22 Feb 2008 03:51:33 | Jill Brennan
Is your life so busy you’re wondering how you are going to find
time to read more, especially when it’s just for ‘pleasure’?
Having trouble justifying it, even to yourself? Leisure
activities like reading are often the things that slide when
life goes into overdrive. And that’s sad because it’s an
activity that can make life richer and more enjoyable.
A lot has been written about the benefits of reading for and to
children. However, there is very little about the benefits to
adults in engaging in regular reading. Let me assure you that
the benefits for adults do exist and are many and varied.
Some of these include:
1. Providing an escape from the day-to-day Fiction is a great
way to take a quick immediate break, to be instantly transported
into another world. Today you could be in America, in the deep
south with Alice Walker’s ‘The Colour Purple’, tomorrow in the
Australian bush with Tim Winton’s ‘Dirt Music’, next week in
downtown London with Helen Fielding’s ‘Bridget Jones Diary’ and
next month in Ireland with Jim O’Neill’s ‘At Swim, Two Boys’.
There is no limit to the places fiction can take you.
2. Relaxation There is something about stopping to focus on
words arranged for our reading pleasure that is instantly
relaxing. Maybe it’s staying still, something that doesn’t seem
to happen often enough. Maybe it’s knowing that we are stepping
into a secret world that we have to relax enough to enter. Then
there is the words themselves. The beauty and rhythm of language
has the ability to calm and relax us.
3. Stress relief Taking your mind off your own problems, even
for a few minutes, can have a therapeutic effect and be a timely
circuit breaker. This is so effective that the National Health
System in the United Kingdom has introduced a ‘Reading and You
Scheme’. The scheme encourages mental health patients to read
more as part of their therapy for reducing stress and overcoming
anxiety, depression and social isolation.
4. Stimulates the right side of your brain Reading opens your
mind to new possibilities. It stretches your imagination in new
and wonderful directions and takes your mind on a wonderful
journey through others’ lives. What would you do if you were Jo
Becker in ‘While I Was Gone’ by Sue Miller? Would you tell your
husband and three daughters about a grisly crime that happened
when you were a university student? Or would you try to pretend
it never happened?
5. Entertaining Fiction is capable of provoking many and varied
emotional responses – it can make you laugh out loud, it can
make tears spill onto the page, it can be edge-of-the seat
terrifying, it can make you blush with embarrassment, it can
challenge your core beliefs. There is a world of emotion in
every story and you as the reader get to be part of it.
6. Enjoyable Reading is a deeply satisfying pursuit. The
expression ‘curling up with a book’ evokes a warm and cosy image
and feels luxurious if you don’t get to do it often.
7. Rejuvenating Reading is an easy and quick way to nourish your
soul because it is for the most part a solitary pursuit. And
being alone, or at least alone in your thoughts, on a regular
basis is crucial to maintaining a sense of self. As I’m sure you
know, it’s easier to give to others when you feel fulfilled and
your needs are met. Even just a few minutes of reading can keep
you going throughout the day. Of course, you know you’ve read
something special when you find your thoughts continually
re-visiting it.
Reading is like exercising – mental and physical benefits flow
from a regular routine.
So don’t feel guilty about taking time out to read. Its good for
you!
About Author :
Jill Brennan, an experienced writer, editor and mother of 2
young boys, created espresso Fiction to help time-poor fiction
lovers get a regular hit of quality fiction that they could read
in 15 minutes or less and still feel satisfied. To learn more
about getting great fiction home delivered, go to
http://www.fastfoodforyourmind.com