A research says that "reading engages the mind. Reading materials, by exercising our memory and imagination, can contribute to happiness in ways similar to active positive thinking. Regular readers are about 8 percent more likely to express daily satisfaction” (Scope, 1999). Even if we don’t read any research at all, we know that those who read books benefit from what they learn and entertainment or inspirations they receive. In addition to that, readers get to exercise their brain and feel satisfied that they are spending their time wisely.
Questions: Which would you choose to be, a person with an ever-decreasing attention span, or a person with an ever-increasing attention span? A person with access to the second- and third- work that would have been considered rubbish two decades ago, or a person with access to the work of the greatest minds we have ever known? A person with access to limited same basic story with the same basic characters, or a person with access to hundreds of choices that span nearly an infinite imagination?
Last question: Which would you rather be, a person who usually spends his or her free time in front of the television, the internet and smartphone, or a person who usually spends his or her free time reading? Would you rather be a boring person or a reading person? (Bad grammar, I know. Rather than "a reading person" it should be "a reader," right? Well, I don't want to be a boring person).
Reading is important for me because as Stephen King says, “If you don't have time to read, you don't have the time (or the tools) to write. Simple as that.”
Instagram ---> Richard_Angelus
THINK BIG. START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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