12 Tips for Organizing Your Reading Time

Posted on: October 13th, 2014 by Julie Bestry | 3 Comments

Recently, we talked about organizing your space for more reading time. That’s a great start, but you probably still have obstacles. You’re busy: at work, at home, volunteering, and schlepping between home, work, school and all the sites of your errands. Maybe you’re tired. Maybe the last book you read cover to cover was Goodnight Moon. Perhaps reading too many tweets and Instagram captions has shortened your attention span.

How will you get yourself back into reading? Try these dozen tips to carve more reading time out of your schedule.

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1) BUILD SOME STRUCTURE INTO YOUR SCHEDULE. (Think of it as a temporal book fort!) I’m not suggesting that you schedule yourself to read every day from 10:18a until 10:37a (though you certainly could). But the truth is that when we don’t plan when we’re going to perform a task, it’s far less likely that it will be accomplished at all, especially when there are no external pressures to force the issue.

Most of what we do, we do either by rote or when there’s a situational compulsion (children who need to be fed, bills that must be paid, supervisors who want their TPS reports ASAP) to do so. But if we plan and link similar tasks together, we’re much more likely to be successful at starting (and hopefully, accomplishing) what we want to do.

Create or envision blocks in your schedule for when you will perform different types of tasks: housekeeping, physical self-care/exercise/grooming, errands. Somewhere, find a block and plan when you will set aside some time to read for fun. If you’re an at-home parent, maybe you might block 45 minutes for housework in the late morning, followed by 30 minutes for reading (as a reward for getting through an entire week without stepping on a Lego)!

Professionally, consider reading in your field to be as much a part of your work as attending conferences or participating in other forms of continuing education. Experiment by blocking two fifteen-minute slots each day, perhaps just prior to lunch and then mid-afternoon, to read professional journals or other writing in your field.

Create a family reading hour or reading night. This could be an hour every evening, or even part of a variety of options: Family Board Game Night, Family Bowling Night, Family Bottlecap Collecting Night! (What? Bert must have family somewhere!)

2) ASK FOR A BREAK. Other people’s expectations of your time should not go unchallenged. Do you do all the cooking and cleaning and driving and nurturing while your significant other (or housemate) benefits from your hospitable nature? Have a heart-to-heart with loved ones about splitting or trading tasks, and request some specific, scheduled downtime so that you can meditate, read, and center yourself. All work and no fun makes, well, for something not so pleasant!

Give yourself a break, too. Remember that every activity in which you participate is an active choice and a tradeoff. If you choose to hire a housekeeper for a few hours a week to do the tasks you truly hate, while Hazel is washing the bathroom floor, you can jettison the guilt and read The Fault in our Stars. You could choose to order pizza instead of cooking, and use the found time to delve into The Goldfinch. And in your office, you could automate or outsource the tasks outside your strongest skill set and use the found moments to read 57 Secrets for Organizing Your Small Business.

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3) MULTITASK, BUT WISELY. Real multi-tasking is a myth. Our brains cannot handle actually focusing on two things at once. We are merely switch-tasking, moving quickly back and forth between two tasks. Generally, this means reduced efficiency at both endeavors. However, there is one way to get two things done at once with little loss of time or quality, but it only works when one of the tasks requires little, if any, cognitive capacity. For example:

  • Read while doing the laundry. One of the very few delights of being a poor college student or otherwise lacking one’s own washer/dryer is the time spent sitting in plastic chairs amid dubious co-launderers at the laundromat with little to do except read. It’s not like we have to traipse to the river to beat our permanent press against the rocks. Push the buttons, then settle in and read!
  • Read while traveling. Surely nobody suggests you should read while driving or biking, but, provided you have ample natural light, an Itty Bitty Book Light, or a backlit e-reader or tablet, you can read — as a passenger — during a road trip, a taxi ride, on the subway (provided you have safe seating and keep your wits about you), on the train or while flying. [Remember to load ebooks from cloud storage to your device before embarking, as Wi-Fi may be unpredictable en route.]
  • Read while cooking. OK, not cooking, per se. Paper and stovetops are a really bad combination. But if you’ve just put a frozen dinner in the microwave, you’ve got anywhere from three to a dozen minutes when you need to stay close to the kitchen. Set a timer for when the food has to be checked so you don’t get too deeply engrossed in your chapter.
  • Read while eating. People who are loath to dine alone usually develop a habit of bringing a book into a restaurant, but I’m often surprised by how few people ever think to read during breakfast or lunch, the meals where they’re the most likely to be eating alone. Indeed, if you tend to gobble your non-social meals to get to your next task, savoring a page with every taste may help you digest your thoughts as well as your food.
  • Read while waiting. In the carpool line before school lets out. In the parking lot when the person you’re picking up is running late. Before seeing the doctor or while waiting for your children, significant other or friends to finish their appointments. Sure, it’s not the same as losing yourself in a novel for three hours while bundled under a cozy blanket, but even five or ten minutes of reading time can be luxurious.
  • Read while working out…maybe. Paper Doll is definitely no expert in exercise physiology, and obviously you’re not going to read while doing crunches or lifting weights. But enough people have expanded from standing desks to treadmill desks that treadmill walking and reading is worth investigating. I know I’d get queasy and I suspect many might become lax with regard to maintaining proper form. But since a treadmill is like an endless walk to nowhere, why not pair your walking with reading, which is a journey to wherever you choose?

