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Readingwiththerightbrain_bybutler

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READING WITH THE RIGHT BRAIN © Copyright 2014 David B utler Praise for READING WITH THE RIGHT BR AIN Unlike many other “speed reading” strategies available, Reading with the Right Brain is not gimmick; it’s a unique method that allows you to more effectively assimilate what you read in a shorter amount of time. Amanda Johnson, M.A., Assistant Professor of English, Collin College, Plano, Texas David Butler and I have been friends for five years and have enjoyed many interesting conversation about reading and comprehension. I have always found his thoughts on this subject to be incredibl unique and insightful. Reading with the Right Brain has given David a place to collect these ideas i one place, and make them easy to understand for anyone wishing to improve their reading skills. This book includes not only srcinal theories and techniques for reading improvement, but also a totally exclusive method of presenting practice exercises that makes it extremely easy to begin reading whole ideas at a time. Pick up this book and start reading with your whole brain. Richard Sutz, CEO, The Literacy Company, www.EfficientReading.com , Author of “Speed Reading for Dummies” I strongly recommend David Butler’s new book Reading with the Right Brain as one of the mos innovate new approaches to speed reading on the market today. For the past year, Dave and I have discussed in email exchanges crucial issues about reading comprehension and the history of speed reading instructions. Dave’s unique approach emphasizes the importance of reading with the right side of the brain which helps the reader quickly comprehend a text by converting groups of words into images and concepts. It is amazing to me that so much could have been written in so many years since Evelyn Wood abou speed reading and no one came up with the idea of “speed comprehension.” All the other programs emphasize rapid movement over on text, promising wouldlink. follow, which it usually didn’t. Theeye concept of focusing com prehensionthat firstcomprehension has been the missing Reading with the Right Brain, is a “must read” for peoples interested in improving their readin comprehension and speed. Dr. James Young, Professor of English, Weber State University, Ogden, Utah David Butler gets to the core of reading comprehension in Reading with the Right Brain, wit effective techniques and exercises to focus your attention on meaning versus words. This book will speed up your reading, increase your comprehension, and make reading a pleasurable pursuit of new orlds of knowledge rather than slow torture that only leads to confusion. Read it and learn! Danielle Ellis, Mother, editor, and 6th grade teacher Table of Contents Praise for Reading With The Right Brain Introduction Chapte r 1: Ge tting Started Chapter 2: How Can You Read Faster? Chapter 3: Your New Reading Experience Chapter 4: The Basics Chapter 5: Skills Chapter 6: Ancie nt History Chapter 7: Modern History Chapter 8: Texting the Brain Chapter 9: Reading with the Brain Chapter 10: Mindset Chapter 11: Comprehension Chapter 12: Habits Chapter 13: Visualizing Chapter 14: Conce ptualiz ing Chapter 15: Reading Speeds Chapter 16: Comprehension Speeds Chapter 17: Techniques Chapter 18: Mythical Exercises Chapter 19: Mythical Stories Chapter 20: Reading on Your Own The End About the Author Introduction slammed the book shut. Why was I such a frustratingly slow reader? And why couldn’t remember what I read? was sitting in my yard, in the shade of the tall white birch trees, beneath the blue summer sky, reading a book I was very interested in. But I couldn’t help getting angry at how much time the reading was taking me and how poor my comprehension was. How could I enjoy a book if I had to read it in slow motion? And then just f orget it all ? This was me several years ago. And if this sounds like you, read on. I can show you how to rea faster and understand more, by reading with more of your brain; specifically the powerful, intuitive, big-picture right hemisphere. Although not normally associated with reading, this side of your head has a unique capability of quickly visualizing and conceptualizing entire complex ideas. Reading with the right brain is a technique which opened the doors to reading for me. This is not like any other technique you may have already tried; believe me, I’ve tried them all. This is different. This book is about learning to read conceptually and imagining and visualizing what you are reading. Reading conceptually is not just another speed reading trick, but a different way of thinking. B learning to use your right brain’s visualizing abilities, you can end the lazy habit of merely reciting ords, and learn to really think about the ideas. This book explains how stronger comprehension leads to faster reading, how the history of reading developed, the habits brain manages to accomplish this miracle. is myths. also a discussion on how to side-step and bad how reading and an examination of popular speed There reading The jewel of this book though is the set of 20 unique reading exercises, which make it easy to learn to read with the right brain by guiding your attention to each of the short, meaningful pieces o information which sentences are made of. These specially formatted exercises will give you an eas ay to experience how it feels to read faster and to read with better comprehension. By spending a little time practicing with these exercises, you can discover the power of reading with the right brain. Frustration I had always wished I was a better reader. I wanted to read more but I was so slow. I was intereste in non-fiction books, especially history and science, but if the point of reading non-fiction was to acquire and retain knowledge, then this was probably the single least effective activity I ever engaged in. Not only was I slow, but after spending dozens of hours getting to the end of a book, I onl retained the foggiest idea of what I had read. I had always been frustrated by how much time my reading took. And no matter how much I read, as still slow. I wanted to improve but didn’t know how. Nothing I tried worked. As a young boy, I would see advertisements that promised to teach me to "speed read." I don’ remember what these courses cost, but it must have been more than I could afford on my allowance. In high school, I finally had the chance to take a night course on speed reading—one night a week fo ten weeks. An impressive looking machine displayed text in short segments, one at a time, with a control for speed adjustment. It seemed like this should work for sure, but in the end it had no real effect. The faster the text displayed, the worse my comprehension was. I tried several speed reading books and courses during high school, college, and beyond, but was always disappointed. Reading well should have been in my genes. My father and mother were excellent readers. My mothe loved to read fiction and my father loved non-fiction. My father was self-taught sinceth8 grade, but because of his passion for reading, he could speak intelligently on practically any subject. But it didn’t look like I had inherited my parents’ reading skills. I also found it difficult to maintai concentration I had horrible memory. What was wrong with me? Maybe I just had a slow brain Maybe I couldand never reada faster. Discovery Then one day at the age of 49, in the summer of 2000, I was sitting in my yard trying to get through book on the interesting science of fractals. But again, it was a struggle. I couldn’t stand it anymore. It seemed stupid to spend so much time reading with so little to show fo it. I shut the book. I sat holding the closed book, wondering if I should force myself to continue reading. I didn’t kno hat to do. I would be a quitter if I gave up, but a fool to waste so much time on a beautiful summe day. I reopened the book and stared at the page… and then something interesting happened. As my mind idled, I began to notice patterns in the arrangement of the words. The rows of spaces seemed to for horizontal, slanted, and vertical lines that outlined blocks of words. I played with this illusion for a while, but then this mental rest stop led me to wonder if there were patterns in the ideas too. Just as these clumps of words formed visual patterns, there were probably clumps of words that created patterns ofideas . What if reading in “idea clumps” would make reading faster? Grouping letters into words is easy because of the spaces between words, but what about ideas? Ideas usually require multiple words; shorter than sentences, but long enough to form complete pieces of understandable information. What if I tried to concentrate on these complete ideas instead o individual words? I grabbed a pencil from the house and started marking off groups of what I though sounded like meaningful chunks of words with slashes like this: ut before / we go into / an introductory discussion / of what chaos theory / is trying to accomplish, / let us look / at some historical aspects / of the fiel d. / I f we look / at the development of the sciences / on a/ time-scale / on /which the efforts / of forebears will observe / indications of an apparent recap/itulation / in theour present day, // are evenvisible, if / at /a we different level. And wow! Suddenly when I read these phrases as complete units of meaning, the ideas seemed t ump off the page, straight into my mind! I marked up and read several more pages. This looked like a breakthrough. I could read the tex faster, plus the text was easier to understand. This was the solution I had been looking for. There was one problem though. How could I read lik this without needing to first manually mark up the text? As a design engineer, it was difficult to leave a problem like this alone. In fact, it was more like the idea owned me than vice versa. It was an interesting challenge, and it also looked like it might help me overcome my long-time struggle with reading. A few weeks later, I came up with an interesting idea for a computer program that could automatically divide text into meaningful phrases. After learning a little programming, I put together a test of this idea and tried this automatic phrase-parser on some text from an online news story. I displayed the phrases one at a time and I was immediately convinced that I was on to something. Th results weren’t perfect, but it definitely made the text faster to read and easier to understand. Development After this discovery, I spent the next few years improving the algorithm, and also making the progra available online to see if others had the same response I did. This srcinal online reading tool, whic can still be found atspeedreader.com/v1, resulted in plenty of positive feedback, which in turn, motivated me even more to continue working on it. I was sleeping late one morning in January 2009, when I was woken by a phone call. It was the CE of a company that teaches speed reading. He had seen my website and wanted to discuss licensing m algorithm for use in his own software. This very nice gentleman flew out to California for a couple o meetings, and over the next few months we worked out an agreement and signed a licensing contract. I was walking on a cloud. Imagine, licensing my idea! But unfortunately the deteriorating econom had other plans for me. After several more meetings with the CEO and working for months with hi company programmer to add this new feature to their software, things ground to a halt. Their updated software was never released, and eventually it became evident that it probably never would be. But while working with this company, something else happened. They had asked me to help the develop lesson plans around this method, and the plans I came up with are what led to the creation o my own course now atreadspeeder.com. The company had also asked for my ideas about why this method worked so well. It was in coming up ith answers to these questions that I realized faster reading mostly required faster thinking, and the only effective way to think faster is to process more information at a time—that is, to read whole ideas or thought-units, instead of words. I could see that reading these thought-units was a faster way to read and comprehend, but reading this ay also took more concentration, and this level of concentration was sometimes difficult to maintain. What could a reader do to hold their attention on the larger ideas? Then I discovered that if Ivisualized what I was reading, I would automatically think in large concepts. By concentrating on visual images, I was encouraging my brain to think of the larger ideas. Even if I couldn’t always think of an actual image, the attempt to visualize was still focusing m attention on mental concepts rather than words. As I thought about this visualizing technique, I realized I’d seen something like this before. Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain by Betty Edwards is a very effective book for learning to draw. The book was first published in 1979, when the science of lateral brain function was new. The book explained how, contrary to how the left brain merely described things, the right brain thought in pictures; and by suppressing the descriptions on the left side, you could use the special right brain talent to actually draw what you saw instead of what you thought you saw. This seemed similar to what I was doing when visualizing the thought-units. I was using my visua right hemisphere to imagine the real concepts of what I was reading. We don’t need to explore any of this science in detail, but only need to understand that each side of the brain works in a very different way. For those with a computer background, basically the left brain works as a serial processor, and the right brain works as a parallel processor. This means the left brain handles information one step at a time, while the right brain looks at whole patterns o information simultaneously. The result is that the two sides have different personalities and see the world in very different ways. But it’s the partnership of this odd couple that lets us make careful analyses as well as leaps o intuition. Recognizing this, it became apparent where my difficulty in reading had occurred. I was concentrating heavily on the left-brain function of decoding words, and was leaving the real comprehension o ideas pretty much to chance. But this was all I was ever taught in school. Word-recognition is where most reading instruction ends. Most of the more advanced reading improvement courses also only concentrate on the left brain function of recognizing words, but then just having you try to recognize them faster. Tapping the right brain was the answer, and understanding how to do this could be a big help. Even though the ReadSpeeder course was very effective and well-received, I saw there was still a need fo a clearer explanation of how and why this worked, and how to best apply this method. Collecting, clarifying, and organizing these ideas is what led to this book. This approach to improving reading skills is different from previous approaches because it doesn’ suggest pushing your speed and waiting for your comprehension to catch up. Instead, it teaches you how to strengthen your comprehension and then let your reading speed increase on its own. This is not a subtle difference. To read faster you must forget about howfast you are reading and put all your attention on what you are reading. But first I want to tell you a joke. Initial Speed Test Onillthe page, there to is read. a quick test to determine your current reading speed. This short tes onlyfollowing take about a minute The test is in the form of a joke. A joke is used to guarantee comprehension, because who likes to read a joke without getting it? This means you won’t need to take a “comprehension” test because, as ith any joke, you’ll know if you “get it” or not. For this test, read exactly the way you would normally read. Don’t worry about getting a low score, and don’t try to read faster than your normal speed. This will be your “before” picture. Use a stopwatch (there are several free ones available on the internet) or use a clock and subtrac your starting time from your ending time to find how long it takes you to read the test. You can download a form for recording your initial speed and your later exercise results at ww.readspeeder.com/reading-speeds.html. After starting your stopwatch or making a note of your start time, immediately begin reading the tex on the next page. When you have finished reading, make a note of your reading time and calculate your words per minute. When you’re ready, start the clock, turn to the next page, and begin. Remember, read at your normal speed. A wife was preparing a breakfast of fried eggs for her husband when he suddenly burst into the kitchen. “Careful!” he said. “Careful! Put in some more butter! Oh, my gosh! You’re cooking too many a once! “Too many! Turn them! Turn them now! Now! We need more butter! Oh, my gosh! They’re going to stick! “Slow things down a bit! Careful! Careful! I said be careful! You never listen to me when you’re cooking! Never! “Right, turn them! Hurry up! Turn them now! Are you crazy? Have you lost your mind? Don’t forget t salt know you always forget to salt them. Use the salt. USE THE SALT! USE THE SAL USEthem. THE You SALT!” The wife stared at him in disbelief. “What the heck is wrong with you? Do you think I don’t kno how to fry a couple of eggs? The husband replied calmly, “I just wanted to show you what it feels like when I’m driving.” Stop Your Timer Now Note the length of time in seconds (e.g. 1 minute 15 seconds = 75 seconds). Next, calculate your reading speed in words per minute (WPM) by dividing the number of word (which is 152) by the seconds you took to read, and then multiplying by sixty. WPM Formula: words / seconds x 60 = WPM For example, if the reading time was seventy-five seconds, your calculation would be: 152 words / 75 seconds x 60 = 122 WPM When you have completed your calculation, record your speed for later reference. Note that although there were 161 actual words, we will use the common standard length of 5.5 characters per word—that’s 4.5 average characters per word plus one space between each word. This will give more consistent results regardless of changing word lengths among exercises. What Your Speed Means Based on studies of average adult readers, here are some basic speed categories: 1 out of 2 adults can read 200 WPM (“slow” readers) 1 out of 10 adults can read 300 WPM (“good” readers) 1 out of 100 adults can read 400 WPM (“fast” readers) 1 out of 1,000 adults can read 600 WPM (“speed” readers) This should give you a general idea of the distribution of speeds. Notice that only one out of ever one hundred adults reads faster than four hundred words per minute. This is interesting because this seems to be a common plateau for many people. It is like some sort of physical speed limit. Exceeding four hundred words per minute appears to require a fundamental shift in mindset; readers can only pass this speed when they stop thinking of the words. Actual speed readers (over 600 WPM) are a particularly rarified group. In fact, it makes me wonde here all the graduates of the many speed reading courses are—those courses that claim you can easily learn to read thousands of words per minute—because these people certainly are not showing up in any of the statistics. But these statistics are not meant to discourage you, only to offer a reality check. Even reading fou hundred words per minute is an excellent skill to have and a very achievable one with this method. I a two-hundred-words-per-minute reader could double his or her speed to four hundred words per minute, this would be an excellent result which would definitely be worth their effort. This does not mean it’s not possible to continue improving to six hundred words per minute and beyond, but you can never know how far any individual can go since reading aptitudes are as unique as basketball or bowling aptitudes. But with proper understanding of the processes and techniques in this book, you will be on the path to reaching your maximum potential. Chapter 1: Getting Started Thank you for purchasing this book and for your time. Time has become a rare commodity, and I truly appreciate you giving me the opportunity to share an idea that has changed my life. It has been an adventure to write this book and to develop the supporting concepts and theories. I am honored to be allowed to share this with you. Background The theory of reading conceptually came to me after years of personal frustration. I am sixty-three years old and had been frustrated with my reading since about the age of ten. By the time I was fortynine, I was convinced my slow reading was incurable. The idea I had in the summer of 2000, i retrospect, now seems blindingly obvious: READING IS COMPREHENSION. This idea is more powerful than it might sound. It is this discovery that allowed me to increase m reading speed from 150 words per minute, to a very enjoyable 450-500 words per minute. The idea stemmed from the realization that comprehension wasn’t just apart of reading; on the contrary, reading was nothing but comprehension. Seeing text and recognizing words, was only the delivery process—but it wasn’t reading . The words delivered raw data to my brain, but this data asn’t actually read until I understood it. All those speed reading books, programs, and courses that I’d tried in the past only focused on eye movement and word recognition—that is, learning tosee words faster. But seeing