“’A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies,’ said Jojen. The man who never reads lives only one.” ~ George R.R. Martin
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We had finished our business.
I asked Anas, the sales representative for a Spanish tiles manufacturer, what he did outside of work. He quickly replied that he read avidly.
I was taken aback. Not many people in the business world around me read, something I find frustrating when socializing.
He explained how his father set him early on the path of reading. Starting when Anas was eight years old, his father would give him a book every month, a literary one—Camus, Tolstoy, Faulkner—and expected him to summarize it over dinner. He told me how, at first, he hated the practice, but that he was incredibly thankful now.
Reading had opened his mind to life.
We spent the next few hours discussing many book that we’d both read. What amazed me most was his literary understanding and how he grasped the writer’s intentions. He easily recognized the underlying themes with which great writers subtly leave their readers. This is something I’m still grappling with in the first year of my MFA for creative writing.
I regret not challenging my own kids to read a book a month when they were younger. However, taking inspiration from Anas’ story, I’ve now thrown down the gauntlet. I’ve asked them to read any book of their choice, and we’ll sit down (or Skype) once a month to review what we got out of it.
Fewer people read these days, but I honestly feel that reading is one of the few non-digital gifts we can still enjoy. We can’t allow the fast pace of modern life to paralyze us, locking us into a robotic, linear lifestyle enslaved by technology and an instant gratification mindset.
Reading is a superpower.
Oprah Winfrey says, “What I love most about reading—it gives you the ability to reach higher ground. A world of possibilities awaits you. Keep turning the page.”
Warren Buffet was once asked about the secret to his success in finance. Holding a stack of papers and reports he replied, “Read 500 pages like this every day. That’s how knowledge works. It builds up, like compound interest. All of you can do it, but I guarantee not many of you will do it.”
Bill Gates reads a book a week. Elon Musk is a voracious reader and, growing up, often read two books a day.
The benefits of reading in my latter years have been twofold. Reading has not only made me a better person, but has also taught me to be more mindful and intentional about everything I do.
When we sit alone with a good book, our mind wanders and wonders into different worlds that we haven’t seen or heard of before. I remember when I read Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts. His vivid portrayal of life in Bombay and the sense of community the locals felt, even in the direst of circumstances, fascinated me and kept me turning pages.
It was as if I lived there for the two weeks it took me to finish the book. I was walking the streets of Mumbai at night. I was Linbaba for a while. And, who could forget the mysterious Swiss woman with lines like, “My body was her chariot, and she drove it into the sun. Her body was my river, and I became the sea.”
Reading is also meditative. We automatically switch off the chattering mind and focus all our energies on reading the lines on the page before us. It may be difficult to concentrate at first, but then the prose pulls us into the story. We become lost in the details, and somehow all our worrisome thoughts fall away.
I’ve recently started “deep reading” for 20 minutes every morning before I do anything else. I will read Rumi, Gibran, or a sacred text like theBhagavad Gita. I’ve been doing this for a month now, and I’ve found it to be both calming and reassuring, as if I’m connecting to my soul in those quiet morning moments.
Completing a book is a great discipline as well. It takes perseverance and commitment in our “ADD world” to finish a book. It sends a message to our psyche and to others that we are determined and can achieve what we set out to do.
I’ve committed to reading a book a week for the past two years. I haven’t always been successful, but I’ve enjoyed having the self-control in turning away from social events or meaningless activities to pursue my goal. I now take my book/Kindle everywhere I might have to wait; when I feel the weekly deadline looming, then I’ll spend four hours on a free afternoon to make up for lost time.
Sometimes we read for information and think we forget everything, but we don’t. The “good stuff” always sticks. Our subconscious gets filled up with life’s most precious details without us realizing it.
Books, for me, are not only a source of information, but a way to escape the stresses of my life. It’s a sacred indulgence; time alone to be any place I choose and anyone I want.
Reading has opened up my mind, exposing me to everything the world has to offer. I hope that I can inspire many to read a book a week.
And, I hope that “one book a week” becomes my life’s slogan.
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