Anonymous wrote:I enjoy reading so much that the idea of someone who doesn't enjoy reading absolutely baffles me. It's like saying, "I don't shower." It's woven into my life. FTR, i haven't enjoyed any fiction books I've read in a long time, so I pretty much focus on non-fiction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only very stupid and uninteresting people fail to read.
Sounds like you should read "Miss Manners."
Anonymous wrote:Only very stupid and uninteresting people fail to read.
Anonymous wrote:I guess I do judge. Almost all of human knowledge is in a book somewhere. I don't think fiction is the be-all-end-all - what about history, current events, memoir, science writing, religion, philosophy, hell, cookbooks and DIY too. Obviously, news, magazines and the web to some extent cover some of the bases too. But I don't see how anyone with any intellectual curiosity isn't reading *something*.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not completely true -- but if it isn't in the Wall Street Journal or Forbes, I frankly probably don't care enough to read it.
I find it amazing that all of my friends and colleagues have a book going at all times. The last time I read a book for pleasure was 1 book 10 yrs ago. The last time before that -- someone was forcing me to read the "classics" in HS though my idea of reading those was speeding reading and reading the cliff notes to ace the test. I didn't read a single book in college (finance major and I made sure to come in with AP credit so I could get out of the reading intensive liberal arts kinds of requirements though I think we were only required to take 2-3 of those max anyway).
I used to read a lot when I was a kid -- up until maybe 6th-7th grade (think Babysitters Club and the like) and then when I stopped, that was it. I'm otherwise a well educated professional, 2 ivy degrees etc. I just can't pretend to care about fiction; I don't know how to get into it. As for non fiction -- theoretically that sounds better bc at least you're learning something, but I don't have the attention span to stick with a 300 pg biography.
OP- I'm a "reader" but I have a couple of highly educated successful friends who are not-- at all. I notice that they really enjoy hands on hobbies like athletics, refurbishing furniture, gardening, etc. they are people who need to be moving and have a lot of spare physical energy.
This is personality- people are different and derive energy from different things. When I have spare time, I like reading and movies and puttering around the kitchen. I'm also big on naps.
Anonymous wrote:Not completely true -- but if it isn't in the Wall Street Journal or Forbes, I frankly probably don't care enough to read it.
I find it amazing that all of my friends and colleagues have a book going at all times. The last time I read a book for pleasure was 1 book 10 yrs ago. The last time before that -- someone was forcing me to read the "classics" in HS though my idea of reading those was speeding reading and reading the cliff notes to ace the test. I didn't read a single book in college (finance major and I made sure to come in with AP credit so I could get out of the reading intensive liberal arts kinds of requirements though I think we were only required to take 2-3 of those max anyway).
I used to read a lot when I was a kid -- up until maybe 6th-7th grade (think Babysitters Club and the like) and then when I stopped, that was it. I'm otherwise a well educated professional, 2 ivy degrees etc. I just can't pretend to care about fiction; I don't know how to get into it. As for non fiction -- theoretically that sounds better bc at least you're learning something, but I don't have the attention span to stick with a 300 pg biography.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I devour books non-stop: fiction, non-fiction and everything in between. My nightmare is getting stuck somewhere without access to books.
As long as you have a fulfilling life, not reading is perfectly fine.
This is me, too. I'd rather sit and read the back of a cereal box for the ninth time than not read anything at all. As others said, it's also my escape and my relaxation. My husband doesn't read much other than history/non-fiction, but I realized reading the quoted comment above that that's how he feels about music. I could happily live without it as long as I had books; he's the exact opposite and would be miserable stuck without anything to listen to.
Anonymous wrote:I devour books non-stop: fiction, non-fiction and everything in between. My nightmare is getting stuck somewhere without access to books.
As long as you have a fulfilling life, not reading is perfectly fine.