is not reading. Many courses even suggested I could completelyignore comprehension and somehow good comprehension would come to me AFTER I became a fast reader. But this is never what happened The faster I pushed my reading, the faster the information seemed to leak out of my brain. So, why were they telling me that faster reading would result in faster comprehension? It appears tha this hypothesis was based on nothing more than the observation that fast readers had good comprehension. But why assume that fast readingleads to good comprehension? Doesn’t it make more sense the other ay around―that better comprehension leads to faster reading? After all, what is reading? Is it only recognizing and pronouncing words? Obviously not, because there are plentyI of I can butwas stilldetected have no idea what they mean.in the For example, canwords “read” thisrecognize medical and text:pronounce “Aspergillus histopathologically visceral pleural cavity .” But when I say I can read this, I mean I cansay the words. My mouth and eyes might read this text, but, since I am not a doctor, all my mind processes isblah " blah blah ." Real reading is something that occurs AFTER you recognize the words. It’s what happens when yo realize what the writer is saying , or more exactly what the author wasthinking when he or she wrote the words. You haven’t readanything until you’ve comprehended it. OK, as interesting as all this might be (to me anyway), here’s the good part. The exercises in this book are pretty easy to do. Just practice with the specially formatted texts and you will begin reading hole phrases at a time, and go from hearing words toseeing ideas . Why Read Faster? If you tell someone you are learning to read faster, you will usually hear,“Why would you want to read faster? How could you enjoy a book if you read it f ast? To enjoy your reading, don’t you need to read slow enough to listen to the sound of the words, the cadence and rhythm of the language? Wouldn’t reading fast destroy the beauty of t he story?” But think about this. How do you know what speed is best? Unless you’re reading aloud, how do yo know what the “correct” speed is? Some people read faster and some people read slower. Is yours, or theirs , the “right” speed? There is no clock in your mind. Reading speed is very flexible and relative to your thinking speed. I you can comprehend faster, you will be thinking faster, but what you read will always seem to be taking place at “normal” speed in your mind. But while you may think you are slowly savoring a book, you actually may be missing much of the big picture by reading too slowly to tie the story points together. By the time you get to the middle of the chapter or book, much of the detail and nuance of the beginning may have faded. The truth is, there is no right speed. If you know how to read faster, you can read faster or slower i you wish. If you have the right tools, you are free to choose the one you prefer for each situation. Why This Method? I realize the field of reading improvement has more than its share of carnival sideshows and tack self-help books—many of them loaded with hype, hucksterism, pop psychology, and pseudoscientific clichés. Plus, most of these books and courses are simply copies of one another. I’m sure you’ve already noticed this, and I realize any self-appointed guru is likely going to set off your BS detector. So allow me to share some of the comments that were emailed or left on my website about this method: "I have used several speed reading pr ograms, but they were missing what this t eaches. This i s so terrific. Thanks so much." "I found your course excellent and more than helpful in improving my reading speed and comprehension." “… a most enjoyable course that has invigorated my love for reading and learning." "I was not even an average reader. But now with practice, I’m an average reader working towards being an excellent r eader. Thank you." "Your course is perfect, really! This method makes it more pleasurable to read! Thank you so much!" "Thanks so much for creating this wonderful tool. I struggle with dyslexia and have become increasingly frustrated with my slow reading speed. I just found your tool today, and I’ve already raised my reading speed significantly :) Thanks again for creating this wonderful program." "This is really great for kids to use to increase their reading fluency. It teaches them to read in meaning units or phrases read. It is t ransferring to their other reading." “I am seventy-five and only with your course am I able to read in groups of words." "Great, amazing new tool. Thank you for inventing this. I absolutely love this." "I use it to help me get through my school work faster and to also read the classics. Thank you!" "I have been through speed reading books, programs, etc. This is by far the best program I have found.countless Thank you." "Hell o. Thank you so much for this amazing pro gram. I have noti ced a great difference in my ability to concentrate, read, and comprehend. Again, thank you so much." "I really appreciate you making this tool available for all us. I have already doubled my reading speed. Thank you very much." I enjoy receiving comments like these. It has been terrific to be able to improve my own reading, bu it’s been fantastic to hear from other people who have also enjoyed and profited from these ideas. Layout of This Book Each chapter of this book starts with instructional material. These explanations will give you a understanding of what reading with the right brain is and how it can be applied to your reading. The instructional material also includes information about the history of and the mental processes involved in reading. This overview of reading will help you stay on the straightest path to faster reading and better comprehension. At the end of each chapter there is an exercise to practice what you have learned. Each exercise consists of the first thousand words of a separate popular classic novel. The text in these exercises is specially formatted in a way that makes it easy to see the thought-units. This is done by indicating the separate units of meaning with alternating black and gray text. This will identify the phrases for you, so you can concentrate more on seeing the meaning of each phrase. Here is an example of this technique. Alice was beginningto get very tired of sitting by her sisteron the bank,and of havingnothing to do: once or twice she had peeped into the bookher sister was reading, but it had no pictures or conversations in it, ‘and what is the useof a book,’ thought Alice‘without picturesor conversation?’ In this example, “Alice was beginning” is the first unit of meaning, t“o get very tired ” is the second, “of sitting by her sister ” is the third, etc. The alternating black and gray text helps you quickly focus your eyes on each phrase, making these phrases easier to grasp at a glance. Each exercise is one thousand words long. The first eight hundred words are highlighted in black an gray, and the last two hundred words are displayed normally. So after reading thought-units with the help of the highlighting, the last two hundred words give you practice picking out thought-units on your own. In effect, the first eight hundred highlighted words will give you a bit of a running start a the remaining unformatted text. Practice these exercises and concentrate on reading whole ideas. Reading text in larger chunks this ay will transfer greater amounts of information per glance, like a high-speed broadband form o reading. It will also make reading easier and faster because you will be concentrating on the larger, more meaningful concepts. Reading these larger ideas will put more emphasis on what has always been the true bottleneck of reading speed: comprehension . Comprehension faster must come first. of the pushing your speed while simply trying to retain you comprehension, reading willInstead come as natural result of better comprehension. Rather than focusing on speed reading, you will be focusing on speed comprehension. In addition to the practice exercises in this book, you can also find other tools and lessons in the free online course at www.readspeeder.com. Helping ReadSpeeder users was how this book started. Thi book srcinated from the desire to give a more in-depth explanation of the techniques and theories demonstrated in the ReadSpeeder course. Another reason for this book was to supply a more natural reading experience to make reading practice more comfortable and realistic. Of course, as with any skill, it will take practice to embed it into your subconscious and really make it your own, but as concentrating on ideas becomes a habit, it will soon replace your old habit o reading words and sounds. Repeating Exercises For the maximum benefit, try to read each exercise in one sitting. But if you need to stop in the middle of an exercise because of a distraction, start over again at the beginning when you are ready to continue. The exercises are short enough that starting over should only take a little more time, but the best way to benefit is if you do the exercises long enough to stretch your reading muscles. You might be concerned that starting an exercise over would distort your speed measurements because you would already be familiar with the material. It is true that you would most likely read faster the second time, but that concern misses the main purpose of the practice. Although an accurate measure of your reading speed may be useful feedback, the primary benefit comes from the practice itself. Plus there are other to repeating an reinforcing exercise. Rather than having unfair advantage on the second reading, you benefits will actually be further your skills in new an ways. You will be able to practice visualizing concepts faster the second time since it will be easier for you to come up with visuals, which will therefore allow you to more easily experience the type of reading you want to have, and to see what it feels like to fly over the words with excellent comprehension. Practice Exercise #1 The shift into higher reading speeds comes as a result of learning to read with the right brain, reading hole ideas rather than words. The methods and theories of this technique will be further explored throughout the book, but in this first practice segment, just pay attention to how the text is segregated into distinct and independently meaningful chunks of information. Without even trying, you should begin seeing phrases as whole ideas. Don’t be too concerned about your speed, or about bad habits such as regression or vocalizing. Jus read through the text and let the special formatting guide your eyes to the meaningful phrases. To determine your reading speed, measure the time it takes from start to finish and then use one of the formulas below to calculate your words per minute. Since each exercise is exactly one thousand ords long, the calculations will be simple and the results will be easy to compare. Here are two ways you can calculate your WPM for these exercises: 1. Divide 1,000 by the number of minutes (1,000 / MINUTES) 2. Divide 60,000 by the number of seconds (60,000 / SECONDS) You can download a simple form for recording your speed results at www.readspeeder.com/readingspeeds.html. In this first exercise the text will be displayed in slightly shorter units of meaning than in the exercises that follow. The word-groups in this exercise will be no longer than three words each, to give you an easier introduction to reading word-groups. As you begin this first exercise, do not be overly concerned with how you are reading. The black an gray highlighting should automatically guide you to the larger blocks of information. At this stage, just get used to seeing text divided into meaningful thought-units. When you come to the unaided portion of the text, try to continue seeing the words in meaningful groups on your own. Don’t worry about exactly which words you group together, because there are no perfect groupings. Just try to continue seeing meaningful phrases, regardless of the phrase lengths you choose. What is most important is that the phrases make sense to you and are easy to imagine. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams The Velveteen Rabbit There was once a velveteen rabbit, and in the beginninghe was really splendid. He was fat and bunchy, as a rabbit should be; his coat was spotted brown and white, he had real thread whiskers, and his ears were lined with pink sateen. On Christmasmorning, when he satwedged in the topof the Boy’s stocking, with a sprig of holly between his paws, the effectwas charming. There were other things in the stocking,nuts and orangesand a toy engine, and chocolate almonds and a clockwork mouse, but the Rabbit was quite the best of all. For at least two hours the Boy loved him, and then Aunts and Uncles came to dinner, and there was a great rustling of tissue paper and unwrapping of parcels, and in the excitementof looking at all the new presents the Velveteen Rabbit as forgotten. For a long time he lived in the toy cupboard or on thenursery floor, and no onethought very much about him.He was naturally shy,and being onlymade of velveteen,some of the moreexpensive toys quite snubbed him.The mechanical toys were very superior, and looked down upon everyone else; they were full of modern ideas, and pretended they were real. The model boat,who had lived through two seasons and lost most of his paint, caught the tonefrom themand never missed an opportunityo referring to his riggingin technical terms. The Rabbit could not claim to be a model of anything,for he didn’t know thatreal rabbits existed; he thoughtthey were all stuffed with sawdust like himself, and he understoodthat sawdust was quite outof-date and should never be mentioned in modern circles. Even Timothy,the jointed wooden lion, ho was made by the disabled soldiers, and should have had broader views, put on airs and pretended he was connected with Government.Between them allthe poor little Rabbit was made to feel himself very insignificant and commonplace,and the only person who was kind to himat all was the Skin Horse. The Skin Horsehad lived longer in the nurserythan any of the others. He was so old that his brown coat was bald in patches and showed the seams underneath,and most of the hairs in his tail had been pulled out to stringbead necklaces. He was wise, for he had seen a long succession of mechanical toys arrive to boast and swagger, and by-and-by break their mainspringsand pass away, and he knew that they wereonly toys,and would never turn intoanything else.For nursery magicis very strange and wonderful, and onlythose playthingsthat are old and wise and experienced like the Skin Horse understand all about it. “What is REAL?” asked the Rabbit one day, when theywere lying side by side near the nursery fender, before Nana cameto tidy the room. “Does it meanhaving things that buzzinside you and a stick-out handle?” “Real isn’t how you are made,” said the Skin Horse.“It’s a thingthat happensto you. When a child loves you for a long, long time,not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then you become Real.” “Does it hurt?” asked the Rabbit. “Sometimes,” said the Skin Horse,for he was always truthful.“When you are Real you don’t mind being hurt.” “Does it happen all at once, like being wound up,” he asked, “or bit by bit?” “It doesn’t happenall at once,” said the Skin Horse. “You become.It takes a long time.That’s why it doesn’t happen often to people who break easily, or have sharp edges, or who have to be carefully kept. Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you getloose in the joints and very shabby. But these things don’t matterat all, because once you are Real you can’t be ugly, except to people who don’t understand.” “I suppose you are real?” said the Rabbit. And thenhe wished he had not said it, for he thoughtthe Skin Horse might besensitive. But the Skin Horse only smiled. “The Boy’s Unclemade me Real,”he said. “That was a great manyyears ago; but once you are Real you can’t becomeunreal again. It lasts for always.” The Rabbit sighed.He thoughtit would be a long time before this magic called Real happened to him. He longed to become Real, to know what it felt like; and yet the idea of growing shabby and losing his eyes and whiskers was rather sad. He wished that he couldbecome it without these uncomfortable things happening to him. There was a person called Nana who ruled the nursery. Sometimes she tookno notice of the playthings lying about, and sometimes, for no reason whatever, she went swooping about like a great ind and hustled them away in cupboards. She called this “tidying up,” and the playthings all hated it, especially the tin ones. The Rabbit didn’t mind it so much, for wherever he was thrown he came down soft. One evening, when the Boy was going to bed, he couldn’t find the china dog that always slept wit him. Nana was in a hurry, and it was too much trouble to hunt for china dogs at bedtime, so she simply looked about her, and seeing that the toy cupboard door stood open, she made a swoop. “Here,” she said, “take your old Bunny! He’ll do to sleep with you!” And she dragged the Rabbit ou by one ear, and put him into the Boy’s arms. That night, and for many nights after, the Velveteen Rabbit slept in the Boy’s bed. At first he found it rather uncomfortable, for the Boy hugged him very tight, and sometimes he rolled over on him, and sometimes he pushed him so far under the pillow that the Rabbit could scarcely breathe. And he missed, too, those long moonlight hours in the nursery, when all the house was silent… Chapter 2: How Can You Read Faster? “I don’t know, Marge… trying is the fi rst step towards failure.” —Homer Simpson Perhaps you’ve tried all the popular speed reading tricks: Pushing your speed Trying not to verbalize Widening your eye span Using your finger as a pacer Ignoring “unimportant” words Making fewer eye stops per line Practicing moving your eyes faster But these haven’t worked. They might have temporarily increased your words per minute as you pushed yourself to read faster, but this increase was probably accompanied by a loss of comprehension. What good is that? If yo read twice as fast but only understand half as much, you haven’t gained a thing. So, what can you do? How can you read faster and also maintain comprehension? Sometimes easiest findquestion the solution to a problem to carefully make suredetermining you are asking question to the begin with.way The toright can often be foundisby whatthe therigh real goal is. What do you really want? What you really want is to be able to pick up a book and understand what the author is saying in the least amount of time. The key word is “understand.” You are not just trying to finish the book faster; you are trying to collect ideas , to collect experiences , and to collect information and knowledge . So the real question is… “How can youcomprehend faster?” The answer to this question is what makesReading with the Right Brain different. This book is based on the principle that comprehension must come first , and therefore, using your right conceptual brain is key. The point of reading is to comprehend meaning, and the old methods that push you to see more words per minute miss that important point. This book aims at a very specific target—the real act of reading. It is not about pre-reading, memorizing, or study habits. Instead, this book focuses specifically on what happens between the time the text enters your eyes as an image and when the information assimilates into your brain as knowledge. Other skills—such as previewing, asking yourself questions, mind mapping, etc.—might be useful, but none of these are really about reading ; they are about everythingaround reading. If you want to know more about these peripheral skills, there are abundant resources already available. eading with the Right Brain is specifically about how to increase the speed of transferring ideas from the text to your brain. It focuses on how to read across each line of text, lock on to the information, and comprehend and assimilate this information into knowledge. This book is NOT about pushing your reading speed, widening your eye-span, or suppressing ba reading habits. It is not another book of speed reading tips, tricks and “secrets.” This book IS abou learning to pay more attention to your reading. Rather than eye exercises, this book focuses on exercising your mental processing, because reading is essentially a mental activity, not a visual one. Therefore the instructions and exercises in this boo are intended to strengthen your powers of concentration and focus. The techniques and practice exercises in this book will show you how to read faster b comprehending faster. The way you’ll do this is by learning toconceptualize your reading. What is conceptualizing? Read the phrase, “the big black dog ” and concentrate on imagining what this group of words means. Imagine a big black dog, but don’t only think of an image; think of what a big black dog meansyou to. Is it friendly? Is it scary? Is it beautiful? Is it smart? Do you remember any big black dogs? Exactly what you imagine is not important—whatever pops into your head is OK; what is important is that what comes into your head is an idea, that you instantly imagine the meaning of the phrase. This is thinkingconceptually . This visual and conceptual concentration causes information to be passed to the right side of your brain, the side that specializes in the conceptual nature of ideas. It also connects the information to all the attributes—both visual and abstract—you associate this information with to create a larger, more complete idea of what the information means. The end result is a big-picture idea, the real essence o hat the information means to you. The right hemisphere of your brain has no verbal understanding. It can connect words with ideas, bu it doesn’t think in words. It does, however, have the powerful ability to imagine whole, complex ideas at once. This is how the right brain gives you clearer and faster comprehension, by processing information in larger and more meaningful chunks. So far, this has been a basic introduction to conceptualizing, and there will be more discussion later about how to conceptualize different types of information. For now, realize that in order to conceptualize ideas, you’ll need to be able to read whole phrases at a time, because there is seldom enough information in individual words to form meaningful mental concepts. A short group of words, in the form of a meaningful phrase, can describe a complete, stand-alone idea. Phrases may be only a few words long, but together these few words can represent distinc pieces of information which can be easily imagined as whole units of meaning. These meaningful pieces of text could be called “phrases,” “word-groups,” “clauses,” “units o meaning,” or “thought-units.” But regardless of the label, they consist of any groups of words which represent whole ideas you can visualize or conceptualize. Reading whole ideas increases your reading speed in two ways: 1. Concentrating on the bigger picture results in processing more meaningful information. 