https://medium.com/@trentg.betham/tsundoku-or-why-owning-more-books-than-youll-ever-read-is-good-for-you-9852904d0f95
I am obsessed with books, when I couldn’t figure out what to study in college I became an English major since books are their whole deal. Whenever I’m in a new town I look for book stores, large book stores, library sales, and of course second hand shops packed from floor to ceiling with more books than I could ever hope to own or even read.
I already own far more books than I’ve read or even plan to read this year. My bookcase is full, my desk drawers are packed with bookshelf rejects, and earlier this week I bought Stephen Kings new book, If It Bleeds. This common trait among book nerds, lovers, and hoarders is Tsundoku. A word when broken into two parts, “tsun” originating from “tsumu” meaning “to pile up” and “doku” meaning “to read”. Combine the two together and you get the resulting home decor of myself and probably yourself if you’re reading this, piles of unread books. What I’m trying to say is, and if you ask my girlfriend, I have a major book problem.
But, what if that’s a good thing?
It’s no surprise to anyone that books have a variety of benefits for their readers. If they didn’t we wouldn’t read them in school; books contain lessons. Lessons in morality, questions to philosophize over, critical thinking skills to develop from answering your instructor’s question, “What does Sunny’s dress represent in the Catcher in the Rye?”, and so much more. Aside from critical thinking, books stimulate the brain, improve memory, and even increase a person’s empathy. But what can owning books do for you?
The Anti-Library and You
The Anti Library is a concept that Nassim Nicholas Taheb discusses in his book The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable. Within the book Taheb brings up the author Umberto Eco, who like you and I owned more books than he could ever read, but unlike you or I his library contained 30,000 books. The idea here was not to hoard books or even to buy them with full intentions to read their pages, but instead to spark curiosity and in turn motivation. Taleb furthers this idea by writing:
A private library is not an ego boosting appendage but a research tool. Read books are far less valuable than unread ones. The library should contain as much of what you do not know as your financial means, mortgage rates and the currently tight real-estate market allows you to put there. You will accumulate more knowledge and more books as you grow older, and the growing number of unread books on the shelves will look at you menacingly. Indeed, the more you know, the larger the rows of unread books. Let us call this collection of unread books an anti-library.”
As the books begin to pile up year by year, and your shelves swell with countless unread volumes it’s easy to become distressed. Instead, allow distress to fall to the wayside and let curiosity take its place instead. The curiosity of what you do not know when compared to what is known, the curiosity that each unread book on that shelf evokes and the knowledge that you can gain from them. Wanting to put a face to the unknown has driven plenty of people to carry out their goals. So, why can’t the daunting faces of your unread books do the same for you?
Setting Goals and Satiating Curiosity
Curiosity is the ultimate motivator. If you’re wondering what a 7-layer burrito tastes like, eat it. If you don’t know any of your towns local spots, explore them. If your shelves are lined with unread books, read them. This sounds easy in theory but tackling your backlog of books while new books are released all the time is hard and often leads to more books being added to your unread collection.
Set easily obtainable goals for yourself, I’ve been using GoodReads to keep track of my reading habits and regretfully add to my overflowing book collection. Each year you can set a reading goal for yourself. Last year I set out to read 15 books and when I finished with 25 books read by the time 2020 rolled around I decided to up this year’s goal to 35 books.
The benefit of using GoodReads or a similar app is that it motivates you and tracks your progress. Every day you read you can tell the app which page you’re on and it will tell you how far along you are in the book. It will even tell you if you’re ahead of schedule or behind on your reading goal for the year. This paired with your curiosity to delve into these books will help bring purpose to your collection.
Reading goals are a great way to work your way through your anti-library and feel accomplished in what you’re reading. Whether you own a collection like Eco or the amount of books you own far outweighs any conceivable reading goal that you can set for yourself this year, don’t beat yourself up. All these unread books are a constant motivator but as long as you realize that not everything can be learned in a lifetime, and not every book will be read, well then you can enjoy yourself and become comfortable among your collection in what you can learn.
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