording back on its own.
Open Do -
Reflect
Check when the reduced card became enough
Notice the line where your mind began supplying the words without needing the full text below it.
Open the gauge log -
Teach
Compare cards with a study partner
Use another brother to spot whether your reduction still points cleanly to the right words.
Open mentor prep
What if · take it further ▸
Sit with this
- Take any short Masonic passage you have access to, four to seven lines. Write it out in full. Then below it write only the first letter of each word. Read each version three times alternately. By the third pass, you should be reading mostly from the first-letter version with your mind filling in the rest.
- Which fits your mind better, March's first-letter cards or the Memory Palace? Most brothers settle on one as their primary method. The other becomes a backup for the passages where the primary doesn't quite stick.
Connect to
- Rote Memory and Chunking
Rote with chunking. March's method extends rote by giving the chunks a visual reduction.
- The Memory Palace
The Memory Palace. The other major published method; many brothers use both, depending on the passage.
- From Study to Delivery
From study to delivery. March's method is built for the silent study side; delivery is its own discipline.