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I've been trying to read a lot of books , for example on on the book of life , how do you guys manage to not get burnout when reading, I feel I digested to much of everything
I think hitting a wall happens to everyone when they try to consume too much information too fast; treating reading like a marathon rather than a sprint is key to actually retaining what you digest.I've been trying to read a lot of books , for example on on the book of life , how do you guys manage to not get burnout when reading, I feel I digested to much of everything
I sometimes felt like that when I still bought and read printed books and felt obliged to finish them because I had spent money on them, even when they turned out to be duds that bored me to tears, but with almost every book being available online for free nowadays, things have greatly changed. Now I will simply discard the duds after a few pages, only read the chapters that seem interesting, or go down another rabbit hole they may have led me to without ever finishing the rest of the book.Burnout tends to be a problem when reading stuff you do not find interesting.
I sometimes felt like that when I still bought and read printed books and felt obliged to finish them because I had spent money on them, even when they turned out to be duds that bored me to tears, but with almost every book being available online for free nowadays, things have greatly changed. Now I will simply discard the duds after a few pages, only read the chapters that seem interesting, or go down another rabbit hole they may have led me to without ever finishing the rest of the book.
Additionally, it's helpful to take breaks now and them and do something physical instead, e.g. household chores or going for walk, however (and this is important!) without mulling over what you've just read - let it settle while keeping your mind blank if you're practicing mindfulness, or focus on what you're actually doing right now instead. It helps me enormously.
Whenever a book is touted as a must-read and the widely acclaimed authoritative work on subject X, I'll nevertheless put it into a folder in my collection if it fails to capture my imagination. It has frequently happened to me (and it's still happening to me as I write this) that I come back to such a standard work I just hadn't been ready for later on. To some books I'll return, many will just take up storage space (for now?). Reading burnout has happened to me in the past whenever I failed to assert my autonomy, for example when I thought: "Wow, that author is so erudite and bright, and I'm such an ignorant slob, I must study harder!" No. We're reading because we that's what we love, not because we're cramming for exams or write reviews for pay.