So far behind

Once again, I’ve fallen behind on my reading challenge. I committed to reading 36 books in 2014 for the Mount TBR Challenge on Goodreads. The goal is to reduce the size of our To Be Read piles by actually reading the books. 36 books. That’s all. Should be a piece of cake, a walk in the park, .

I listed the books I planned to read, a nice mix of classics plus both fiction and non-fiction from recent years. I was off to a good start, and then…I got derailed. Every time I went to the library or walked past a bookstore, I was distracted by other books I wanted to read. So, I read those books, and not the ones I committed to read.

Well, I’ve just finished a chat with a few of the stellar reader-heroes who always finish their challenges with time to spare, and I’ve discovered their secret. They update their lists monthly, taking off some of the listed titles and filling in the titles of the books they actually read, even if those books weren’t on their original list.

I’m feeling seriously disillusioned.
Bummed.
Betrayed.
.
.
.
Envious.

So, that’s what I’ll do for the remaining months of 2014: read whatever I feel like reading, as long as it’s from my 1000-book To Read wishlist. When I finish it, I will enter it into my Mount TBR list in place of something that’s already there that I won’t get to this year.

And, for the 2015 Mount TBR Challenge, I will start with a BLANK LIST, and fill in the titles as I go.

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The Third Day

the third day - lake and tree

12 The land produced vegetation—plants yielding seeds according to their kinds, and trees bearing fruit with seed in it according to their kinds. God saw that it was good. 13 There was evening, and there was morning, a third day.

 

Today was another glorious day. Instead of the predicted cold rain, we had bright sunshine. A glorious day, and I had to spend it inside.

I’m working on several projects, all with upcoming milestones: a couple of web projects, a couple of computer coaching clients with problems I need to help them solve, a couple of knitting projects with promised delivery dates. I’m also still excavating my 40-year accumulation of work files, plus the cartons of stuff I inherited from my mother (along with her packrat genes).

When God created the grass and trees on the third day of creation, he knew he was halfway through his task list.

Sometimes, I feel like my task list goes on forever.

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Third Sentence Thursday: “At the heart…is fear”

Third Sentence Thursday

At the heart of such hard-edged boundaries is fear.

 

from A New Harmony: The Spirit, the Earth, and the Human Soul
by J. Philip Newell, p. 15, Kindle edition

This sentence is from the Prologue, and comes after several examples of the deep fragmentations that are driving humanity to the edge of destruction: racism, religious bigotry, greed. Newell proposes a radical shift in our understanding of our relationship with the physical world and with each other. I enjoyed his earlier book, “Christ of the Celts.” I’m hoping this one is at least as good. Even if it isn’t, I expect to learn a lot from the discussions as Sisters in Spirit discusses the book.

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Slow reading

18th century gentleman with iPad

Dr. John Friend and his iPad, after Michael Dahl by Mike Licht. CC Some rights reserved.

Two weeks ago, I read an article in the Wall Street Journal about an unusual sort of book club. The members of this club don’t discuss what they’re reading. They apparently don’t talk much at all, beyond a brief “Hello” at the beginning of the meeting and “See you next week” at the end.

I thought about my reading habits. For most of my life—since I learned to read around age four—I’ve read at least a book a day. I left in-progress books next to a comfortable chair in each room, on the porch, in the car, in my purse, in my backpack, even in the bathroom. I’d read while eating meals, if I were alone at the table. I always had a book with me, and I’d read on the bus, waiting in line at the bank, during lunch and breaks, in doctors’ waiting rooms, any time I had a minute or two between tasks, and for at least an hour at the end of the day as I wound down my brain from the day’s activity level to something more conducive to sleep.

Lately, though, I’ve noticed I’m reading far fewer books. I read magazines. I read blogs. I read online news articles. I still read some books, either paper or e-books, just not as many as I used to. I have at least eight in-progress books lying around, but instead of finishing one a day, it’s more like one or two books a month.

I first noticed this depressing change in habit a few years ago, but the WSJ article really made me think. In looking for reasons for the change, I’ve come to a few conclusions.

  • Over the last two years, the time I used to spend reading books at home is now spent sorting through boxes and boxes and boxes of old files: sorting them, reading them, deciding what to toss and what to scan and keep. This is exhausting, and uses up time and energy I used to spend reading.
  • I’m more socially active than I used to be. I go to more concerts, more art exhibits. And, through social media, I spend far more time chatting with friends all over the world than I used to. As my arthritic joints have increasingly limited my ability to comfortably hold a phone and write letters with pen and paper, I’ve replaced occasional letters and phone calls with daily electronic communication on Facebook and Twitter. As a result, I’m in much closer relationships with many of my relatives and friends, but I also spend more time maintaining those relationships—time I used to spend reading.
  • The world is noisier and more distracting than it was. People talk more loudly. Car horns are louder, easily heard even through closed windows in my home office. Computer keys clacking in a coffee shop are louder than paper pages turning. Everything everybody owns beeps at us constantly, whether we’re touching them or not. I need a quiet environment to enjoy reading.
  • Most of the books I want to read these days are big. Even paperback mysteries are 400-500 pages, now, and holding them open makes my hands hurt.
  • I’m not absorbing printed text as quickly as I used to when I was younger. I used to skim, and remember every word. Now, not so much. My previous normal reading speed is not serving me well any more, and reading isn’t as much fun. I need to slow down.

So what am I going to do about this? I’ve already made a start with three habit changes:

  • I’ve joined a book club that reads 2-3 books a year and meets twice a month to discuss a chapter or two. Even if I skim a book quickly, I have to go back and read it slowly to take part in the discussion.
  • I’ve joined a group on GoodReads where I committed to read a set number of books over the year. While it hasn’t gotten me back to my previous reading level, it is spurring me to actually finish the books I start.
  • I’m reading more and more books on my nook or using the Kindle app on my iPad. Yes, I still love the feel and smell of paper books, but I can carry hundreds of books on these devices, and it weighs about the same as paperback.

This isn’t enough, though, so I’m looking at the WSJ Slow Reading article for inspiration. So far, I haven’t found a group like this in Rochester, NY. Not even at Writers and Books, or local bookstores. Lots of book discussion groups; no quiet groups for slow reading.

Want to help me start one?

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Morning Light, 2014-09-18

morning light NYC

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