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On Finding Time to Read.

John Luke Garofalo on October 22, 2019

"No matter how busy you may think you are, you must find time for reading or surrender yourself to self-chosen ignorance." -- Confucius Reading ...
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emma profile image
Emma Goto πŸ™

Nice post!

If you live near a library, you can save a lot of money if you borrow from there instead of buying new books all the time. Also if you have an e-reader, a lot of libraries these days let you borrow e-books, which is pretty cool.

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Lou (πŸš€ Open Up The Cloud ☁️)

I'm just going to leave this here too for the benefit of anyone else...

For cheap books β€” I've bought a lot of second hand ones from amazon for almost nothing except postage, usually they're no more than ~Β£1/2. I personally like to keep my books, but you could always put them back in circulation, too and save the waste.

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Michel

Exactly. Library save money, and the great thing is that it's easy to find books or authors that you didn't know about.

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John Luke Garofalo

Thank you and great info, Emma! Thank you for sharing :)

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ben profile image
Ben Halpern • Edited

A new years' resolution to find more time to read useful technical articles (outside of when I'm desperately seeking a fix to my current problem) was a key event which helped eventually lead to creating DEV.

By reading I learned so much about how the coding community operated etc.

In terms of non-code reading, I'm audio all the way, because I do so much screen reading in my daily routine.

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John Luke Garofalo • Edited

Wow, that’s really cool. I love facts like that one about what the smaller steps that lead to the creation of a successful business like this.

By reading I learned so much about how the coding community operates etc.

This is a great example of how important it is for a founder to be reading and learning.

Thanks for sharing, Ben!

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Brad

When I was young I was literally forced to learn to read. Tears, fights, tantrums, summer "reading" camps, traumatic experiences left and right.

Regardless of how I ended up learning how to read, I learned how.

I found as I got older I liked hard sci-fi books, and my family got me a number of novels to read. By this point reading was not very healthy, as I found myself reading until 4:00AM some nights.

By now I still stick to reading physical books, but due to life being busy its hard to find time to read. I think its somewhat of a godsend, as I can easily be pulled into a book so I read far less than I used to, but that doesn't mean I don't like it, I just don't have time to dedicate to reading through books :)

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John Luke Garofalo

Yeah, I can understand that feeling of getting sucked into a good book. Like anything, it requires a healthy balance! Thanks for sharing :)

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Damien Cosset

Finding more time to read is actually one of my priorities lately. It fuels my learning and my writing. I'm more interested in having a set period of time scheduled when I know I'll only read than trying to squeeze every single moment possible. I know I don't have the focus necessary in those moments.

As for the tools, I'm enjoying reading e-books. I already own a lot of physical books and don't have much space anymore 😁.

I also enjoy Blinkist. This is an application that gives you a resume of books that takes around 15 minutes to read. I like to start there, and if I feel like the book might be interesting, I will buy it as an e-book.

Thank you for the post!

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Lou (πŸš€ Open Up The Cloud ☁️)

If you like Blinkist you might like: fourminutebooks.com

I've been subscribed for a few years and it's great to get an insight into a book and then go read it.

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Cathy Casey-Richards

I love that you called out using basically any downtime (no matter how short) to read! I found that once I started reading eBooks, I was getting through books so much faster because of being able to just pull my phone out at any given moment and read.

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John Luke Garofalo

Yes! This. Exactly! πŸ˜ƒ

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Ryan • Edited

The obvious question I find myself asking after reading this is...what books do you recommend!? And also, do you think it makes a difference if the books are comics or novels?
When I was in my early teens, before high speed internet hit our part of the world I would read through books like no tomorrow. Now that I am done college, working, and have a family it is much harder to dedicate a good evening to reading a book. I do read comics here and there. Now that I have a son on the way it got me to thinking how I'd get him to read books when he is ready instead of always gaming like I have fallen into doing.

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John Luke Garofalo

Great questions!

what books do you recommend!?

The reason I didn't include this in this post was because I read a lot of different types of books. When I give recommendations, I tend to filter that through what I know about the person and which books she might get the most out of. I was thinking of following this post up with a list of the books that have had the most impact on me. The two I'd recommend over everything would be "How to Win Friends and Influence People" by Dale Carnegie and "Man's Search for Meaning" by Viktor Frankl.

do you think if the books are comics or novels?

I think that works of fiction can be just as important. They offer a way to expand your imagination and escape into a different mode of thinking that can be applicable in your work. It's important to have balance. I have 4-5 books in progress at any moment across different domains so that I can stimulate my mind in different ways depending on my environment, mood, etc...

Now that I am done college, working, and have a family it is much harder to dedicate a good evening to reading a book.

I love this reflection. This is very much why I wrote this post. Between my full-time job, side business, and going back to get my master's degree, I found myself neglecting my habit of reading books. Hopefully this post helped you see that you don't need to dedicate an evening to it, you can fit it into your day, without changing your routine.

Now that I have a son on the way it got me to thinking how I'd get him to read books when he is ready instead of always gaming like I have fallen into doing.

First of all, congratulations on your new baby! I've actually researched this quite a bit in my graduate school program. The research says that the best way to get your children to read is to read to them consistently as they grow up and to read consistently yourself. Kids want to be like their parents. If they see you reading for fun, they will want to read for fun. It seems obvious, but it's not. Think of how many kids want to play on an iPad because they see their parents on their phones all day.

Thank you for the thoughtful response, Ryan! Let me know how your reading goes and any books you find impactful.

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Michael Messerli

What a timely post. I've made a resolution for myself in the past week to read more. I added "Read/listen to a book for 30 minutes" every day to my to-do list. I usually go over, but I'm trying to use an achieveable time to build the habit.

I work remotely now and honestly miss having a commute for the sole reason of not having that perfect time for books or podcasts. IMO driving is best balance of keeping my brain focused on what's being said and not wandering because I also have to pay attention to my surroundings.

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John Luke Garofalo

That's great! I commend you for making a commitment to your growth. Let me know how it goes!

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Lou (πŸš€ Open Up The Cloud ☁️) • Edited

I can tell by the "On..." format title that you've read some philosophy!

Some good points in here β€” especially about abandoning books for instance. I have a lot of books on the go at any one time, I find that makes it a lot easier, since I read whatever it is that I feel that I "need" at that point: Something calm, inspiring, something to get me unstuck etc. I find it takes having quite a large pool to be able to cater for all the different "moods" that I go through.

Thanks for sharing, John.

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bigcross9

Did you read Blink: The power of thinking without thinking ? are this kind of books better than reading horror books or any genre can be good?

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John Luke Garofalo

I personally love books like Blink, where you're learning about psychology and cognitive processes and how those lessons can be applied to your life. These types of books (i.e. self-development, leadership, business) have become my favorite to read because I get so much out of them and I'm able to apply the lessons every day.

Copied from an earlier comment asking the same thing...
I think that works of fiction can be just as important. They offer a way to expand your imagination and escape into a different mode of thinking that can be applicable in your work. It's important to have balance. I have 4-5 books in progress at any moment across different domains so that I can stimulate my mind in different ways depending on my environment, mood, etc...