Memorize formulas faster, recall them under pressure, and stop blanking in exams with simple routines, memory tricks, and practice drills.
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Get it on Play StoreI’ve had that horrible exam moment where a formula was sitting in my brain all week, and then—poof—it vanished the second I saw the question. Super annoying. And honestly, it’s usually not because you “can’t memorize.”
It’s because you only recognized the formula while studying. That’s different from being able to pull it out under pressure.
Recognition is easy. Recall is the real test. And exams only care about recall.
This is where most people mess up. They make one giant formula sheet, stare at it for 2 hours, feel productive, and then forget 80% of it by dinner.
Don’t do that.
Break formulas into tiny groups of 3-5. Study one group until you can write it from memory 3 times in a row without looking. Then move on.
For example:
Small chunks stick better. Your brain likes patterns, not panic.
I used to hate hearing “just understand it,” because that advice is annoyingly true. If you know what each symbol means and why the formula exists, it becomes way easier to remember.
Take a physics formula like:
v = u + at
Don’t just memorize the letters. Say:
Now the formula has a story. It’s not random junk anymore.
And when you understand the logic, even if you forget the exact order, you can often rebuild it from the meaning. That’s a huge exam advantage.
This is my strongest opinion: rereading formulas is a weak study method.
It feels good. It’s fake progress.
Instead, do this:
That’s active recall. And it works because your brain has to actually retrieve the info, which is exactly what exams demand.
Try this 10-minute drill:
You’ll notice the same thing I did—your recall gets much faster after just 2-3 rounds.
Your brain remembers weird stuff better than boring stuff. So make the formula visual, emotional, or slightly silly.
Examples:
And yes, this feels childish. It also works.
I once remembered a chemistry formula because I associated part of it with my friend’s nickname. Ridiculous? Absolutely. Effective? Also yes.
Typing is fine for organizing notes. But if you want actual memory, write by hand.
There’s something about physically writing that helps your brain lock it in. Use a notebook, sticky notes, or a whiteboard—whatever gets your hand moving.
A good routine:
That’s just 10-15 minutes a day, but it adds up fast.
And if you use a habit app like Trider (myhabits.in), you can actually keep this streak going instead of “starting over on Monday” for the 9th time.
A formula sheet isn’t for staring at. It’s for testing yourself.
Make one page per subject. On the left, write the formula. On the right, leave it blank. Cover the left side and try to fill it in.
Even better:
That way, you’re not just memorizing symbols. You’re linking formula to usage.
Example:
speed = distance / timeThat connection matters. A lot.
This is the part most students skip, and it’s exactly why they blank out later.
You need to simulate exam conditions.
Do these 3 things:
Then check how many you missed.
Why this works: your brain learns that recall is supposed to happen fast, not in a cozy study setting with unlimited time. That reduces panic later.
And if you always study in comfort, your brain gets lazy. Exams are not comfortable.
Memorizing a formula once is useless if it’s gone by Friday.
So review on a schedule:
This spacing is magic. Not mystical magic—actual memory science magic.
You don’t need long sessions either. Even 7 minutes per review is enough if you’re active about it.
Some formulas are hard because of one annoying detail—signs, order, units, or exceptions.
Don’t memorize the whole thing again and again. Just isolate the problem spot.
For example:
Make a list titled “Stuff I always mess up”. Be brutally honest.
That list saves marks.
The morning of the exam, don’t panic-study 40 formulas. That’s a bad move. It just makes you doubt yourself.
Do this instead:
Then stop.
You want your brain calm, not overloaded. A stressed brain blanks easier. A focused brain pulls formulas faster.
Here’s the exact routine I’d use if I had to memorize formulas from scratch:
10 minutes
5 minutes
3 minutes
2 minutes
Do that once in the morning and once at night. That’s 40 minutes a day total, but split up so it doesn’t feel brutal.
First, don’t freeze and start mentally yelling at yourself. That only makes it worse.
Try this:
Sometimes the answer comes back once you stop forcing it.
And if it doesn’t, move on and come back later. A calm brain retrieves better than a panicked one. Every time.
Some people act like they were “born good at memory.” Nah. They just use better methods.
Memorize in small chunks. Test yourself. Review spaced out. Practice under pressure. That’s the whole game.
And if you want help building the habit of daily formula review, Trider (myhabits.in) makes it way easier to stay consistent without relying on motivation alone.
Try it, set a tiny formula streak, and see how much less you blank out next exam.