2. Taking in more words at a time results in reading more words per minute. Reading whole phrases is like taking larger strides when you run. Switching from walking to runnin doesn’t mean just moving your legs faster, but also lengthening your stride, thereby covering more distance with each step. This is basically how conceptualizing helps you read and comprehend faster, by letting you see a bigger picture and taking in larger blocks of information at a time. In normal, unaided text, you have to perform both parts of this skill on your own. You have to concentrate on finding the meaningful word-groups, and at the same time, focus on the larger meaning of those word-groups. Trying to learn both parts of this skill together can be mentally overwhelming. It can be difficult to focus on meanings and concepts at the same time you are trying to select the meaningful word-groups. But the formatted text in the exercises in this book will eliminate the work of finding phrases, allowing you to concentrate more attention on imagining the larger concepts. This makes it easy to practice reading in larger concepts. Then once you become familiar and comfortable with processing information in larger chunks, you will be able to pick out the phrases automatically on your own in normal, unformatted text. Don’t confuse reading thought-units with the more common advice to make fewer eye-stops per line. Reading meaningful phrases is very different than simply trying to read in groups of some arbitrar number of words at a time. Instead, it is actively seeking conceptual units of information. In fact, it i this proactive, searching frame of mind which will make these word-groups automatically appear to you. This is because when you are aware that the information is in larger blocks of text, those blocks ill become easier to recognize. Sentences are not smooth, consistent flows of evenly distributed information; are more like clumps of ideas. Knowing this, and looking for these clumps, is wha helps you seethey them. As an example, consider this sentence: t was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striki ng thirteen. This should not be viewed as just a string of words, “It—was—a—bright—cold—day—in—April, ” ith each word adding just one more additional piece of information. The sentence is actually better understood asclumps of ideas, “ It was—a bright cold day—in April,” here each clump adds a specific and meaningful block of information to the sentence. The exercises in this book identify these blocks of information for you. After practicing with these exercises, these meaningful phrases will automatically appear to you in regular text as you look for ideas and concepts. When you scan text for meaningful ideas, you will automatically focus on wordgroups that represent the more complete and meaningful building blocks of the sentences—the separate ideas which can be imagined as pictures or concepts. In the following demonstration, the meaningful phrases are indicated with black text. This example only shows one way this sentence could be divided; you could divide it differently as long as each phrase is meaningful to you on its own. It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen. IItt was ing thirteen. was aa bright bright cold cold day day in and the the clock cloc kss were were strik striking thirteen. in April, April,and It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen. It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen. As shown in this example, the first phrase you might lock onto could be It“ was.” These two words can be imagined as a complete idea—in this case, one that gives you a context of the time this sentence is describing. So although“It was” is not something physical that you can actually form a picture of, it can still be imagined as a conceptual idea. The next meaningful phrase could be “a bright cold day ;” This time, the words create an idea tha might be imagined as an actual picture. As you continued across the sentence, you would pick up each of the short, independent ideas, quickl imagining what it means. You can’t in advance which makeout up at each by looking for complete ideas, the know meaningful portions willwords tend will to jump youthought-unit, like friendlybut faces in a crowd. Also be aware that even though some word-groups may be more obvious than others, all these clumps o information will be easier to see when you are actively seeking ideas to visualize. One other thing to consider is that this is not a conscious, mechanical process; you won’t be thinking, “Look at the next word-group—now imagine the information.” Instead, this will be an internalized, subconscious function that will take place automatically. You will concentrate only on looking for and imagining a flow of meaningful ideas, and your eyes and mind will automatically work together to discover them for you. In short, the process of reading with the right brain consists of reading each sentence not as a list o individual words or as a string of sounds, but as a set of larger ideas which can then be linked together into the complete meaning of the entire sentence; this enables you to focus on the larger conceptual nature of what you are reading rather than the individual textual components. More will be discussed later about reading word-groups and also about visualizing physical ideas versus conceptualizing abstract ideas, but for now just know that you will be focusing on larger, more meaningful pieces of information, and passing whole ideas to the conceptual right side of your brain for faster and more efficient processing. As you practice with the specially formatted exercises in this book, you will experience what reading ith the right brain feels like. You will experience reading and thinking in larger units of meaning and using the part of your brain which sees patterns and connections—the part which categorizes and understands larger concepts and connects them firmly with your existing knowledge. Reading with the right brain will move you away from reading words and sounds, to readingideas . Practice Exercise #2 As you read the next exercise, look at each highlighted word-group all at once and not as a string o ords. Look at each as a complete unit of meaning all its own. As you do, think of what it means or hat it looks like. Take whatever quick mental snapshot that comes into your head for each phrase. As you focus on the whole meanings of entire thought-units, you should feel the conceptual ideas expand into your right brain and float up into your consciousness. If something is not easy to imagine as an actual picture or scene, at least conceptualize it and think o hat it means. But remember, this is a fast and fleeting process, not a ponderous one. Quickly imagine each phrase and move on. But, do not rush your reading. You mostly want to concentrate on involving the powerfully equipped parallel-processing visual machinery of your right hemisphere, to transfer the reading data from the ordy left side, through the thick bundle of nerves of the corpus callosum, and over to the right side for visualizing and conceptualizing. You want to experience what it feels like to “see” the meaning of hat you read. At first this may feel like it’s causing your reading to slow down, but as your right brain starts to imagine what you are reading, your speed will increase on its own as the result of faster comprehension. This next will display phrases up to a maximum of fourprocess words long, don’t about this practice increaseexercise in the number of words per thought-unit; the reading is the but same, justworr with some slightly longer phrases. The actual number of words will be almost irrelevant when you concentrate on each phrase as a complete idea. Even though you should be concentrating more on pushing your comprehension than on pushing your speed, you will still find it helpful to keep track of your words per minute. You will be glad you have this record for future comparisons. And once again, do not be concerned with exactly how you group the words in the unaided section o the text. Just focus on seeing the larger meaningful ideas, and see which word-groups appear to you. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen Pride and Prejudice It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single manin possession of a good fortune, must bein ant of a wife. However little known the feelings or views of such a man may beon his first entering a neighborhood, this truth isso well fixed in the mindsof the surroundingfamilies, that he is considered the rightful property of someone or other of their daughters. “My dear Mr. Bennet,”said his lady to himone day, “have you heard that Netherfield Parkis let at last?” Mr. Bennet replied that hehad not. “But it is,” returned she; “for Mrs. Longhas just been here, and she told me all about it.” Mr. Bennetmade no answer. “Do you notwant to knowwho has taken it?” cried his wife impatiently. “You want to tell me, and I haveno objection to hearing it.” This was invitation enough. “Why, my dear,you must know,Mrs. Long saysthat Netherfieldis taken bya young manof large fortune from the northof England;that he came down on Mondayin a chaise and four to see the place, and was so much delightedwith it, that he agreed with Mr. Morris immediately; that he isto take possession before Michaelmas, and some of his servants are to be in the house by the end of next eek.” “What is his name?” “Bingley.” “Is he married or single?” “Oh! Single, my dear, to be sure! A single manof large fortune;four or five thousand a year.What a fine thingfor our girls!” “How so? How can it affect them?” “My dear Mr. Bennet,”replied his wife, “how can yoube so tiresome! You must knowthat I a thinkingof his marryingone of them.” “Is thathis design in settling here?” “Design! Nonsense, how can youtalk so! But it is very likely that he mayfall in love with one o them,and therefore you must visit himas soon as he comes.” “I see no occasion for that.You and the girls may go,or you maysend them by themselves, which perhaps will be still better, for as you are as handsome as any of them,Mr. Bingleymay like youthe best of the party.” “My dear, you flatter me.I certainly havehad my shareof beauty, but I do not pretend to be anything extraordinary now. When a womanhas five grown-up daughters,she oughtto give over thinking o her own beauty.” “In such cases, a woman has not oftenmuch beautyto think of.” “But, my dear,you mustindeed go and see Mr. Bingleywhen he comes into the neighborhood.” “It is more than Iengage for, I assure you.” “But consider your daughters.Only think whatan establishment it would be for one of them.Sir William and Lady Lucasare determined to go, merely on that account,for in general, you know,they visit no newcomers. Indeed you must go,for it will be impossible for us to visit him if you do not.” “You are over-scrupulous, surely. I dare say Mr. Bingleywill be very glad to see you;and I will send a few lines by you to assure him of my heartyconsent to his marryingwhichever he chooses of the girls; thoughI mustthrow in a good word for mylittle Lizzy.” “I desire you will do no such thing.Lizzy is nota bit better than the others;and I am sureshe is not half so handsome as Jane, nor half so good-humored as Lydia. But you arealways giving herthe preference.” “They have none of themmuch torecommend them,”replied he; “they are all silly and ignorantlike other girls; but Lizzy has something moreof quickness than her sisters.” “Mr. Bennet,how can youabuse your own childrenin such a way? You take delightin vexing me. You have no compassion for my poor nerves.” “You mistake me,my dear. I have a high respect for your nerves. They are my old friends. I have heard you mention themwith consideration these last twenty years at least.” “Ah, you do notknow what I suffer.” “But I hope you will get over it, and live to see many young menof four thousanda year, come into the neighborhood.” “It will be no use to us, if twenty suchshould come, since you will not visit them.” “Depend upon it, my dear, that whenthere are twenty, I will visit them all.” Mr. Bennet wasso odd a mixtureof quick parts, sarcastic humor, reserve, and caprice, that the experience of three-and-twentyyears had been insufficientto make hiswife understand his character. Her mind was less difficult to develop. She was a woman of meanunderstanding,little information, and uncertain temper. When she wasdiscontented, she fancied herself nervous. The businessof her life was to get her daughters married;its solace was visiting and news. Mr. Bennet was among the earliest of those who waited on Mr. Bingley. He had always intended to visit him, though to the last always assuring his wife that he should not go; and till the evening after the visit was paid she had no knowledge of it. It was then disclosed in the following manner. Observing his second daughter employed in trimming a hat, he suddenly addressed her with: “I hope Mr. Bingley will like it, Lizzy.” “We are not in a way to know what Mr. Bingley likes,” said her mother resentfully, “since we are not to visit.” “But you forget, Mamma,” said Elizabeth, “that we shall meet him at the assemblies, and that Mrs Long promised to introduce him.” “I do not believe Mrs. Long will do any such thing. She has two nieces of her own. She is a selfish hypocritical woman, and I have no opinion of her.” “No more have I,” said Mr. Bennet; “and I am glad to find that you do not depend on her serving you.” Mrs. Bennet deigned not to make any reply, but, unable to contain herself, began scolding one of her daughters. “Don’t keep coughing so, Kitty, for Heaven’s sake! Have a little compassion… Chapter 3: Your New Reading Experience Words are f lowing out like Endless rain into a paper cup. They slither wildly as t hey slip away across the universe. -“Across the Universe,” the Beatles There certainly does seem to be an endless flow of words today. Unlike a short time ago, when our access to words was limited to the space available on our bookshelves or to the amount of time we could spend in our local library, today we have literally an infinite amount of reading material available. It’s easier than ever to access, and it’s there for us twenty-four hours a day. Our biggest challenges now are deciding what to read and how to get through it all. Today there really is only one limit to the information available, and that limit is us. Our reading speed is the only limit there is to the many things we can know and the many stories we can experience. A superior reading skill can give us greater access to this expanding cornucopia of information, and access to this information can have a powerful effect on our lives. It can make our lives easier, happier, and even safer and healthier—which might even mean longer! Plus, this greater access to information will also make our lives more interesting, as well as makeus more interesting. In addition to acquiring information, improved reading skills can even physically enhance our brains. A study in the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that older people who rea regularly are two and a half times less likely to have Alzheimer’s disease. Reading skills also strengthen our brains by boosting memory, focus, concentration, and analytical thinking. But wait, there’s more! Conceptualizing information and really paying attention to its meaning will increase your awareness of life. Instead of having a superficial awareness of the things you see, hear, and read—conceptual thinking will make you more aware of the deeper reality of what things actually mean. Your Reading Upgrade Conceptualizing ideas instead of listening to sounds is learning to experience reading in a new way. This is a major upgrade to those very old reading lessons from your childhood. Remember when you first learned to read? You learned all the letters and the sounds the letters made, and then you also learned when the letters made different sounds in different words. It was all prett confusing at first—a lot for a little kid to take in—but eventually you learned to read. Some really helpful tools during that learning process were the special reading books, the Dick an ane stories. These books were carefully developed to make learning as easy and interesting as possible. By practicing with these books, something gradually happened—you began to recognize ords at a glance without thinking of each letter. At that point, reading became automatic; you could read words without thinking about how you did it. That’s about as far as your reading education went; you could readwords. Today you’re no longer reading about Dick and Jane. You’ve got a lot more to read now, and that reading has gotten a lot more sophisticated and complicated. But when was your last reading lesson? Fifth grade? Today, are you reading any better than a fifth grader? For a lot of people the answer is, sadly, "No." This is not a happy group of people because it’s frustrating to have poor reading skills, and it’s embarrassing, too. It’s frustrating to take forever to read a single book, and it’s embarrassing to be uninformed about so many of the interesting and fast changing events in the world. The Unread Masses Unfortunately, poor readers aren’t a lonely bunch; they have a lot more company than good readers have. There are sadly more and more people who, for one reason or another, have either not progressed in their reading skills after childhood, or have even regressed through a lack of practice. Sure they may read their text messages and tweets, and maybe even headlines and picture captions, but a large number of people shy away from anything more demanding than the TV Guide, and they restrict the selection of what they read to material with plenty of pictures. At a time when there is more information than ever easily available to us, we are nonetheless turning into a readerless society. Here are some sad reading statistics. Although the numbers are staggering, they are unfortunately no that shocking. 58% of the US adult population never reads another book after high school. 42% of college students never read another book after college. 80% of US families did not buy or read a book last year. 70% of US adults have not been to a bookstore in the last five years. 