Why Make Reading a Habit? (Reading Series — Part 1)

Why Make Reading a Habit? (Reading Series — Part 1)

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7 min read

“Reading is an introduction to past, future and a better present.”

For every person barring a few fictional ones, life is only experienced once.

Reading as a habit is not about reading emails or news blogs, it is about reading a continuous stretch of 300 pages on a specific topic that is curated and published.

The habit of reading is about reading published books. It can be a hardcover, paperback or an e-book. It can be fiction or nonfiction. But it has to be active, conscious and continuous.

This post is about making a list of arguments on why reading is a must have habit.

But if you are impatient like me and would like to skip the rest of the post, here is the one-line takeaway that sums it all.

“A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one.” — George R.R. Martin

Lack of Logical Edifice

A college graduate spends 21 years in the formal education system. During this time he/she is exposed to learn different subjects using two main tools, Reading and Writing.

After investing a significant amount of time and energy in learning and learning through reading, the habit of reading is lost immediately after college.

But reading is the basis of all learning both in formal and informal education. It is the ultimate meta-skill to learn any other skill.

The side effect of not reading books after college is, learning of new subjects turns in to snacking. Problems are solved through an intense search on Google and the knowledge is not retained.

A logical edifice on a given subject is never constructed and the notion of expertise remains elusive and unachievable.

This snack-based learning is a phenomenon across professional and personal lives after college.

Reading is a simple habit that can fix this.

A disciplined and habitual reading habit can help individuals build logical edifices in the area of their interests.

This structure will make one efficient at their job and compounds the return on knowledge.

**Leonardo Da Vinci** made a series of drawings in a book called **On Divine Proportion** written by his friend and mathematician **Luca Pacioli**. This rhombicuboctahedron is one of those drawings and is the closest thing to a perfect representation of a logical edifice.*Leonardo Da Vinci made a series of drawings in a book called On Divine Proportion written by his friend and mathematician Luca Pacioli. This rhombicuboctahedron is one of those drawings and is the closest thing to a perfect representation of a logical edifice.*

Click Bait Conundrum

(If you have come this long in a blog post you are already better off than most, & I am elated.)

Journalism currently is Clickbait barbarism. Everything written on the internet either a blog or an article is optimized to make you click, to make you open the article.

Barring very few sources, the incentive is to make you open the article. Not to actually read it.

Recommendation systems play a big role in the clickbait economy. You can find more about the problems in these systems here.

Clickbait culture turned every topic into an outrage topic. Before I get outraged about the outrage economy the point to be made is, in the circus of clickbait the reader is just clicking all the time and reading nothing. And the reader has lost the most important part of his waking time.

Concentration.

Concentration is attacked and destroyed one click at a time.

One can try to control this urge to click baits. But it is virtually impossible because the system that you are working against is just a much larger and is a well-designed concoction of technology and human capital that an individual can never match.

Reading is an antidote to this phenomenon.

A sustained reading habit will refill your concentration tank. It is like lifting weights but for the mind.

In the reading gym, the only accomplices are the thoughts triggered by the book. The silence of recommendation algorithms will refill the concentration tank page by page.

In a clickbait economy reading sessions are a way to meditate.

A newspaper boy, Ned Parfett, sells papers outlining the Titanic disaster in 1912. The term **Clickbait **a new one but the phenomenon is as old as the news business. The scale of is now at astronomical levels. Source — Getty ImagesA newspaper boy, Ned Parfett, sells papers outlining the Titanic disaster in 1912. The term Clickbait a new one but the phenomenon is as old as the news business. The scale of is now at astronomical levels. Source — Getty Images

Hack Your Self

Hacking is shortcutting a procedure that would otherwise need permission or a long process to complete.

In life, everyone has gaps in knowledge, spirit, and character. If the only way to fill these gaps is by experience, it would be dumb.

Every generation in evolution has leveraged both the successful and failed experiences of past generations to make progress into the future.

If these experiences are not leveraged it is not only that you are wasting your life but also of your forgotten ancestors.

Reading is a way to hack across life. It’s about knowing and learning from past stories and experiences.

It is about avoiding known mistakes and making only fresh and bold new mistakes.

Reading is the ultimate hack for growth and progress.

Thanks to Gutenberg printing press, the early print shops in Italy were possible and were accessible to Leonardo Da Vinci in the late 15th century. He bought a Latin version of **“De Architectura”** by **“Marcus Vitruvius Pollio”**. It is this piece of literature written around 80 B.C which planted the seed for one of the most iconic paintings of the Renaissance era widely known as **“The Vitruvian Man”**. If Da Vinci didn’t get access to this literature which was not possible without the Gutenberg’s invention, one can say that the most recognizable piece of art in the world would have never been possible.Thanks to Gutenberg printing press, the early print shops in Italy were possible and were accessible to Leonardo Da Vinci in the late 15th century. He bought a Latin version of “De Architectura” by “Marcus Vitruvius Pollio”. It is this piece of literature written around 80 B.C which planted the seed for one of the most iconic paintings of the Renaissance era widely known as “The Vitruvian Man”. If Da Vinci didn’t get access to this literature which was not possible without the Gutenberg’s invention, one can say that the most recognizable piece of art in the world would have never been possible.

Outcompete

In an ever volatile skill market everyone is competing with everyone else to move ahead in their careers.

Competition is the name of the game.

To out-compete your colleague is the true business you are in.

To get an **edge **in this competition, reading can be a game-changer.

Readers have the edge to know more, to understand more. And a habitual reader will do it all effortlessly.

The way you outcompete other people is by out reading and out learning them.

Conclusion

We are Creatures of Desire. Our desires include all the things to acquire, places to go, experiences to be had. We make up a version of our-self we desire to be.

The image that we desire of our-self is always more ambitious than where our real self is travelling towards.

To make your desires come true, to believe in your best self and to enhance your best self, reading is a gateway drug where addiction is prescribed.

It will enhance and elevate all things in your mind.

Benjamin Franklin said “The person who deserves most pity is a lonesome one on a rainy day who doesn’t know how to read.” This is a painting of him *in London, with the bust of Isaac Newton on his desk. **It captures the spirit of reading at its best.***Benjamin Franklin said “The person who deserves most pity is a lonesome one on a rainy day who doesn’t know how to read.” This is a painting of him in London, with the bust of Isaac Newton on his desk. It captures the spirit of reading at its best.**

P.S — The most fun part of the post is the descriptions of the images. I don’t want to preach without practice. So here are the books I have read in 2018 and 2019.

👏 If you liked this story, I’d appreciate your claps!

😃 Let’s connect on Twitter! *@natarajsindam*

👇 You can find more stories from me below. How to Read More Books? A 7 Step Guide (Reading Series — Part 2) To develop long term habits is about setting up systems that support your cause.medium.com Why Read A Book Summary? We sapiens are on a constant lookout for short cuts. A large reason why ideologies thrive is that they instill a…medium.com How to Find Your Next Book? (Reading Series — Part 3) Books are part of Entertainment Industry.medium.com