Tuesday, July 10, 2018

Reading Books Will Help You Build These 7 Habits

1. Reading books helps you build the habit of taking the right kind of nootropic

I apologize to all the modafinil lovers out there, but books have most nootropics beat. Eventually, nootropics wear off. Meanwhile, reading permanently upgrades your mind, leaving you with a lifetime of benefits. The side effects of books have been tested by time, whereas the latest nootropics? Not so much. When you get into the habit of taking a nootropic such as reading through books, the benefits compound.
“Read 500 pages like this every day. That’s how knowledge works. It builds up, like compound interest. All of you can do it, but I guarantee not many of you will do it.” — Warren Buffett
reading book

2. Reading books helps you build the habit of upgrade your mental operating system

There are many people who never update their mental operating systems through reading. Upgrading your mental OS is an ongoing habit you have to develop, and books help you do it. So how does this mental OS update occur?
The best books are written when the author is in a flow state. The author transmits their wisdom, muse, or insights with minimal ego. When a reader seeking wisdom moves through these words and enters their own flow state… magic happens.
I don’t know how it works, but after enough time of reading, my mind always feels upgraded. Programming our minds by moving consciously into the flow state of another wise person is powerful.
When we upgrade our mental OS, our main apps (speaking, writing, and communicating) all begin to run faster and more smoothly.

3. Reading books helps you build the habit of sitting quietly in a room alone

Eric Hoffer was onto something when he said that, “A man by himself is in bad company.” This might be true initially, but we can grow ourselves out of this place. It takes hard work to become good company to ourselves. But if we read books, pause for reflection, and continually improve ourselves… we can develop the habit of sitting quietly in a room alone. By reading books, we build an inessential habit, which can help fight some of the greatest human challenges of our time:
“All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone” — Blaise Pascal

4. Reading books helps you build the habit of getting direct experience

There are tradeoffs for everything in life, but reading a lot (of the best books) isn’t dangerous. The hunger for wisdom seems to be the only desire that we can satiate. There isn’t a risk of overindulgence. After enough reading, we become charged with good ideas and courage to go out and explore the world. Once we get fueled up on enough wisdom, we become inspired to embark on our next hero and heroine’s journey. This means we’re guaranteed to get direct experience in the real world without some technological filter.
Binge reading books leads to a hunger for experience in the real world.

5. Reading books helps you build the habit of meditation

The more we read and spend time with books, the more we’re forced to practice mindfulness and meditation. Reading builds the habits of patience, calmness, and builds our ability to focus deeply on a single thing for an extended period of time.

6. Reading books helps you build the habit of strategic isolation

“Sanity in this culture, requires a certain amount of alienation.” –Terence McKenna
Books and reading are one of the last societally acceptable reasons for being alone. If you need respite from society, there is no better strategic isolation than books. Books help keep us safe from crowds.

7. Reading books helps you build the habit of telling the truth

“I am of course confident that I will fulfil my tasks as a writer in all circumstances — from my grave even more successfully and more irrefutably than in my lifetime. No one can bar the road to truth, and to advance its cause I am prepared to accept even death. But may it be that repeated lessons will finally teach us not to stop the writer’s pen during his lifetime? At no time has this ennobled our history.” –Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

1 comment:

  1. Sheerly relevant piece of detail allocated by you. There is no denying that this information might turn out to be considered to a greater part of apprentices. Keep updating.
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