57% of new books are not read to completion. Most readers do not get past page 18 in a book they have purchased. Benefits I know the lament: "Who’s got time?" Of course we’re all so busy, and reading takes SO MUC TIME! So it comes down to a cost-benefit analysis: How much time will improved reading skill cost, and how much benefit will be received? The benefit is that you will get more out of your reading; enjoy it more, be more informed, and have better comprehension and retention. However the real price is actually free, because with faster reading, your time investment will be continually refunded. Time How much time does it take to read a book? Remember that the average adult reads two hundre ords per minute. Assume this average person wants to read a book which is three hundred pages long and has approximately four hundred words per page. This book would then have a total of one hundred twenty thousand words. At two hundred words per minute, this book would take ten hours to read (120,000 / 200 = 600 minutes or 10 hours). At four hundred words per minute, however, this book would only take half that time—five hours. So, how long would it take this average person learn to increase his reading speed from reading two hundred words per minute to four hundred? Four hundred words per minute is not actually a ver difficult speed to reach. If it took a total of five hours of practice to learn this speed increase, then those five hours would be saved back after reading only one book. But a reading speed increase is a gift that keeps on giving, because the back. faster a person reads, the more books they will want to read and therefore, the more time they will get Besides this time rebate, what about the benefits side of the equation? The major benefit, of course, is improved comprehension. This means getting moreout of your reading. When someone asks, “Wha is that book about?” you can actually tell him. But there are even more benefits to gain from improved reading skills. Power The mental exercise of reading develops a more powerful mind. The act of reading is one of the mos sophisticated mental achievements of the human mind. The mental exercise this involves strengthens your intelligence, sharpens your analytical skills, and improves your ability to separate reality from fiction. Even more power can be developed by extending your reading to your right brain. One way is b improving the power of your memory. By conceptualizing thought-units, you are concentrating on more complex ideas, making your reading more memorable and storing information more efficiently. You are not just reading new information, but conceptualizing it and associating it with previous information. Each of these complex memories creates even more association points for future memories to attach to. The more you know, the easier it becomes to know more. And more knowledge is more power. Success Reading—combined with the ability to understand, recall, and make use of the material you have read —also plays a major role in achieving success in life. Faster reading and better comprehension have powerful impacts; whether it’s being better informed in your job, or having a better understanding of your studies, or simply by being a more well-rounded and informed conversationalist. Good reading skills produce many advantages. It’s no exaggeration to say that in this modern interconnected and competitive world, the ability to read, comprehend, and better organize information into useful knowledge could be considered tantamount to a survival skill, and a prerequisite to most success. Uniqueness By concentrating on concepts, you will be remembering not just the facts, but the real meaning behind hat you read as well. You can’t remember every detail you read, but you can remember the meaning. Your own personal meaning is created by the selection and significance of attributes you connect to information—these selections being based primarily on your previous knowledge and interests. These conceptual connections are what make each of us unique. Each person has his ow informational combinations, and these combinations and intersections of information create each person’s uniqueness, enabling each person to see information in unique ways with unique perspectives. This is true of all kinds of reading. No matter what you read, all reading changes you. In a lot o ays, we are what we read. We are the sum of these experiences, and many of our experiences come to us vicariously through reading, from anywhere and from any-when. Regardless of whether it is fac or fiction, educational or relaxation, all reading adds something to who we are, and to our own uniqueness. Innovation It’s the conceptual connections of information which create the real power of human intelligence. The information itself is cheap—the whole world of information is only a Google search away. The real power of human intelligence is not in the collection of information, but in the connections o information. It is at these unique intersections that ideas build upon each other to produce new, relevant and more valuable ideas. These unique combinations are the real mother of innovation. Read for Enjoyment Many people who say they don’t have time to read will also say they don’t have time to learn to read faster, but since reading faster couldsave them time, this seems like a contradiction. When you are facing a contradiction, check your premises; you will usually find that one of them is rong. I believe the mistaken premise here the belief that those peoplewant to read in the first place. I suspect the real truth is that most people don’t want to read simply because it’s not enjoyable for them. I hope one benefit of conceptual reading is to make reading more enjoyable. I have found that by improving my own reading, I’ve developed what feels almost like a reading addiction. The more read, the more I learn; the more I learn, the more things I discover that I want to read about. So why not deemphasize the collection of raw data, and instead concentrate on the development o intelligence by fostering your reasoning ability and creativity—which are all enhanced through the connectedness of information and conceptual reading of ideas? Realistic Expectations Of course every skill takes practice, but at least this is practice that works. This is not practicin some so-called secret speed reading tricks—like the ones you find in every other book. This is practicing seeing the ideas behind the words by concentrating on the larger blocks of information. But let’s be realistic―there are a lot of very unbelievable claims being made in the speed reading industry. You’re probably suspicious of many of them, or you at least suspect they might be too good to be true. Instead of filling your head with nonsense, I want to give you something that will truly be of value to you. Forget all the exercises that focus on eye movement. Instead, focus on thinking conceptuall about what you are reading by employing the right side of your brain to see the big picture, the whole idea of what you read. With the explosion of information available through e-readers and the internet, we are likely itnessing a fundamental transformation of the world. In fact, we are probably at the beginning of an unprecedented information and knowledge revolution—a quantum leap in the development of human intelligence and potential. The driver of this change is the worldwide connectedness and collaboration that has suddenly been made available through the internet. All of this change, however, dependsreading on reading. A rocket ship is about to take off, headed for the future, but only those with excellent skills will be aboard. Practice Exercise #3 As you practice this exercise, keep in mind that there is still a speed below which we tend to vocalize the words, at least internally, just because we’re bored. If you are careful to read slightly faster while concentrating on imagining the meaning of what you read, there therefore will be less of a tendency to say the words. During this exercise, try to visualize in your imagination what you are reading. Visualizing ideas also has a powerful effect on silencing your inner voice since it’s actually difficult to verbalize while concentrating on visuals. It seems that concentrating on one makes it harder to do the other, so you don’t need to make any special effort to silence that voice; just concentrate on the visuals but avoid going too slowly. This, and all remaining exercises, have alarger maximum thought-unit of five words.only You a should have no problem pickingwill up these phrases becausephrase each length will still represent single idea. In fact, you may find that you can read even faster with larger phrases because you will be covering more text per glance. But don’t push your speed past your comprehension; focus on imagining what each phrase means and the speed will come. Once you’ve finished reading the exercise, make a note of your speed result for future comparisons. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde The Picture of Dorian Gray The studio was filled with the rich odor of roses, and when the light summer windstirred amidst the trees of the garden,there came throughthe open door the heavy scentof the lilac, or the more delicate perfume of the pink-flowering thorn. From the cornerof the divan of Persian saddle-bags on which he was lying,smoking, as was his custom, innumerable cigarettes,Lord Henry Wotton couldjust catch the gleam of the honey-sweetand honey-colored blossoms of a laburnum, whose tremulous branchesseemed hardly able to bear the burden of a beauty so flame-likeas theirs; and now and thenthe fantastic shadowsof birds in flight flitted across the longtussore-silk curtains that were stretchedin front ofthe huge window,producing a kind of momentaryJapanese effect, and making him thinkof those pallid, jade-faced painters o Tokyo who, through the mediumof an art that is necessarily immobile,seek to convey the sense o swiftness and motion.The sullen murmurof the bees shouldering their waythrough the long unmown grass, or circling with monotonous insistenceround the dustygilt horns of the straggling woodbine, seemed to makethe stillness more oppressive. The dim roar of London was like the bourdon noteof a distant organ. In the centerof the room,clamped to an upright easel,stood the full-lengthportrait of a young mano extraordinary personal beauty, and in front of it,some little distance away, was sitting the artist himself, Basil Hallward, whose sudden disappearance some years ago caused, at the time,such public excitement and gave rise to so manystrange conjectures. As the painterlooked at the graciousand comely formhe had so skillfullymirrored in his art, a smile of pleasure passed across his face, and seemed about to linger there. But he suddenlystarted up, and closing his eyes, placed his fingers upon the lids, as though he soughtto imprison within his brain some curious dreamfrom which he fearedhe might awake. “It is your best work, Basil, the best thingyou have ever done,”said Lord Henry languidly. “You must certainlysend it next year to the Grosvenor. The Academy is too largeand too vulgar. Whenever I have gone there,there have been eitherso many people that I have notbeen able to see the pictures, hich was dreadful, or so many picturesthat I have notbeen able to see the people, which was orse. The Grosvenor is really the only place.” “I don’t thinkI shall send it anywhere,” he answered, tossing his head backin that odd way that used to make his friendslaugh at himat Oxford. “No, I won’t send it anywhere.” Lord Henryelevated his eyebrows and looked at him in amazementthrough the thinblue wreaths o smoke that curled up in such fanciful whorlsfrom his heavy,opium-tainted cigarette.“Not send i anywhere? My dear fellow, why?Have you any reason?What odd chapsyou painters are! You do anything in the world to gain a reputation. As soon as you have one,you seem to wantto throw it away. It is silly of you, for there is only one thingin the world worse than being talked about, and that is not beingtalked about. A portrait like thiswould set you far above all the young menin England, and make the old menquite jealous, if old men are ever capable of any emotion.” “I know you will laugh at me,”he replied, “but I really can’texhibit it. I have put too muchof mysel into it.” Lord Henrystretched himself out on the divan and laughed. “Yes, I knew you would;but it is quite true, all the same.” “Too muchof yourself in it! Upon my word,Basil, I didn’t knowyou were so vain;and I really can’ see any resemblance between you, with your ruggedstrong face and your coal-black hair,and this young Adonis,who looks as if he was made out of ivory and rose-leaves. Why, my dear Basil,he is a Narcissus, and you—well, of course you have an intellectualexpression and all that. But beauty,real beauty, ends where an intellectual expression begins. Intellect is in itself a mode of exaggeration,and destroys the harmonyof any face.The moment onesits down to think,one becomes all nose, or all forehead, or something horrid.Look atthe successful menin any of the learned professions. How perfectly hideous they are!Except, of course, in the Church.But then in the Churchthey don’t think.A bishop keeps on saying at the age of eightywhat he was told to say when he was a boy of eighteen, and as a natural consequence he always looks absolutely delightful. Your mysterious young friend, hose name you have never told me, but whose picture really fascinates me, never thinks. I feel quite sure of that. He is some brainless beautiful creature who should be always here in winter when we have no flowers to look at, and always here in summer when we want something to chill our intelligence. Don’t flatter yourself, Basil: you are not in the least like him.” “You don’t understand me, Harry,” answered the artist. “Of course I am not like him. I know tha perfectly well. Indeed, I should be sorry to look like him. You shrug your shoulders? I am telling you the truth. There is a fatality about all physical and intellectual distinction, the sort of fatality tha seems to dog through history the faltering steps of kings. It is better not to be different from one’s fellows. The ugly and the stupid have the best of it in this world. They can sit at their ease and gape a the play. If they know nothing of victory, they are at least spared the knowledge of defeat. They live as well as… Chapter 4: The B asics Many people seem to be looking for a quick and easy way to read faster—some kind of ninja trick or magic beans. This preference for a “magical” solution is clearly evidenced by the popularity of books ith titles promising to teach you speed reading in one hour or less. The hidden truth behind such promises is that when they say “Learn to Speed Read in One Hour, they’re not actually promising to teach you TO READ faster in one hour; they’re only promising t teach you HOW TO read faster. There is a subtle but important difference; the “one hour’” only refer to how long it will take you to read their little book! At the end of the hour, you still won’t be able to read any faster; you’ll just knowhow (supposedly) to begin learning. If you only want to knowhow to read faster, I can tell you in just a few seconds: 3 Mind Tricks to Power-Up Your Reading 1. Read meaningful groups of words at a time. 2. Concentrate on whole ideas instead of words. 3. Conceptualize the meanings of those ideas. This can even be further shortened to simply:Conceptualize the ideas of meaningfu l word-groups . That’s it; the rest takes practice. Simply put, reading faster requires comprehending faster. That’s how you do it, but of course the only way to turn knowledge into skill is by doing. But although there is practice required, I promise I’m not going to waste your time with a bunch of strange an impractical exercises. You won’t be asked to dwell on things that don’t work, don’t interest you, and don’t make sense. Instead, the specially formatted practice exercises are a kind of rapid immersion into reading for ideas. But please do me a favor… Forget your dreams of becoming the next Kim Peek. You’ve probably heard of incredible savants like Mr. Peek, amazing people who can read thousands of words per minute. Very few people are savants, and I would think few would want to be. These rare people are not what they may seem. They ca “read” at astonishing speeds—often even remembering every word—but the fact is, they usually don’t understand what they’ve read. They may be able to recite every word of a book, but they can’ actually have a conversation about it. In this way, they are a bit like human computers: all speed and memory, but no comprehension. The goal of this book is not to make you a savant, but to give you something valuable and honest, the ability to get more out of what you read—in less time—byimproving your comprehension. So, how do you improve your comprehension? The answer is surprisingly and almost deceptivel simple: by improving your thinking . Strangely, the thinking part of reading is often taken for granted. People frequently imagine tha learning to read simply involves learning how to recognize written words, but words are practically meaningless without the context of their surrounding words. Not until you think about what whole groups of words mean does text become ideas and raw data becomes meaningful information. “Thinking” is what happens when data is conceptualized—when i is classified, categorized, filtered, and evaluated as to what it means to you. When you conceptualize the ideas of meaningful word-groups, you translate the text from words into information. And when this information is associated with previous information, it becomes new knowledge by modifying your existing information. So let’s explore what these three “reading tricks” mean. Trick 1 - Read Meaningful Groups of Words at a Time To understand faster, you will need to read whole groups of words at a time. And in order to understand word-groups at a glance, these must be groups of words which form independently meaningful ideas on their own. But you already do this. Reading multiple words at once is not a new idea. For example, before 1940, the word “percent” was more commonly written, and understood, as two words: “per” and “cent.” Today, “percent” is not only considered one word, but a single, unified idea as well. The two ideas, “per” as for each and “cent” as one hundredth , were combined into a new larger and more complex idea. After constant and regular use together, the two words gradually became accepted as one word, “percent,” with one meaning,for each one hundredth . Joining these words meant more than jus omitting the space between them; it meant actually beginning to think of this word-group as a separate, uniquely distinct idea of its own. This is the same way many compound words were created—they started as separate words and became meaningful word-groups. The words were combined because it was easier and faster to thin of them as single, complete concepts. So we’ve always combined meaningful word-groups. Now, we are taking it to the next level b combining even more words. Just as you can immediately understand the whole concept of a compound word—such as “forever ” (1890), “ nearby” (1925), or “ worthwhile” (1960)—you can also instantly imagine the concept of a multi-word thought unit—such asfor-a-while, “ ” “near-myhouse,” or “ worth-your-time.” The point is, it has always been possible to read words together as long as the word-groups formed meaningful ideas; reading thought-units is just a further extension of this process of thinking and communicating in larger, more complex—and thereby more efficient—conceptual ideas. Trick 2 - Concentrate on Whole Ideas Instead of Words The only way to be able to understand word-groups at a glance is to think of them as ideas rather than ust words. You can’t say two words at the same time because it’s not possible to pronounce words simultaneously, one on top of the other. Even if you could, it would not be possible to understand the resulting cacophony. Likewise, it’s also not possible tothink of separate words simultaneously. But it is possible to think of complete and more complex ideas—single thoughts represented by groups of words—all at once. In fact, it’s even easier to imagine the meaning of such word-groups, because their combined information is more specific. For example, “driving rain” is more specific and easier to imagine than just the words “driving” or “rain” alone. The single words “driving” or “rain,” without the context of supporting information, are so vague as to make it almost impossible to know what to imagine. Words have definitions, but real meaning is determined by the way multiple ords are put together. The information from a single word is so small and vague that it is usually difficult for our minds to know what to do with it before we connect it with its neighboring words. A meaningful word-group though is much easier and quicker to imagine and understand. The larger ideas represented by groups of words are not only easier to imagine, but they are also easier to connect our previous knowledge, making formore stronger and longer lastingpoints memories. These ord-groups are to easier to connect because they have potential connection due to the larger number of attributes each of them contains. For instance, consider the two words “red” and “cat.” “Red” can connect to our knowledge of colors, and “cat” can connect to our knowledge of animals. But “red cat” taken as one complete thought—even though it is only two words long—can connect to both colors AND animals. These extra connection points make this larger, more complex idea stickier , which makes it faster to imagine and easier to remember. When you think of “red cat,” your mind can associate it with red things as well as with animals. Of course, this example has been intentionally over-simplified to make a point. There are actuall many either or “cat.” For “red”orcan be Furthermore, associated with bright possible things orconnections danger. Andfor“cat” can“red” be associated withexample, furry things pets. by considering “red cat” as a complete thought, you also introduce additional points of contact, such as unusual cats (because red is an unusual color for a cat) and unusual red things. The larger and more complex an idea, the more ways you will have to remember it and the more things it will remind you of. The main point here is that larger, more complex ideas have many more possible points of contact in your mind. Think of those stubborn little burrs that get stuck in your socks—the more points they have, the easier they stick and the longer they hang on. Trick 3 - Conceptualize the Meaning of These Ideas This is a simple, yet powerful trick to get your right hemisphere involved. By conceptualizing ideas, you your mind into a conceptual mode. When youthesee a phrase—for "the fa blue force dog"—and you conceptualize this bythinking imagining it as an image, image will cause example several more neurons to fire than would have if you had only thought of the words and their sounds. Your mind will also instantly pay more attention because humans are very visual animals and images are what our brains crave most. Please note that I will often use the words "conceptualizing" and "visualizing" interchangeably. There ill be more discussion of these terms later, but the basically, visualizing is a subset of conceptualizing, and because of this relationship, doing one often leads to the other. Now, although conceptualizing is