
5 Ways to Slow Down and Smell the Metaphorical Roses While Reading
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I have long struggled with teaching myself to slow down while reading and give myself a chance to smell the metaphorical roses of the reading experience. I truly think there is something to be gained by spending a little more time with the nuances of the stories. Everybody reads and thinks at different paces, but if you need a little help slowing down every once in while here are 5 tricks that have helped me in the past.
I started keeping a commonplace book because a professor required it of me but even after graduation, I haven’t stopped. A commonplace book is like a real-life Pinterest where you can organize quotes you like from books into whatever categories you like. I find that when I’m looking for particular sentiments or just really beautiful sentences within a story and I have to categorize them, it forces me to think more deeply about how the quote I chose fits in the grand scheme. Sometimes the meaning of the quote changes completely when it’s taken out of context from the story. Thinking about how the individual sentiments and sentences fit into the grand scheme of the book always makes me slow down and appreciate the authors skill.
I am currently reading One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez. It has been an excellent book so far but it follows several generations of a family and the kids are all named after the parents. There are so many books similar to this with a large cast of characters and it can be a little confusing if you read too fast and don’t pick up on who you are reading about. This is where a little notecard keeping track of who is who can help you. It can even be used as a book mark and it will help you to slow down and think about the impact each character is having on their world.
If you feel like you are zooming through books way too fast find or start a book club that only reads a couple chapters of a book a week. Sometimes the very idea of having to talk to people about a single section of a book is enough to slow down a bit and carefully consider what you’re reading. Nobody wants to be the person that shows up and can only talk about the end, which no one else has gotten to yet because they spent time with the assigned chapters. It will be like having an accountability buddy for slow reading.
If you can afford to buy your own books and can get over the idea that they can’t be marked up then annotating is a great way to slow down and think about and interface with the text. You can write down random thoughts you have while reading, questions, predictions, or you can highlight passages that feel important or particularly well done. The activity of physically engaging with the text often gives you time to step back and think about various aspects of the story in a deeper and more meaningful way.