Let questions lead the way
General knowledge covers a wide world. The best way to make it manageable is to begin with one question and follow its connections: a place to its history, a discovery to its impact, or an event to its context.
Mix categories deliberately
Rotate across science, history, geography, art, sport, and culture. Variety keeps the habit interesting and gives your memory several different paths to retrieve an idea later.
Prefer context over isolated facts
When you learn a fact, ask one more question: why it matters, what came before it, or what it is related to. That extra moment can make knowledge feel useful rather than fleeting.
Learning note: when a fact changes over time, verify it with a timely, reliable source before relying on it.