actually a simple trick, it may not seem so simple to actually sustain at first, and you may feel yourself going into and out of the conceptualizing zone. Here’s why: When you visualize the meaning of phrases, the ideas will seem to leap off the page and into your mind as your right brain focuses on the conceptual nature of the information. However, it takes practice to learn to “see” ideas as you read, and at first this process may slow your reading. You may then become impatient and be tempted to return to your old way of reading—by simply connecting text to matching words and sounds. And if you get frustrated and skip visualizing one phrase, it makes it harder to visualize the next one, and then the next. You will lose your connection with the material, but you will still be tempted to keep reading along anyway, without visualizing and without comprehending . Thisnecessary type of mental “blanking is an thing to understand. It happens reading, an it’s to consider theout” cause in important order to prevent it. It isn’t that you areoften not inpaying enough attention or concentrating hard enough. The problem is that your chain of comprehension becomes broken when you skip a piece of information. Imagine your concentration as an airplane trying to take off. But the engine begins to sputter—firs once, then a few times. Each time the engine misfires makes it harder to get off the ground, and as long as this happens, it will never gain enough power to become airborne. If it can gain enough speed to liftoff, then staying airborne will be relatively easy. Similarly, each time your concentration misfires, it also loses power. It takes discipline and effort to conceptually visualize what you are reading, but this visualizing will get your powerful right brain involved in reading and lift your reading into the higher conceptual comprehension necessary for faster reading. This participation of your right hemisphere will also make your reading come more alive as you begin seeing the larger conceptual nature of the ideas you are reading. The act of using your visual right hemisphere will also cause you to direct additional mental attention to the information, and it will cause you to filter out more distractions. The text will also become more meaningful since even attempting to visualize forces you to actuallythink about what the text means. At this point, we have mostly considered visual imagery, but visualizing pictures is only one form o conceptualizing. We will get more into other types of conceptualizing later, including how to conceptualize unobservable ideas, but for now at least make sure to activelythink about what you’re reading. Instead of your consciousness just sitting back and listening to you read it a story, you will use conceptual images to wake it up and say, “Pay attention. This is important.” Keep These Tips in Mind Visualize. The brain is wired to notice and react more quickly and emotionally to visuals. Thought-units are ideas, not sounds; think about what they mean. Words in thought-units give each other context and become more meaningful. Looking for that meaning will help you to see those word-groups. If at times you get stuck and lose concentration, stop focusing on speed. Refocus on ideas b forcing your brain to visualize. Concentrate on comprehension and the speed will come. The suggestions in this book may appear unusual to some people, but have you noticed that the other methods aren’t working? Learning to read phrases is as simple as it is uncommon; it’s a simple uncommon-sense solution to reading more efficiently, effectively, powerfully, and quickly. I’ve already mentioned that this takes practice, but you would be surprised how many people give up hen they discover practice is required. Another group quits when they find it will take longer than an hour. I wish I could help these people, but the subjects of tenacity and persistence would be a hole other book. However, with proper practice and technique, you will see positive results. It ma seem difficult at first, but this is really just activelythinking about what you read. Keywords Another helpful thing to notice is that the last word is often the “key” word in each meaningful phrase. It’s like the other words in the phrase were leading up this this word. Focusing on these key words can make your reading smoother as you more quickly zoom in on the main idea of each phrase. As you practice reading thought-units, you will develop the right-brained habit of creating visual and conceptual representations of what you read. This alone will make your reading flow more smoothly, as you read with a deeper and more conceptual understanding, and youexperience the text rather than ust listen to it. But even though you are conceptualizing each phrase as a meaningful idea, these individual phrases do not stand alone. Each phrase is still a link within the larger meaning of a whole sentence. As you conceptualize phrases, you must also link them together as interlocking bricks into the completed structure of the whole sentence. Looking at these keywords is one way to pull the phrases together. This does not mean ignoring other ords. It just means paying special attention to words that describe who or what is involved, or wha is happening. For example, here is a sentence divided into thought-units and with possible key words underlined. Dorothy lived in the midst of the great Kansas prairies, with Uncle Henry, who was a farmer, and Aunt Em,who was the farmer’s wife. Even though you are reading this sentence in meaningful phrases, there are certain words which represent the overall direction and framework of the sentence. You can’t skip or ignore any words, but these key words will give you a very good idea of what the sentence is about. Paying special attention to these will increase your comprehension and reading speed because these words will tie the thought-units together and add an overall structure to the sentence. There are no exact rules of grammar for selecting these key words, but they are usually the subjects and verbs of the sentence. They are also—as in the example above—quite often the first word of the sentence and then thelast word in each phrase. However, just as the word-groups you select don’t have to be perfect, neither do the keywords—they ust have to work. You are simply focusing on the words that act as a summary to the sentence. This may seem like a lot to think about while reading, but it is only another helpful tool for focusing on ideas versus words. With practice, the habit of seeing text as larger meaningful ideas should become internalized and unconscious and assist in making the most use of our finite amounts o cognitive energy. Practice Exercise #4 As you do the practice exercises, remember that speed is the result of better comprehension. Brin each thought-unit into clear focus by visualizing or conceptualizing its meaning, and let the speed increase as a natural result. You don’t want to feel like you arepushing your speed, but rather pulling it along behind your faster, more powerful comprehension. One more suggestion―besides practicing with the exercises, you should start to apply reading thought-units to your regular reading. In fact, there is no reason not to apply this method to the regular text portions of this book. Just remember not to go faster than you can comprehend, and remember to not include too many words at in each phrase; smaller thought-units are easier to quickly imagine hile you are learning. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells The War of the Worlds No one would have believed in the last yearsof the nineteenth centurythat this world was being atched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than man’sand yet as mortal as his own; that as men busied themselves about their various concerns they were scrutinizedand studied, perhaps almost as narrowly as a manwith a microscope might scrutinizethe transient creaturesthat swarm and multiplyin a drop of water. With infinite complacencymen wentto and fro over this globe about their little affairs, serene in their assurance of their empire over matter. It is possible that the infusoria under the microscopedo the same. No one gave a thought to the older worlds of space as sources o human danger,or thought of themonly to dismiss the idea of life upon themas impossible or improbable. It is curious to recall some of the mental habitsof those departed days.At mos terrestrial fancied there might beother men the upon Mars, perhaps inferior and ready to welcomemen a missionary enterprise. Yet across gulfof space, minds that to arethemselves to our mindsas ours are to those of the beaststhat perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic,regarded this earth ith envious eyes,and slowly and surely drew their plans against us. And early inthe twentieth century,came the greatdisillusionment. The planet Mars, I scarcely need remind the reader, revolves about the sunat a mean distanceo 140,000,000 miles, and the lightand heat it receives from the sunis barely half of that received by this world. It must be,if the nebular hypothesishas any truth,older than our world; and long before this earth ceased to be molten,life upon its surfacemust have begunits course. The fact thatit is scarcely one seventhof the volumeof the earthmust have accelerated its cooling to the temperatureat hich life could begin. It has air and water and all that is necessary for the support of animated existence. Yet so vain is man,and so blinded by his vanity, that no writer, up to the very end of the nineteenth century, expressed any idea that intelligent lifemight havedeveloped there far, or indeed at all, beyond its earthly level. Nor was it generally understoodthat since Marsis older than our earth,with scarcely a quarter of the superficial area and remoter from the sun,it necessarily follows that it is not only more distant from time’s beginningbut nearer its end. The secular cooling that must somedayovertake our planethas already gone far indeed with our neighbor. Its physical conditionis still largely a mystery, but we know now that evenin its equatorial region the midday temperaturebarely approaches that of our coldest winter. Its air is much more attenuated than ours,its oceans have shrunkuntil they cover but a third of its surface, and as its slow seasons change huge snowcaps gatherand melt abouteither pole and periodically inundate its temperate zones. That last stageof exhaustion,which to us is still incredibly remote,has become a present-day problem for the inhabitantsof Mars. The immediate pressureof necessity has brightened their intellects, enlarged their powers, and hardened their hearts. And looking across space with instruments,and intelligencessuch as we have scarcely dreamed of, they see, at its nearest distance only 35,000,000 of miles sunward of them,a morning star of hope,our own warmer planet,green ith vegetation and grey with water, with a cloudy atmosphereeloquent of fertility,with glimpses through its driftingcloud wisps of broad stretches of populous countryand narrow, navy-crowded seas. And we men,the creatures who inhabitthis earth, must be to them at leastas alien and lowly as are the monkeysand lemurs to us. The intellectual side of man already admits that life is an incessant struggle for existence, and it would seemthat this toois the belief of the minds upon Mars.Their orld is far gone in its cooling and this world is still crowded with life, but crowded only with what they regard as inferior animals. To carry warfare sunward is, indeed, their only escapefrom the destruction that, generation after generation,creeps upon them. And before we judge of them too harshlywe must rememberwhat ruthless and utter destructionour own species has wrought,not only upon animals,such as the vanished bisonand the dodo, but upon its inferior races. The Tasmanians, in spite of their human likeness, were entirely swept out o existence in a war of extermination waged by European immigrants, in the space of fifty years. Are e such apostles of mercy as to complain if the Martians warred in the same spirit? The Martians seem to have calculated their descent with amazing subtlety—their mathematical learning is evidently far in excess of ours—and to have carried out their preparations with a wellnigh perfect unanimity.century. Had our instruments permitted it, we might seen the trouble far back in the nineteenth Men like Schiaparelli watched the redhave planet—it is gathering odd, by-the-bye, that for countless centuries Mars has been the star of war—but failed to interpret the fluctuating appearances of the markings they mapped so well. All that time the Martians must have been getting ready. During the opposition of 1894 a great light was seen on the illuminated part of the disk, first at the Lick Observatory, then by Perrotin of Nice, and then by other observers. English readers heard of i first in the issue of Nature dated August 2… Chapter 5: Skills Every skill requires practice, but some strategies exist that can boost any practice to maximu effectiveness—and some of these strategies are especially suited to reading skills. A little consideration of these strategies before continuing with the exercises will be time well-spent. Force vs. Technique Watch students of martial arts, and you will often see them practicing their moves in slow motion. It doesn’t look very powerful because they are moving so slowly, but what they are doing is perfecting their form and improving their technique. They know that power comes more from technique than from physical force. This same principle of technique over force applies to reading. Instead of the brute force method of simply trying to push yourself to read faster, real reading power can be achieved by concentrating on techniques to learn to read text as a flow of ideas rather than a string of words. It’s mastering this skill that gives power to your reading. If learning a physical skill like martial arts requires careful attention to technique, then it shouldn’t be surprising that this is also true of something as complex as reading. Practice "Practice does not make perfect. Only perfect practice makes perfect." —Vince Lombardi Practice you onlychoose createstohabits , and can be good, or mediocre. Therefore, the type o practice engage in isthese muchhabits more important than bad, the amount. Consider the skill of typing as an example. When people first learn to type, they usually improve quickly until they can type without looking at the keys. But after learning to "touch-type," they soon reach a plateau. No matter how much more they practice, they still don’t type any faster. Even if the type every day for a living, all that practice doesn’t continue to result in faster and faster typing. In the 1960s, psychologists Paul Fitts and Michael Posner described the three stages of acquiring new skill. The first phase is the "cognitive stage," wherein you consciously think about the task. The second phase is the "associative stage," wherein you improve your accuracy and efficiency and the task requires much less concentration. The third phase is the "autonomous stage," wherein you basically perform the skill automatically with barely any conscious effort at all. This third stage is—of course—useful, because you can then pay more attention towhat you are typing instead how.more All repetitive eventually reach the stage can driving, free yourplaying mind toa concentrate on of other, importantskills things. This is true whether the where skill isyou typing, sport… or reading. But this final automatic stage can also be considered a plateau, because once you’re good enough to no longer think about a skill, the skill no longer improves. Some people, however, manage to surpass this plateau—continuing to improve and becoming true experts in their skill. Somehow these people find a way to avoid the plateau; this “way” is the process of deliberate practice . These top achievers use a strategy to consciously stay away from that third, "good enough" stage. This strategy consists of three elements: 1. Focusing on technique. 2. Keeping attention on the goal. 3. Getting constant feedback. By following this strategy, they force themselves to stay in the first cognitive stage. The secret to reaching higher levels of any skill involves retaining conscious control while practicing and staying out of autopilot mode. This is why consciously concentrating on technique is so much more effective than simply putting in more hours of practice. Maintaining conscious control of your practice works in a similar way to how conceptual reading orks. Just as your comprehension and speed improves by staying consciously mindful of the concepts you are reading, your reading skill improves by staying consciously mindful ofhow you are reading. All this additional concentration may seem challenging, but think about what you’re doing—you are literally strengthening your brain. New discoveries about the neuroplasticity of the brain have demonstrated that the brain actually restructures itself to meet new cognitive demands. Training your brain to handle more information faster actually improves your brain’s ability to assimilate information. If your improvement slows down or plateaus, realize it’s still all forward progress, and that the plateau is just something to pass through on the way to your goal. Consistency Practice is important, but if you want your mind to get the most return from your practice time, it helps to remember a few things about how the mind works. Memory storage is based on a web of neurons. Each new memory alters this web to leave what is called a memory trace. Each repetition of this memory further reinforces this trace, making it stronger and easier to access. These repetitions create long-lasting enhancements in the signal transmission capabilities between the neurons in this web. As a result, the more you practice a skill, the stronger your memory of that skill becomes. Because repetition is such a powerful force in strengthening memories, consistency is an importan component to learning any new skills. This is particularly true with reading, where you are trying to reprogram a very engrained habit which may be several years old. If you only work at it sporadically, your brain won’t know you’re serious and might try to ignore your attempts to change its way o thinking. To maintain consistency, set a goal for yourself and plan the time period you will devote to practice; this will enable you to make use of the compounding effects of consistent practice. You should also consider the length of time of each practice session and how far apart to space your practice. I discovered something unexpected when analyzing students’ metadata on ReadSpeeder. I found that speed improvement correlated more closely with words per day of practice, than with days per week. This seemed counter-intuitive, but by studying the millions of words read by thousands o students, I found that—on average—it turned out to actually be more productive to cram extra time into each practice than to practice more often. The results of this analysis showed a sixty-four percen correlation between reading improvement and minutes per day of practice, but no correlation (actually a negative 0.4% correlation) between successes and practice days per week. On reflection, it seems this discovery might be in line with the latest science. According to Nassi Taleb’s book Antifragile, the fastest growth of any type, whether physical or mental, occurs when an organism is prompted to overcompensate for significant stressors; it could be that longer practice sessions create this productive stress. This is interesting because cramming more practice into fewer sessions is the opposite of how people are generally taught to study. I can’t be sure this is what will work best for you, but these are the results I’ve found from other students, I’d at least like to offer the information for your consideration. In the end, even though there are plenty of interesting theories and data on how to study, the best thing to do is to pay attention to what works for you. Pay attention to when and how you make the mos progress, and then try to accommodate your own learning style. Persistence omer : Hey, how come you never play your guitar anymore? art : I’ll tell ya the truth, Dad. I wasn’t good at it right away, so I quit. I hope you’re not mad. omer : [sweetly] Son, come here! Heh heh heh… [Bart sits on Homer’s knee] Of course I’m no mad. If something’s hard to do, then it’s not worth doing! You just stick that guitar in the closet next to your short- wave radio, your karate outfit, and your unicycle, and we’ll go insi de and watch TV. Obtaining a basic reading skill is a complex enough task on its own. Although achieving superior reading skills is even more difficult, the advantages are worth the effort. In the long run,not having good reading skills will end up costing you more than the effort needed to acquire them. Those ithout good reading skills are exiled to a land of ignorance—a boring wasteland, isolated from much of life’s fascinations and excitement. So how can you persist with the necessary effort to expand this skill? When you work on any goal, your motivation is bound to rise and fall over time and change with your moods; sometimes you will feel motivated, and sometimes you won’t. But results don’t come from motivation—they come fro action . Sometimes, when you don’t feel like doing something that you know you should do, it helps if you fool yourself into taking action. Tell yourself that you are only going to practice for a few minutes, ust enough to refresh your memory, and that if you feel like quitting after that, you’ll allow yourself to go ahead and quit. However, you’ll often find that once you overcome your initial desire to do nothing and instead get moving, the law of inertia works both ways; once a body (or a mind) is in motion, it tends to stay in motion. As a result, you may end up getting more done than you expected. Patience Although practice, consistency, and persistence are important ingredients for learning a skill, it can be a bitter mix without patience. Be patient with your progress. Allow time for your skills to develop. You may make great progress in the beginning when you first adopt this new perspective on reading, but don’t get impatient when you get stuck. If you never got stuck, then you were probably pursuing a goal that was too easy. When you do get stuck, slow down and concentrate more on the meaning of what you’re reading. This change of speed can sometimes break you out of a rut, like rocking a car back and forth to get traction if you’re stuck in a mud hole. This comprehension traction is important, and although it sounds like a contradiction, it means you will sometimes have to slow down to go faster. However, if you simply try to push your speed, you will make a lot of comprehension errors, and these errors will end up slowing your overall speed. But if you back off just a bit and concentrate on accuracy—that is, concentrate on the concepts and ideas—you will reconnect to the information, and your reading will start to flow more smoothly, resulting in the desired speed increase. You will also notice that your speed can increase and decrease, from one day to the next—or even one minute to the next. Sometimes this is due to the changing difficulty of the material, but it can also be due to your changing mental states. It’s easy to slip out of “the zone” when you are distracted by other thoughts, and this makes it difficult to maintain a strong mental attachment to the material. Jus be patient, put the book down, and attend to those other issues or distracting thoughts. Then, pick the book up again when you are ready for it. Practice Exercise #5 With this exercise, be patient and concentrate on technique. If you are not seeing the ideas as you read, then you’re wasting your time. Take a deep breath. Let it out slowly. Clear your mind and get ready to start the next reading practice. