this post was submitted on 24 Jun 2023
128 points (99.2% liked)

Books

10265 readers
2 users here now

Book reader community.

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 

I used to be an avid reader, but years of high school and depression completely ruined that. I haven't been able to complete a novel since senior year six years ago. It's frustrating to me and I want to know how I can overcome my lack of focus and anxiety. I've heard I'm not alone when it comes to this sort of thing at least.

E: I wasn't expecting so many replies. Thank you, all of you, for the ideas.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] Sunrosa 10 points 2 years ago (1 children)

In my personal experience, when I do a lot of quickly rewarding things, the pace of my life speeds up. Drastically. It's something that takes weeks to recover from. For example, whenever I hit the road for a few months, away from my computer, using my phone for only a couple hours a day, I find this peace. It's not the sort of peace you feel when you're just chilling during the day. It's lasting peace, on a large scale. And I read a lot when I'm out there. But as soon as I return home, I return to my computer, and suddenly, life is full of opportunities for instant rewards (dopamine) again. And then I lose the patience for the slower and greater dopamine sources. It's like, why would I want to wait hours to receive a lot of dopamine, when I could just have a little bit now, and a little bit then, and a little bit later. It takes willpower. You need to take a step back from the daily rush, especially involving your phone and social media, and YouTube and stuff.

It will require willpower, because the change will not be instant. Going outside and basking in the breeze is one of the easiest ways for me to just slooow down. Try meditation too. Just sit there, thinking of nothing (or if you have to, think about your breathing, or even think about thinking about nothing), and feel your body relax. You do not need to be doing things all day every day. Boredom can even be your friend. Learning to become one with nothingness is how you're going to start reading again. Be patient, and commit to things without expecting instant gratification.

[โ€“] Sunrosa 2 points 2 years ago

Also, if you like cool software, and you have a Linux box available, or Android, or a Kindle (YMMV), or a Kobo, or some other devices, KOReader singlehandedly got me back into reading. It's such a good and well-rounded piece of reader software, that tracks in-depth your reading time statistics, plus many many other things. Perhaps you could use your time spent reading as a dopamine catalyst. That's part of what I do.