I used to read alot devouring books on the bus to school/work (almost like the movement help my dyslexia 😂) but recently I have been struggling to get into books having not been able to get past the first few chapters. Do yous have tips or methods for when you’re in a bit of a reading funk?

  • @metaltoilet@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    This video completely changed my outlook on reading. Every time I’m in a reading slump I go back to it. You really should watch it, even if it is 40 minutes. https://www.yewtu.be/watch?v=lIW5jBrrsS0

    Edit: I cannot stress how much this video has changed my reading habits. I’ve gone from 10 books a year to being on track to 25.

  • Zitronenschnitte
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    81 year ago

    I just have periods I don’t read that much and just accept it. I often have a cycle of reading-gaming-watching series/movies. One phase lasts around 1-2 months for me. All just different ways to experience a story. So I don’t want to force one or the other (The latest Zelda for example dropped during a non-gaming phase. Still haven’t touched if even though I should love it :(). Reading for me is fun and if I don’t feel it I don’t force it.

    Mostly after some non-reading time I see a book that looks really interesting and I just dive in. That often kicks off my reading phase and I devour multiple books during the next few weeks.

  • @okiegirl22@beehaw.org
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    81 year ago

    I try to pick up something that will be a quick, easy read that won’t take much brainpower or reread something I really enjoyed.

    • KamiroseM
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      51 year ago

      Yeah, simpler YA or middle-grade books are great for getting out of a reading slump. Great, easily digestible storylines.

    • @oofinsprouts@beehaw.org
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      21 year ago

      Totally agree - Terry Pratchett is my go-to quick/easy read. In fact, I just finished Wheel of Time last month, and I’m using Small Gods as my palate cleanser.

  • @strangerloop@beehaw.org
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    71 year ago

    I usually turn to reading shorter stories when that happens and/or switch up the genre. I am pretty big fan of short stories and novellas, it’s amazing seeing a complete story condensed in like, a 100 pages. Plus they’re quick to finish and typically give me a dopamine hit that has me picking up another story to read afterwards (last time I read Becky Chamber’s “A Psalm for the Wild-built”, highly recommend it if you read sci-fi!). Depending on mood/mental state, I then usually either keep reading shorter stories, or move on to a longer book.

  • @wit@beehaw.org
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    71 year ago

    Buy a Kobo or similar(preferably not Kindle, because Amazon…), if you don’t have one yet! It drastically improved my reading.

    • @SlamDrag@beehaw.org
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      21 year ago

      Agree with this! A quality ereader is a big game changer. I love physical books, but ebooks have quickly overtaken them for me in the last year simply because of how easy and convenient it is to carry around my Kobo. But there are some trade offs, no marginalia and flipping around between different pages/chapters can be troublesome (especially if you’re in a classroom or book club).

  • @grogg@beehaw.org
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    61 year ago

    I have periods where I don’t read much, and then periods where I devour books. What I do to read consistently is to try and read 10 pages a day at least. For me the resistance to start reading becomes easy to break and oftentimes I end up reading more than 10 pages. But some times 10 pages is all, and that’s ok.

    So maybe set a rule for yourself to read x amount of pages, or to read for a set amount of time.

  • @DidacticDumbass
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    51 year ago

    Here are some links from the wise Khatzumoto, because I cannot explain it better myself:

    http://www.alljapaneseallthetime.com/blog/common-reading-mistakes-youre-making-that-you-need-to-stop-making-if-you-want-to-be-thin-and-pretty-like-me/

    http://www.alljapaneseallthetime.com/blog/if-you-played-songs-the-way-you-read-books-you-would-hate-music/

    http://www.alljapaneseallthetime.com/blog/the-trick-to-reading-more-and-faster/

    The only way you will read more books is by putting more books in front of your face. Put the stuff you actually want to read in front of your face, not the stuff that is recommendation or you feel some kind of obligation to. If the book you are reading is not interesting, skip it and find one that is.

    • @SlamDrag@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I don’t love most of this advice. Most of the problems that I face in my day-to-day are related to the constant cacophony of noise that permeates my urban life. Not literal noise, but just the etcetera that draws my attention and focus away from whatever is right in front of me. So ever present is this constant distraction that I didn’t even realize it was a thing until I went camping in one of the remotest parts of the US for a week last year. With more time than anything else it suddenly became easy to read. But not just read, but think about what I was reading, to engage with the author in a meaningful way.

      Changed my perspective. Most of the advice this lady is giving is to engage less, skim more, do it in small chunks so that you can’t string any thought process together that has any amount of complexity. That probably is some good advice if all you care about is reaching high page counts. But, frankly, this is just subordinating reading and thought to the same capitalist/market framework that subjects us to the tyranny of productivity. Without trying to sound too dramatic, reading slowly, in longer chunks, doing ones best to block out distractions, is an act of resistance.

      I suppose what I’m getting at is that I don’t care to consume books, I want to engage with books (and by extension, their authors). That takes time, effort, and intentionality.

      EDIT: As far as OPs original question, but advice would be to take it slow and build good habits over time. Don’t expect to start reading massive academic tomes right away. Start with simple page-turner novels and let yourself get carried away by the story. Then work your way into harder material (though if it isn’t interesting drop it). Guard carefully your attention! Your attention is worth a lot of money to many corporations, so keep it to yourself and focus it on things that you actually want to focus it on. Don’t piss it away with no good reason.

  • @JaymesRS@midwest.social
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    41 year ago

    Between college and having kids I was lucky if I was reading 5 to 10 books in a year. I think the biggest thing that helped me get back into reading was doing a reading challenge and getting an eReader that made choosing books easer. 

    I’ve been using the readers since Barnes & Noble’s first nook, but outside of the reading interface. It was difficult to keep a large variety of my books on there and find the one I was looking for. It was especially bad with Series. I got a kobo and the interface is so much better. I like the hardware slightly more for the nook, but the interface more than makes up for that difference.

    r/Fantasy runs an annual bingo sheet where they give different categories for a book to read and using that to discover new books that I had been missing out on really went along way and getting me back and enjoying reading.

  • mistyquigley
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    41 year ago

    Audiobooks have helped me when I’m in a slump. I used to fly through books (print/ebook), but in the past few years my attention span has decreased significantly. Audiobooks are now my favorite format.

  • @icanmakesound@beehaw.org
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    21 year ago

    Finding a book of short stories by an author or in a genre you like might help. Something with low time commitment. If you don’t like a story, skip onto the next one.

    I also second audiobooks though. Listened to more books lately than I have in quite awhile. It’s handy when you have some other things to do, just throw in some headphones.