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson Treasure Island Squire Trelawney, Dr. Livesey, and the rest of these gentlemenhaving asked meto write down the hole particulars about Treasure Island, from the beginningto the end,keeping nothing backbut the bearings of the island, and that only becausethere is still treasure not yet lifted,I take upmy penin the year of grace 17 and go back to the timewhen my father keptthe Admiral Benbow Innand the brown old seaman with the saber cut first took up his lodging under our roof. I remember himas if it were yesterday, as he came ploddingto the inn door,his sea-chest following behind him in a hand-barrow—a tall, strong, heavy, nut-brown man,his tarry pigtailfalling over the shoulder of his soiled blue coat, his hands ragged and scarred, with black, broken nails, and the saber cut across one cheek, a dirty, livid white. I remember him lookinground the cover and whistling to himself as he did so, and then breaking outin that old sea-songthat he sangso often afterwards: “Fifteen menon thedead man’s chest—Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum!”in the high,old tottering voice that seemed tohave been tunedand broken at the capstan bars.Then he rappedon the door with a bit of stick like a handspike that he carried, and when my father appeared,called roughly for a glass o rum. This, when it was brought to him, he drank slowly, like a connoisseur, lingering on the tasteand still looking about himat the cliffs and up atour signboard. “This is a handy cove,” says he at length;“and a pleasantlysituated grog-shop.Much company, mate?” My fathertold him no,very little company,the more was the pity. “Well, then,” said he, “this is the berthfor me. Here you, matey,” he cried to the manwho trundled the barrow; “bring up alongsideand help up my chest.I’ll stay here a bit,” he continued.“I’m a plain man;rum and eggs ismewhat I want,and headup to watch off.downthree What you mightcall and me?bacon You mightcall captain. Oh, I seethat what you’rethere at—for there”; and heships threw or four gold pieces on the threshold. “You can tell mewhen I’ve worked through that,”says he, looking as fierce as a commander. And indeed bad as his clothes were and coarsely as he spoke, he had none of the appearanceof a man ho sailed before the mast, but seemed like a mate or skipper accustomed to be obeyed or to strike. The manwho came with the barrow told us the mailhad set him downthe morning beforeat the Royal George, that he had inquiredwhat inns there were along the coast, and hearing ours wellspoken of, I suppose, and described as lonely, had chosen it from the othersfor his place o residence. And that was all we could learn of our guest. He was a very silent man by custom. All day he hunground the cove or upon the cliffs with a brass telescope; all evening he sat in a corner of the parlor next to the fireand drank rumand water very strong. Mostly he would not speak when spoken to, only look upsudden and fierceand blow through his nose like a fog-horn;and we and the people who came about our housesoon learned to let him be. Every day when he came backfrom his stroll he would ask if any seafaring menhad gone byalong the road. At first we thoughtit was the want of companyof his own kind that made himask this question, but at last we began to see he was desirous to avoid them. When a seamandid put up at the Admiral Benbow (as now and then some did, making bythe coast road for Bristol) he would look in at him throughthe curtained door before he entered the parlor; and he was always sure to be as silent as a mouse when any suchwas present. For me, at least, there was no secret about the matter,for I was, in a way, a sharer in his alarms. He had taken measide one day and promised me a silver four-pennyon the first of every monthif I would only keep my “weather-eye openfor a seafaring manwith one leg” and let him knowthe moment he appeared.Often enoughwhen the first of the monthcame roundand I applied to himfor my wage,he would only blow through his nose at me and stare me down, but before the week was out he was sure to thinkbetter of it, bring me my four-penny piece,and repeat his orders to look out for “the seafaring manwith one leg.” How that personagehaunted my dreams,I need scarcely tell you. On stormy nights,when the wind shook the four corners of the houseand the surf roaredalong the cove and up the cliffs, I would see him in a thousand forms, and with a thousand diabolical expressions. Now the leg would be cut off a the knee, now at the hip; now he was a monstrous kind of a creature who had never had but the one leg, and that in the middle of his body. To see him leap and run and pursue me over hedge and ditch as the worst of nightmares. And altogether I paid pretty dear for my monthly four-penny piece, in the shape of these abominable fancies. But though I was so terrified by the idea of the seafaring man with one leg, I was far less afraid of th captain himself than anybody else who knew him. There were nights when he took a deal more ru and water than his head would carry; and then he would sometimes sit and sing his wicked, old, wild sea-songs, minding nobody; but sometimes he would call for glasses round and force all the trembling company to listen to his stories or bear a chorus to his singing. Often I have heard the house shakin ith “Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum,” all the neighbors joining in for dear life, with the fear of death upon them, and… Chapter 6: Ancient History Reading is everywhere we look. It is such a prevalent part of our lives that it’s difficult to imagine a orld without it. But even the most basic form of written text didn’t appear until about five thousand years ago, and it wasn’t until only five hundred years ago that reading became common among the general population. A short discussion of the history of reading will make it easier to understand the skill that we seek to improve. Seeing reading in the context of where it came from, and how it got to where it is now, will also demonstrate why the way we read now, is not necessarily the final stage in our development of this amazing ability. written Our species beenmore sending each other messages for one hundred fifty thousand years, but messages arehas a much recent innovation. It’s a shame that children aren’t told the story of reading and instead are left with the erroneous impression that reading has somehow always existed. Learning to read is more interesting when you realize that this is a new technology, and that only a few centuries ago it was even considered magic. Reading developed through a process of trial and error and was created in stages. Each of these stages was a modification to suit the particular needs of the people at that time. Reading and writing aren’t fixed skills that have been passed down to us intact—each generation has added its own improvements as it saw fit. Reading has always been a dynamic skill; therefore, there is no reason to believe its development ended when it was handed down to us. People invented reading, and people are free to continue improving it for as long as they want. Alphabet The first written language was developed by the Sumerians and the Egyptians about fifty-four hundre years ago. They created it as a way to keep track of agricultural trading, and this idea of using symbols for record keeping is what eventually grew into writing as we know it today. The Sumerians developed a method of writing using cuneiforms, symbols pressed into clay tablets. The Egyptians developed a method of using hieroglyphics and pictograms written with charcoal o papyrus. Since it was faster and easier to draw pictograms on papyrus than to carve cuneiforms in clay, the Egyptians began expanding their pictograms to also represent the sounds of consonants. In this way, besides keeping track of items being traded, they were also able to record names and events. This recording of consonants was a major turning point in human history; for the first time, the sounds of actual speech could be saved. With the introduction of consonants, simple record keeping evolved into actual writing, and human thought could now be communicated over time and distance. The word "hieroglyph" is Greek for sacred writing . It’s easy to understand why it was considered sacred when you imagine what a magical experience reading must have been. What must people have thought when they discovered that just by looking at these hieroglyphs, they could hear voices in their heads? Writing must have seemed almost alive to them. Around thirty-eight hundred years ago, the Phoenicians, a people of traders and sailors, needed faster and simpler system than those currently available to them. Cuneiform and hieroglyphic writings ere comprised of hundreds of symbols and were so complex that they were only reserved for a small caste of specialists. The Phoenicians created a system of representing sounds (phonics) b adapting a small set of these hieroglyphic symbols. Because there were fewer symbols, this new Phoenician alphabet was easy to learn and simple to use. The Phoenician alphabet, however, was only composed of consonants, so pictures were occasionall added to remove ambiguities. To clarify this even further, the Greeks modified the Phoenician alphabet by adding vowels. This alphabet was then adapted by the Romans about twenty-seven hundred years ago to form the Latin alphabet. Then Latin was adapted by the English around sixteen hundred years ago to form th Old English alphabet. The Old English alphabet continued to be modified until around two hundre years ago when we arrived at the English alphabet used today. Spaces and Punctuation Originally there was no punctuation. It wasn’t until about twenty-two hundred years ago that the mos basic punctuation marks were invented by Aristophanes of Byzantium, the director of the Library o Alexandria. This punctuation consisted of a single dot either at the bottom, middle, or top of the line to let readers know how long to pause between sentences. Even spaces had to be invented. Until they were, words ran together in an unending stream of capital letters known as scriptio continua. ASYOUCANSEEITISNOTVERYEASYTOREADL IKETHIS About thirteen hundred years ago, Irish monks began using spaces to separate words in Latin and, fo the first time ever, we had individual words. Before spaces, text functioned more like musical notes, and a person reading a scroll was more like a player piano, translating the scroll into sounds. In fact, well into the Middle Ages, reading was a activity generally carried out aloud; text was usually spoken as a kind of performance. The performers would practice and repeat their performances, and the text only had to serve as a reminder. But by adding spaces and punctuation, text became more meaningful as ideas instead of just sounds; and rather than replicating speech, some readers began to read completely in their heads—especially in the monastery libraries where they had to be very quiet. Over time, further improvements were added to make written language easier to read. By aroun twelve hundred years ago, spacing had become popular and the catalog of punctuation marks had grown richer. By this time, the page provided enough information for silent reading finally to become common. Printing Press After the printing press appeared in the late 1400s, the popularity of reading absolutely exploded. The printing press was like the World Wide Web of the day; suddenly, the world was full of information that had never been available before. As more and more information became available, more and more people began to read. Although many could read silently, most reading was still considered simply a form of entertainment, and—just like television entertainment today—was best enjoyed when shared. People would read to each other, and public reading performances were a common form of entertainment. The wealthy even hired people to read to them at home—the audio book of the time. But as the amount of reading material available continued to grow, and the time available for reading remained relatively fixed, the ability to read faster became increasingly desirable. However since reading was considered a verbal performance, how would it be possible to read faster than you could speak? Even if you only thought the words internally, how could you think them faster without it sounding like gibberish? The answer is to concentrate on the whole ideas being expressed rather than the sounds of the spoken words. This means that it is not enough to just read silently or even to avoid sub-vocalizing, but to concentrate on imaginingwhat is being communicated instead of the words used to communicate it. Practice Exercise #6 As you read the next practice exercise, make sure to see each phrase as a complete, meaningful piece of information. Just as spaces divide letters into distinct words, phrases divide words into complete and ideas. ideas. Concentrate on these ideas rather than the words. You are not performing the text;independent you are absorbing When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Dorothy lived in the midstof the greatKansas prairies, with Uncle Henry,who was a farmer, and Aunt Em,who was the farmer’s wife. Their house was small, for the lumberto build it had to be carried by wagon many miles.There were four walls, a floor and a roof, which made one room;and this room containeda rusty lookingcook-stove, a cupboard for the dishes, a table, three or four chairs, and the beds. Uncle Henry and Aunt Emhad a big bed in one corner, and Dorothya little bed in another corner. There was no garret at all, and no cellar—except a small holedug in the ground, called a cyclone cellar, where the family could goin case one of those great whirlwinds arose, mighty enoughto crush any buildingin its path. It was reached by a trap door in the middle of the floor, from which a ladderled down into the small, dark hole. When Dorothystood in the doorwayand looked around,she could see nothing but the great gray prairie on every side. Not a tree nor a house broke the broad sweep of flat countrythat reached to the edge of the skyin all directions. The sun had bakedthe plowed land into a gray mass,with little cracks running through it.Even the grasswas not green, for the sunhad burned the topsof the long blades until they were the same gray colorto be seen everywhere. Once the househad been painted, but the sun blistered the paint and the rains washed it away, and now the housewas as dull and gray as everything else. When Aunt Emcame there to live she was a young,pretty wife. The sun and windhad changed her, too. They had takenthe sparkle from her eyesand left thema sober gray; they had taken the redfrom her cheeks and lips,and they were gray also.She was thinand gaunt,and never smiled now. When Dorothy, who was an orphan,first came to her, Aunt Em had beenso startled by the child’s laughter that she would screamand press her handupon her heart whenever Dorothy’smerry voice reached her ears; and she still looked at the little girlwith wonder that she could find anythingto laugh at. Uncle Henrynever laughed. He worked hard from morning till nightand did not know what joy was. He was gray also, from his long beardto his rough boots,and he looked sternand solemn, and rarely spoke. It was Toto that made Dorothy laugh,and saved her from growingas gray as her other surroundings. Toto was not gray;he was a little black dog, with long silky hairand small black eyesthat twinkled merrily on either side of his funny,wee nose. Toto played all day long,and Dorothy played with him, and loved him dearly. Today, however, they were not playing.Uncle Henry sat uponthe doorstep and looked anxiouslyat the sky,which was even grayerthan usual.Dorothy stood in the doorwith Toto in her arms, and looked at the sky too.Aunt Emwas washing the dishes. From the far norththey heard a low wail of the wind, and Uncle Henryand Dorothy could seewhere the long grass bowed in waves before the coming storm. There now camea sharp whistlingin the air from the south,and as theyturned their eyes that way they saw ripples in the grass coming fromthat direction also. Suddenly Uncle Henry stood up. “There’s a cyclone coming, Em,”he called to his wife. "I’ll go look after the stock."Then he ran toward the sheds where the cows and horses were kept. Aunt Emdropped her work and came to the door.One glance told herof the dangerclose at hand. “Quick, Dorothy!”she screamed. “Run for the cellar!” Toto jumped out ofDorothy’s arms and hid under the bed,and the girl started to get him.Aunt Em, badly frightened, threw open the trap doorin the floor and climbed down the ladder into the small, dark hole. Dorothy caught Totoat last and started to follow her aunt.When she was halfwayacross the roomthere came a great shriekfrom the wind,and the houseshook so hard that she lost her footing and sat down suddenlyupon the floor. Then a strange thinghappened. The house whirled aroundtwo or three times and rose slowly through the air. Dorothy feltas if she ere going up in a balloon. Themiddle north and windsmet the house andgreat made it the exact cyclone. the of asouth cyclone the air where is generally still,stood, but the pressure of thecenter windofonthe every side oIn the houseraised it up higher and higher,until it was at the very top of the cyclone;and there it remained and was carried miles and miles away as easily as you could carry a feather. It was very dark, and the wind howled horribly around her, but Dorothy found she was riding quite easily. After the first few whirls around, and one other time when the house tipped badly, she felt as i she were being rocked gently, like a baby in a cradle. Toto did not like it. He ran about the room, now here, now there, barking loudly; but Dorothy sat quite still on the floor and waited to see what would happen. Once Toto got too near the open trap door, and fell in; and at first the little girl thought she had lost him. But soon she saw one of his ears sticking up through the hole, for the strong pressure of the air as keeping him up so that he could not fall. She crept to the hole, caught Toto by the ear, and dragged happen. him into the room again, afterward closing the trap door so that no more accidents could Hour after hour passed away, and slowly Dorothy got over her fright; but she felt quite lonely, and the ind shrieked so loudly all about her that she nearly became deaf. At first she had wondered if she ould be… Chapter 7: Modern History So, what is “speed reading,” and where did the idea of speed reading come from? There are almos as many definitions of what speed reading is as there are courses and books on the subject, and the history of speed reading is clouded with many myths and misconceptions. However, knowing the real story of speed reading will further clarify the process and goal of real reading improvement. Speed Reading Origins The speed of normal spoken English is about one hundred fifty words per minute. The way to rea faster than you speak is to do away with this speech and replace it with ideas. Instead of internall verbalizing the words, why not simply think the thoughts? This would allow more than one word at a time to be read, and it would omit the necessity of internal verbalizing, because once the idea was understood, the