4) RISE and SHINE. The common advice for those who can’t find time to exercise is to awaken 15 or 30 minutes earlier than usual. For those of us who are not morning people, that’s like saying, “Hey, if you give up your dessert, you’ll have more time to do homework!” However, if your book or e-reader is at your bedside and you can start your day bathed in gentle light, snuggled under the covers, slowly warming up your brain for a busy day, you’ll not only have discovered time for reading, but when your regular alarm goes off, you’ll be less stressed about facing your day.

5) SET A READING GOAL! 52 novels in a year? One book in your professional field each month? A biography of every president or monarch of England in chronological order, starting with the first? The nature of your goal or the benchmarks really don’t matter, but having an aspiration can lend form to your approach, and give you a sense of progress. It’s like training for a half-marathon or working towards a degree. Just knowing that you’re on the path will inspire you, and that inspiration will condition you to weigh your priorities and focus your time and attention.

6) LISTEN TO AN AUDIO BOOK. For some reason, some people feel like it’s cheating to listen instead of read, but while seeing and hearing are both passive activities, reading and listening are active. Your brain still creates visuals, conjures scents and textures and emotions, and flickers with its own internal, customized film.

Reading is already a collaborative process: the writer creates, whether from whole cloth or from research. You, the reader, take in what’s presented and create your own sense of meaning and understanding. It’s not any more of a cheat to listen to Neil deGrasse Tyson read Death By Black Hole than it would be to attend one of his lectures, and neither should be considered an inferior experience to reading the book. So…

7) JOIN A BOOK CLUB. An ideal book club is one where people you like are reading and discussing the kinds of books you want to read and discuss. It’s one that inspires more reading and extends the joy of the experience beyond “The End.”

For many of us, inspiration, even to do things we want to do, benefits from a kick in the pants via social interaction. People start exercise regimens because their high school reunions are upcoming. More than a few of you report scheduling dinner parties to yield the necessary panic to get you to clean or organize your home. If going to a book club to discuss a book you’d have wanted to read anyway will give you the extra push needed to read the book (because you want to engage in delightful conversation or even to avoid sounding like an oaf), then go to it!

8) FIND A READING PARTNER. This is different from joining a book club, the goal of which is to bring everyone together after they’ve read the book. If you and a friend (across the hall or across the globe) commit to reading a book together, you’ll soon find inspiration — and time — to read. If you think discussing Scandal at the water cooler is fun, making time to chat with a friend (in person, over the phone or on Skype) over the latest chapter of a classic or a new best-seller provides a special thrill. You get to enjoy the book while reading, and then savor it again while reveling in one another’s thoughts.

9) LEARN HOW TO READ FASTER. For my 19th birthday, my college friends gave me a book on speed reading as a joke. Speed reading, per se, is a dubious pursuit, but there really are a variety of ways to read faster while maintaining or even increasing one’s comprehension.

10) READ TWO OR MORE BOOKS CONCURRENTLY. Sometimes you feel like a nut; sometimes you don’t. Maybe the passage you’re currently reading evokes memories you don’t want to face right now. You like the story and are not planning on ditching the book, but sometimes you need to strike a different tone. Having an alternate book selection for today’s reading slot is like changing up your regular coffee order with an occasional pumpkin-spiced latte. If absence makes the heart grow fonder, taking a short break from one title while dabbling with another will make you all the more eager to return to the first.

11) GIVE UP! It may seem counterintuitive, but not books are for all people at all stages in their lives. Paper Doll is a fast reader and loves to lose herself in books, but two titles: Anna Karenina and Moby Dick have proved elusive. I’ve tried both, multiple times, and just can’t push through. Giving up — for now — on a book that isn’t satisfying you is like accepting the fact that cilantro just isn’t your seasoning.

Letting go of obligations or possessions that don’t serve your current goals gives you time and space for the things that do matter to you. Letting go of a book that doesn’t tickle your fancy will free up time to immerse yourself in your next BBFF (Best Book Friend Forever).

12) DRIP BY DRIP, PUT IT TOGETHER. If your life is so overburdened with tasks you are unable or unwilling to give up or reduce, your time truly is as limited as the space of someone who lives in a studio apartment and collects pianos.

But hope is not lost. Micro-reading opportunities may serve your needs. In our next post, we’ll be looking at how digital era technology, including sites and apps like Daily Lit, Rooster, Drip Read and others, can deliver appetizer-sized portions of books to people who don’t have the time for a sit-down meal of good reading.

3 Responses

  1. John Trosko says:

    Very extensive list Julie. Well thought out for sure. I learned a few things and you explored every angle!

    John

  2. Julie Bestry says:

    Awww, John, thank you for the kind words! We all need more time to read!

  3. Janine Adams says:

    I love this, Julie! I finish a novel every week or two, and I keep a list of the books I’ve read in Evernote. (So I can tell you that I’m reading my 31st book of the year.) I tend to be a multitasking reader–I read while eating breakfast and lunch (if I’m eating lunch alone) and while I’m brushing and flossing my teeth. And I also read in bed. My Kindle Paperwhite has made reading so easy and portable. I just love it.

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