reading job would be done. The concept of reading groups of words at a time has been around since 1879, when a Frenc ophthalmologist, Louis Émile Javal, developed a method of photographically recording people’s eye movements while they read. Until then, everyone simply “knew” the eyes had to look at each letter in every word. The interesting thing is, readers don’t move their eyes in a smooth flow, but in small jerking motions called fixations. Javal’s photographs recorded these fixations and revealed that while poor readers perceived just one word—or perhaps only a part of a word—at a time, excellent readers took in entire groups of words with each eye fixation. After this discovery, instructors began to encourage students to “widen their eye spans” and see as many words as they could at each fixation. The invention of the tachistoscope—a machine designed to flash a series of images very rapidly, sometimes allowing them to appear on the screen for only 1/100th of a second, in order to create subliminal imprinting in the mind—seemed to create an advancement in teaching students to see more ords at a time. This technology, invented by psychologist Dr. Samuel Renshaw, was srcinally used to train World War II naval soldiers to rapidly recognize different aircraft and ships. In 1946, Dr. Renshaw patented the tachistoscope projector and began directing research at Ohio Stat University to use the machine to teach speed reading. With regular training on the machine, most people were able to increase their reading speeds from an average of two hundred words per minute to an average of four hundred per minute—the difference between the junior high school student and the post-graduate. However, most students reported that shortly after their course finished, their reading speeds once again sank to their previous levels. Only recently have experts realized that the normal range of reading ability is roughly two hundred to four hundred words per minute, and that most people operate at the lower end of this range. The increased reading abilities observed during the tachistoscopic courses actually had little to do with the training; they were mostly due to the students being highly motivated over a period of weeks and thus being able to reach the top of their normal range. Although it was gradually recognized that the tachistoscopic method did not provide any lasting positive results, this approach was still offered as a part of the basic training kit of most speed reading courses for many years. After all, they had to offer something, and a machine like this made a good first impression on students. Recent History Before the 1920s, reading instruction stressed “accurate oral reading.” The good reader was one who could “read aloud with expression and fluency.” But then experimenters at the University of Chicago found that students could read faster silently tha they could orally, and they could do it with better comprehension and retention. Research on eye movement during this time also found that a reader could read faster if he made fewer fixations per line of text. However, further research showed that eye movement could not be consciously controlled. Mos authorities concluded that the only way to improve reading would be to improve the reader’s ability talready o perceive and interpret the material. Therefore, by the 1950s most teachers and colleges were skeptical of any courses labeled “speed reading.” But then in 1959, a woman named Evelyn Nielsen Wood set up a course in Wilmington, Delawar called Reading Dynamics. Wood’s method started with what she called "push-up" drills, wherein students would read for one minute and then re-read, trying to cover more material each time. The course also concentrated on exercises meant to widen the eye span in order to see more words at a time. To eliminate subvocalizing, students were encouraged to push their speeds faster than they could vocalize. Even though these courses concentrated on pushing your speed, the basic theory behind Wood’s exercises was that students should concentrate on reading thoughts instead of words. She described i like this: "The reader becomes part of the story. Since the method relies upon the total idea of the thought rather than the individual words, there is no feeling of hurry or fast motion of speeded reading. The words go in fast, but they go in only to make the complete picture." Evelyn Wood considered her work an important crusade—one that would improve student reading skills across the country. In the fall of 1960, she set out to change the world, opening twenty-five instruction centers around the United States. Sadly though, Wood was bankrupt by the following September. She had opened all twenty-five centers within one month, and although Wood had a zealous commitment towards her schools, she unfortunately did not have any real business or advertising experience. She sold her business to George Webster, who promptly fired the srcinal staff and modified the course and the marketing. He ran a simply worded full-page ad in the newspaper, offering a moneyback guarantee if a student didn’t at least triple their “reading index.” Suddenly, Reading Dynamic became a huge success, and Wood was hired to make public appearances and open new schools. The advertised guarantee was a very effective marketing strategy, but unfortunately for students, the guarantee wasn’t really that easy to qualify for. First, the promise was only to improve the student’s so-called “reading index.” This index was calculated by multiplying the words-per-minute speed by the comprehension score. It was actuall difficult not to improve this index since the final reading exercise was always so much easier than the first. The final comprehension test was so easy that students could score quite high without even reading the exercise. Second, students hadjust to dropped completeout, thechoosing entire course beforemoney qualifying for the mos unsatisfied customers to lose their rather than morerefund, of theirand time. In the end, few students actually made the incredible progress that was promised. Over the nex twenty years the public became more and more skeptical, and the “speed reading” industry was unable to refute this skepticism with enough student success stories. This skepticism is unfortunate because there are always ways to improve any skill. But because of the outlandish promises made by many of these courses, people felt cheated and then ridiculed all speed reading courses to avoid looking foolish enough to fall for such ridiculous promises. As comedian Woody Allen described it, “I took a speed reading course and read War and Peace in twenty minutes… It involves Russia.” Progress Although the past century was littered with many courses using all kinds of incredible exercises and making even more incredible claims, at least the past hundred years saw a huge increase in the number of people who actuallycould read. In the century before that, a lot fewer people could read—and most who did, only read aloud, and only for entertainment. But even as a form of entertainment, reading was probably as fascinating to the people of that time as any of our entertainment is to us today. It’s interesting when you realize that before there was radio or TV, most people never even heard what people in other places sounded like. In fact, this is why many books of the 1800s—Tom Sawyer is a good example—are so full o colloquialisms and strangely spelled words. These books were written this way to reproduce the wa people sounded. Throughout the twentieth century, reading instruction became much more widely available than in previous eras; however, it was still primarily aimed at reading sounds, not ideas. Future Reading Reading has made great progress over the centuries, but that doesn’t mean the progress has to stop now. With the recent erosion in reading skills, there is now even greater room for improvement. Today half the people read below two hundred words per minute, the vast majority of high school graduates aren’t ready for college, and SAT reading scores have plummeted to their lowest level in four decades. The best path out of this this problem is through improved reading skills. The goo news is that this is something people can do on their own. Due to the massive and rapidly growing amount of information available since the advent o computers, the internet, and e-books, reading skills are becoming ever more important. Information is no longer expensive or difficult to access, and this means that regardless of the issues we may have ith our current educational systems, we seem to be entering a new era of do-it-yourself education— and the only entrance exam or tuition required is the ability to read. In order to read more, reading needs to evolve beyond text as sound to text as meaning. This is the same goal Evelyn Wood suggested when she said we needed to rely " more upon the total idea of thought rather than the indivi dual words. " But nowmethod there iswas an important difference: the order. must come first,before Wood’s basically an improvement on theComprehension old tachistoscopes—it still focused on speed. pushing speed and merely hoped for improved comprehension as a result. The reverse, however, is the better ay to read faster. Faster reading won’t lead to faster comprehension, but faster comprehension will naturally lead to faster reading. There have been many disagreements over methods to teach reading, but when people think o controversies in reading education, they usually only consider disagreements about word recognition training—such as the long-standing argument between phonics and sight learning. Both of these methods only teach how to match text with words, but regardless of which method is used to recognize words, word recognition is really only the first step of reading. To be an effective reader, you need to be able to rapidly and accurately process the thoughts behind the words. The thoughts are what the author wanted to communicate; the words were used only as a vehicle to communicate them. The history of writing has gone from simple record-keeping, to sound recording, and then to idea recording. Reading now has to catch up and advance from sound playback toidea playback. To handle the more extensive and sophisticated information today, we’ll need to trade in listening to that old-time radio and switch over to watching a new HD flat screen. In other words, this is not your parents’ reading. If reading and writing has changed so much in the past, it would be incredibly vain of us to think that we, today, were the intended final receivers of this skill. Likewise, it would be shameful to think we were the first who could not improve it. Practice Exercise #7 Remember, if you find yourself slipping into old reading habits as you practice, just stop a moment and then continue by concentrating more on meaning. As you continue, go as slowly as you need to until you can really get a grasp on the information. Take your time; you’re creating something new. This whole human ability to read may still be on the ground floor, and you are experimenting with using other parts of your brain to discover a better way of extracting meaning from text. And if it seems sometimes like you’re not quite sure how to conceptualize the ideas you are reading, and you feel like you’re not quite getting it, imagine how earlier readers felt when they first tried reading in their heads. That probably felt pretty strange too, and I’m sure they often felt impelled to start reading aloud again as they were used to doing. No reading advancements would have occurred if people weren’t willing to try something new, so read with an open mind, so you too can be part of this advancement. Just as with your previous six exercises, see each word-group in a single glance, imagine the meaning of each thought-unit, concentrate on pushing your comprehension instead of your speed, and be patient and focus on the ideas. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain The Adventures of Tom Sawyer “TOM!” No answer. “TOM!” No answer. “What’s gone withthat boy,I wonder? You TOM!” No answer. The old lady pulled her spectacles down and looked over themabout the room;then she put them up and outher under them.She seldom looked THROUGH themfornot soservice— small a thingas boy; looked they were state pair,the pride oforhernever heart,and were built for “style,” she coulda have seen through a pair of stove-lids just as well. She looked perplexed for a moment,and then said, not fiercely, but still loud enough for the furnitureto hear: “Well, I lay if I get hold of youI’ll—” She did not finish,for by this timeshe was bending downand punchingunder the bed with the broom, and so she needed breathto punctuatethe punches with.She resurrected nothing but the cat. “I never did see the beat of that boy!” She went to the open door and stood in it and looked out among the tomato vinesand “jimpson” eeds that constitutedthe garden. No Tom. So she lifted upher voice at an anglecalculated for distance and shouted: “Y-o-u-u TOM!” There was a slight noise behind her and she turned just in time to seize a small boy by the slack of his roundabout and arrest his flight. “There! I might‘a’ thought of that closet. What you been doingin there?” “Nothing.” “Nothing!Look at your hands.And look at your mouth.What IS that truck?” “I don’t know, Aunt.” “Well, I know. It’s jam—that’s what it is. Forty times I’ve said if you didn’tlet that jam aloneI’d skin you.Hand me that switch.” The switch hoveredin the air—the peril was desperate— “My! Looklady behind you,Aunt!” The old whirled round, and snatched her skirtsout of danger.The lad fled on the instant, scrambled up the high board-fence, and disappeared over it. His Aunt Polly stoodsurprised a moment, and then brokeinto a gentle laugh. “Hang the boy,can’t I neverlearn anything?Ain’t he played metricks enoughlike that for me to be looking out for himby this time? But old fools is the biggest foolsthere is. Can’t learn an old dog new tricks, as the saying is. But my goodness,he never plays them alike, two days, and how is a body to know what’s coming?He ‘pears to know just how long he can torment mebefore I get my dander up, and he knowsif he can make outto put me offfor a minuteor make me laugh,it’s all down again and I can’t hit him a lick. I ain’t doing my dutyby that boy, and that’s the Lord’s truth,goodness knows. Spare the rod and spile the child, as the Good Book says.I’m a laying up sinand sufferingfor us both, I know. He’s full of the Old Scratch, but laws-a-me! He’s my owndead sister’s boy, poor thing, and I ain’t gotthe heartto lash him,somehow. Every time I let him off,my conscience does hurt me so, and every time I hit himmy old heartmost breaks. Well-a-well, man thatis born of woman is of few days and full of trouble,as the Scripture says, and I reckon it’s so.He’ll play hookeythis afternoon, and I’ll just be obleeged to make him work,tomorrow, to punish him.It’s mighty hardto make him work Saturdays, when all the boys is having holiday, but he hates work more than he hatesanything else, and I’ve GOT to do some of my duty by him,or I’ll be the ruinationof the child.” Tom did play hookey,and he hada very good time. He got back homebarely in season to help Jim, the small colored boy,saw next-day’s wood and split the kindlings before supper— at least he was there in timeto tell his adventuresto Jim while Jim did three-fourths of the work. Tom’s younger brother (or rather half-brother) Sid was already throughwith his part of the work (picking up chips), for he was a quiet boy, and had no adventurous, troublesome ways. While Tomwas eating his supper, and stealing sugaras opportunity offered,Aunt Pollyasked him questions that were full of guile, and very deep—for she wanted to trap himinto damaging revealments. Like many other simple-hearted souls, it was her pet vanityto believe she was endowed ith a talent for dark and mysteriousdiplomacy, and she loved to contemplate her mosttransparent devices as marvels of low cunning.Said she: “Tom, it was middling warmin school, warn’t it?” “Yes’m.” “Powerful warm, warn’t it?” “Yes’m.” “Didn’t you want to goin a-swimming, Tom?” A bit of a scare shot through Tom—a touch ofuncomfortable suspicion.He searched Aunt Polly’s face, but it told him nothing. So he said: “No’m—well, not very much.” The old lady reached out her hand and felt Tom’s shirt, and said: “But you ain’t too warm now, though.” And it flattered her to reflect that she had discovered that the shirt was dry without anybody knowing that that was what she had in her mind. But in spite of her, Tom knew where the wind lay, now. So he forestalled what might be the next move: “Some of us pumped on our heads—mine’s damp yet. See?” Aunt Polly was vexed to think she had overlooked that bit of circumstantial evidence, and missed trick. Then she had a new inspiration: “Tom, you didn’t have to undo your shirt collar where I sewed it, to pump on your head, did you? Unbutton your jacket!” The trouble vanished out of Tom’s face. He opened his jacket. His shirt collar was securely sewed. “Bother! Well, go ‘long with you. I’d made sure you’d played hookey and been a-swimming. But forgive ye, Tom. I reckon you’re a kind of a singed cat, as the saying is—better’n you look. THI time.” She was half sorry her sagacity had miscarried, and half glad that Tom had stumbled into obedient conduct for once. But Sidney said: “Well, now… Chapter 8: Texting the Brain Thinking about how you are reading,while you are reading, can seem counterproductive because the extra effort required would obviously distract you from your comprehension. You can really only think of one thing at a time, so thinking aboutwhat your brain is doing would interfere with thinking about what you are reading. But having an overall concept of how the brain reads will help you practice more effectively. An overview of what your brain is doing and what you are trying to change, will help you stay on the right track and stay focused on the techniques that will get your right brain involved in your reading. It’s not necessary to stay consciously aware of this process while you read, but removing some of the mystery you with general lay of the land, to make it easier to know where you are going and makemay yourleave progress moreastraightforward. Mechanics In basic terms, text is a communication device and the reader’s mind is a receiver. Just like a tex message sent from one smart phone to another, printed words are sent from the page to your brain. In both cases, a signal is being sent, received, and decoded. How does the brain actually accomplish this task? How can you know someone’s thoughts simply b looking at squiggles on a page? It seems like some kind of magic that these printed marks are actuall speaking to your brain. How is this possible? Text enters the eyes like any other image, but how do images of text turn into thoughts? Where and how does real reading take place? This is not a course on neurolinguistics—and anyone who is an expert in the field is invited to clarif any essential discrepancies—but some basic concepts will be useful, so here are a few simple glimpses under the hood to help conceptualize what is involved. Like all mental tasks, reading uses a network of modules and systems, each relying on its own network of neurons. Many areas of the brain work together simultaneously, and while the complete process is not even entirely understood yet, a general awareness of how reading is accomplished can give you a deeper respect for the amazing complexity involved, as well as an appreciation of how and why reading with the right brain boosts your reading effectiveness. One network of neurons, which many people may not think of as an actual part of the brain, is the eye. Reading starts with light entering the eye. And even though the whole eye is filled with light, only the fovea—a portion of the retina which occupies about fifteen degrees of the visual field—is used for reading. Signals from the fovea are transferred to the occipital lobe at the back of the brain, where the ligh signals are recognized as shapes. From this point on, these shapes are converted into words in a stepby-step process along a path the leftthe side of the brain. The recognized shapes are through passed from occipital lobe to the visual recognition area, where shapes are recognized as letters, then passed further forward to the Wernicke’s area. This is the area hich understands both written or spoken language. This area recognizes the groups of letters as ords. From here, the information branches off in several more directions. The words are sent farther forward to the hearing area in the auditory cortex, where they can be subvocalized, plus along a separate path to Broca’s area, where speech production is controlled for saying words aloud. At the same time the words are also sent down into the center of the brain to the amygdala, where the emotional content is determined. It may not seem like emotions would affect reading, but memories are more likely to stick if they are combined with emotion. This is one reason that having an interes in a subject makes it easier to remember; being interested in something activates the powerful emotion of pleasure. But there’s much more to reading than just recognizing words. Real meaning only comes from the wa the words are combined, and in that one fact lies the real secret to reading faster… Think Fast Quick! Memorize the foll owing letters: UPSIRSFBIJFKNASANATO Not done yet? Fine. Give up then, because it really does take too long. But let’s make it easier by grouping the same string of letters like this: UPSI RSFB IJF KNA SAN ATO Easier, right? Just six little “words” to remember. Nope. Still too hard and still takes too much time. Well, what if we group the letters like this: UPS IRS FBI JFK NASA NATO Wow, what a difference! The letters still make up six words, but these words are so much easier to remember than the previous ones. They’re made up of the same letters, in the same order, and in the same number of “words,” but only the grouping is different. Now they’re grouped into “thoughtunits,” with each thought-unit representing a meaningful chunk of information. This is the key to moving more information through your brain faster: parceling the information into larger packages. Reading and remembering takes a lot of thinking, and thinking takes time. You can’t really make those neurons fire any faster than they are capable; as smart as they are, they still have certain physical limits. I don’t mean that neurons are slow, but it just takes an awful lot of firing on their part to accomplish all the work they have to do as they sort and store information. When they’re resting, neurons fire about twenty-five times per second. When they’re active, that speed increases to around four hundred times per second. And when they’re concentrating really hard on something, they max out at about one thousand firings per second. So yes, youcan think faster, but there is still a maximum speed limit. There are other limits,attoo. Besides conscious only hold about pieces of information a time; andprocessing at normal speed, readingour speeds, theseminds piecescan only have about halfseve a second before the next piece comes through. But fortunately there is a clever way to bypass both of these limitations. In fact, this solution is special talent that, in comparison to all other creatures, puts humans at the head of the pack in the thinking department. Although humans aren’t well known for physical strength, speed, or any other particularly powerful physical abilities, they do excel at consciousness . Human consciousness gives rise to an amazing ability to handle novel and complex information, which allows humans to invent new solutions to problems and to make accurate predictions about the future. This consciousness is not located throughout the whole brain, but resides primarily in the prefrontal cortex. This is where you pay attention. This is where the real “you” lives. This prefrontal cortex is the erasable whiteboard of the brain; here, information is scribbled temporarily while the consciousness decides what to do with it. Information constantly and rapidl flows into this from the senses all andthis is even quickly organized, filtered, chunked into larger ideas. Andarea it has to accomplish though it only has roomand to hold abouttogether seven pieces of information at a time. But the conscious mind uses a clever trick to keep up with all this information. Although it is limited to handling only about seven items at a time, each of these items can be immensely complex. Each o these seven items can be piled high with information, similar to the way we pile food on our plates at an all-you-can-eat buffet. Chunking of information into larger more complex ideas makes the most o each conceptual idea before it is sent on to memory. The key to this process of filtering and combining information is the brain’s fascination with patterns and hidden structures . These patterns allow ideas and concepts to be assembled into massivel complex pyramids of information where each thought is attached to many layers of underlying meaning and associations. This hunger patterns is unstoppable. Weexperiences. can’t help By seeing patterns in everything. The result more than justfor faster thinking, but also richer filtering and combining information intois larger patterns, we create the complex context of our consciousness. We don’t just see, learn, and remember information—we understand it conceptually. To conceptualize information is to become truly aware of it, and what it means to us. The process of chunking information into conceptual patterns is not just a neat trick for thinking and reading faster—the more we chunk information into concepts, the more truly conscious we become. Reading Evolution As amazing as the human mind is, it wasn’t specifically designed for the modern world. Our minds evolved and developed over a period of time continually adapting to our changing needs. So just like language, our minds are just what we ended up with. Our brains weren’t designed wit reading in mind. Our early hominid ancestors needed to know things like where food and resources ere, the route home, and which plants were edible or poisonous. To recognize these types of things, they had to be very good at visual imagery, but they didn’t have to remember things like lists of facts, or names, dates, and numbers. They also didn’t need to spend much time thinking about abstract ideas—the kinds with no visual associations. Since reading was only developed a few thousand years ago, it certainly hasn’t given our brains enough time for any physical adaptation. In essence, we are still reading with prehistoric brains, ye somehow there are fixed circuitries of the human brain that seem perfectly attuned to recognizing the printed word. What appears to have happened is that somehow humans have very effectively reassigned portions o their brains to this new task. In other words, reading looks to be just a patch onto an existing, more primitive brain. But even though this reassignment of brain areas is just a makeshift adaptation, our reading skills have continued on a constant path of improvement and sophistication. They have progressed from recognizing cave pictures to rapidly consuming vast amounts of data from a continuous flow of complex information. This has been an incredible mental restructuring. A caveman has learned to read. If the brain developed this amazing skill in such a short time, then once again, it makes one wonder how we could imagine that our current reading skill is the “finished” product. Practice Exercise #8 For the next reading exercise, imagine how your inner caveman brain is going to understand this. This guy has been around way longer than those shiny, brand new reading skills—and he prefers to think in pictures! So make sure to give him something that will keep his attention by forming visual images that will be interesting to the whole brain. One thing you could try if you are having difficulty thinking in pictures as you read is doodling the phrases. To prompt your mind to think visually, try this exercise. Get a sheet of paper and make very quick sketches of what each phrase means to you. These can be absolutely simplistic and maybe onl meaningful to you. Don’t take a lot of time, just jot down whatever comes to mind, be it an actual pictorial view, a metaphorical view, or a symbolic view. These aren’t pieces of art and should be created as quickly as possible—just simple stick figures will do. Think of it as speed Pictionary. Don’t be concerned at all about what your doodles look like; just as our internal singing voice is often better than what comes out of our mouths, our right brains will internally take care of the real artwork much better than we can draw. The point is only to give you some practice in seeing ideas as images and concepts, which can help wake up the visual right brain. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Mr. Uttersonthe lawyer was a man of a rugged countenance,that was never lighted by a smile; cold, scanty and embarrassed in discourse; backward in sentiment; lean, long, dusty, dreary, and yet somehow lovable. At friendly meetings,and when the winewas to his taste, something eminently human beaconed from his eye; something indeedwhich never found its wayinto his talk, but which spoke not only in these silent symbolsof the after-dinner face, but more often and loudly in the acts o his life. He was austere with himself;drank ginwhen he was alone, to mortifya taste for vintages; and thoughhe enjoyed the theatre,had not crossed the doors of onefor twenty years. But he hadan approved tolerance for others; sometimes wondering,almost with envy,at the high pressureof spirits involved in their misdeeds;and in any extremityinclined to help rather thanto reprove. “I incline to Cain’s heresy,”he used to say quaintly:“I let my brothergo to the devil in his own way.” In this character,it was frequently his fortuneto be the last reputable acquaintanceand the last good influence in the lives of down-going men.And to such as these,so long as they cameabout his chambers, he never marked a shade of changein his demeanor. No doubt the feat was easy to Mr. Utterson;for he was undemonstrative at the best, and even his friendship seemed to be foundedin a similar catholicityof good-nature. It is the markof a modest man to accept his friendly circle ready-made from the handsof opportunity;and that was the lawyer’s ay. His friends were those of his own blood or those whom he had knownthe longest;his affections, like ivy, were the growth of time,they implied no aptnessin the object. Hence, no doubt, the bond that united himto Mr. Richard Enfield, his distant kinsman,the well-known man about town. It was a nutto crack for many,what these two could see in each other, or what subject they could find in common.It was reported by those who encountered themin their Sunday walks,that they said nothing,looked singularly dull,and would hail with obvious relief the appearance of a friend. For all that, the two men put the greatest store by these excursions, counted themthe chief jewel of each eek, and not only set asideoccasions of pleasure, but even resisted the calls of business, that they mightenjoy them uninterrupted. It chanced onone of these ramblesthat their way led them down a by-street in a busy quartero London. The street was small and what is called quiet, but it drove a thriving trade on the week-days. The inhabitants were all doing well, it seemed, and all emulously hopingto do better still, and laying out the surplus of their gains in coquetry;so that the shop frontsstood along that thoroughfarewith an air of invitation, like rows of smiling saleswomen.Even on Sunday,when it veiled its more florid charms and lay comparativelyempty of passage, the street shone outin contrast to its dingy neighborhood, like a fire in a forest; and with its freshly paintedshutters, well-polished brasses, and general cleanliness and gaiety of note,instantly caughtand pleased the eyeof the passenger. Two doors from one corner,on the left handgoing east, the line was broken by the entry of a court; and just at that point,a certain sinister block of building thrust forward its gable on the street. It was two stories high; showed no window, nothing but a dooron the lower story and a blind forehead o discolored wall on the upper; and bore in every feature, the marks of prolonged and sordid negligence. The door, which was equipped with neither bell nor knocker,was blistered and distained. Tramps slouchedinto the recess and struck matcheson the panels; children kept shop upon the steps; the schoolboy had tried his knife on the moldings;and for close on a generation, no one had appeared to drive away these random visitors or to repair their ravages. Mr. Enfield and the lawyer were on the other side of the by-street; but when they cameabreast of the entry, the former lifted up his cane and pointed. “Did you ever remarkthat door?” he asked; and when his companion had replied in the affirmative, “It is connected in my mind,”added he, “with a very odd story.” “Indeed?” said Mr. Utterson, with a slight changeof voice, “and what was that?” “Well, it was this way,” returned Mr. Enfield: “I was coming home from some place at the end of the orld, about three o’clock of a black winter morning, and my way lay through a part of town where there was literally nothing to be seen but lamps. Street after street; and all the folks asleep—stree after street, all lighted up as if for a procession and all as empty as a church—till at last I got into tha state of mind when a man listens and listens and begins to long for the sight of a policeman. All at once, I saw two figures: one a little man who was stumping along eastward at a good walk, and the other girl of eight or tennaturally who wasenough runningatasthehard as she was able down cross street. Well, sir, thea two ranmaybe into one another corner; and then came theahorrible part of the thing; for the man trampled calmly over the child’s body and left her screaming on the ground. It sounds nothing to hear, but it was hellish to see. It wasn’t like a man; it was like some damned Juggernaut. I gave a view-halloa, took to my heels, collared my gentleman, and brought him back to here there was already quite a group about the screaming… Chapter 9: Reading with the B rain We now know a little about the physical processes the brain uses to accomplish the task of reading, but how can we make the most of this ability? What mental processes should we be using to bes convert text into knowledge? Where’s the “User’s Guide” for this reading machine? As you have probably noticed, there is already plenty of advice available on reading techniques. In fact, having so much advice can make it difficult to decide which advice is excellent and which is nonsense. Our previous discussion of how we process text, however, may help you determine which methods makes more sense. The last chapter primarily dealt with how the brain converts printed text into words, but this chapter ill concentrate on how these words are turned into meaning. We will cover how words are turned into the thoughts they came from, and how language becomes ideas. We will also look closer at how the right brain can enhance this ability. Perceptual and Conceptual Processing Once text enters your brain, it is processed in two stages: perceptual and conceptual. The first processing stage is perceptual; this is when you see text and recognize the characters and ords. As amazing as this ability is, it is actually the simpler and faster of the two stages. Of course the whole reading process seems incredibly fast when you consider the complexit involved, but the second stage, the conceptual stage, is by far the slower of the two. A whole phrase of text can be perceived in about 1/25th of a second. That’s very fast—around seven times faster than you can blink! That means a group of words can be flashed on a screen so fast as to be almost invisible, but you can still perceive the whole phrase. However, conceptualizing the meaning of that phrase takes considerably longer. To understand how much longer it takes to actually read and understand text, consider that even reading at a rapid six hundred words per minute is equivalent to spending an entire half a second on each part. phrase. In other words, thethinking part of reading takes over ten times longer than theseeing This huge difference between the time it takes to perceive text and the time it takes to conceptuall process it should make it abundantly clear why speed reading has nothing to do with seeing text faster, but everything to do withthinking faster. Speed reading is really speed thinking. That’s why it is pointless to push the speed of seeing text, regardless if it’s with eye exercises or by following a pacer. Eyes are not cameras. The “camera” is the whole brain, and the eyes are only the lens of this camera. The eyes are an important component, but useless without the complex mechanisms required for processing and saving information. Reading is a complex process involving various operations. The whole process takes visual input, converts it to lines and shapes, then to letters and words, to language, and then to data. It next filters and sorts this data into information, and then finally saves it as useful knowledge. The entire process involves several simultaneous and integrated tasks, working together to generate new thoughts and memories. These thoughts and memories are the final result and sole purpose of all this work; a process which allows you to categorize, organize, store, and recall what you have read. As you can see, the end result of a system like this is knowledge, not memorization. This means the purpose of reading is not to remember words, but to assimilateideas . The purpose of conceptually understanding information is to make the information useful . The brain is a predicting and planning machine, and it uses categorizations and connections of stored information to accomplish those tasks. Episodic and Semantic Information There are two types of information: episodic and semantic. Episodic information is located in time and space. These are concrete things—things that are in the real world and can be observed. Semantic information is outside of time and space. These are abstract things—things you can onl understand conceptual ideas thingsfaster that can be represented as categories and connections. Consider theassentence, “He wasand running thanonly ever.” “He was running” is episodic information, and “faster than ever” is semantic. The first phrase is a concrete image. The second phrase is a abstract idea. When conceptualizing what you read, episodic information is somewhat faster and easier to imagine than semantic information, as it is easier to think of real world things than abstract ideas. Without any visual image, semantic information requires more imagination and mental effort to process. But although the processing of semantic information takes more effort, it is one of the abilities which make us uniquely human—and it beats the opposable thumbs, hands down! Chimps, for example, cannot effectively process semantic information, meaning they have very little ability to reason about unobservable things. But semantically thinking humans can understand how the past affects the presen and then how to use this understanding to plan for the future. Consciousness Once data is processed into conceptual ideas, it is presented to the conscious mind. Here the data is quickly filtered by tuning out what is not important, and amplifying what is. This is also where you become aware of the data as information. Although the conscious portion of the brain is small, it acts as the boss, delegating tasks and receiving reports from all the subconscious areas. As information streams through the conscious mind, it is temporarily placed in the short-term working memory, where it is analyzed, combined, compared, and evaluated. Although the short- term memory can’t hold many items or hold them for long—since each conscious item can be immensely complex—it can still handle a large amount of information. Because it takes about the same amount of effort to process a large concept as it does an individual word, concentrating on reading for ideas can maximize the processing speed. Another way consciousness maximizes its efficiency is by filtering out anything it thinks is irrelevant, enabling it to concentrate more time and energy on what matters most. You could think of this as a secretary going through and prioritizing the incoming mail. Not everything that comes in escapes the astebasket, but the most important items go to the top of the inbox. The result of this filtering is that you won’t remember everything you read—and you wouldn’t wan to; that’s not how the brain is supposed to work. The brain is more like an index than a book. Its job is not to simply record its experiences, but to organize and make sense of them. Memory After the data has been filtered and evaluated, the information is stored in the long-term memory. This information is not stored in one place, but distributed throughout a network of associated attributes. Each of these attributes is like a tag associated with the information and represents a quality or characteristic inherent in that information. Instead of being stored as intact bundles, this information is saved as a set of related attributes. Eac piece of information is not stored as a separate block somewhere in the brain, but as a complex web of connections to all associated information. In this way, we store memories of what information actually means to us. The result is that unlike a computer, we don’t store “data"—we store knowledge. In other words, we don’t store the exact information or experience, but instead store the conceptual idea of that information. This also explains why memories change over time. It is not because we forget them; it’s because we never really remembered them in the first place, at least not as exact recordings of facts and events. In fact, the latest studies on memory have found that memories are actually altered every time they are recalled, depending on which attributes are connected and which attributes are more strongly emphasized. This understanding of memory will increase your reading efficiency by encouraging you to concentrate on the conceptual thought-units rather than trying to memorize the words and details. Unless you are trying to memorize something like technical jargon or a poem, you are no remembering the words, but the ideas. Comprehending text means thinking of what it means. Here’s an example of conceptualizing via attributes. The thought of a red rose creates attribute connections for red things, roses, flowers, plants, and any other categories you might associate with a red rose—including any emotional attachment you might associate with roses. Later on when you retrieve this information, you aaren’t reallynetwork retrieving the srcinal you contributes are insteadto reconstructing the memory from distributed of attributes, wherememory; each attribute the larger meaning of the idea. When you remember this information, you will recreate this memory as red + rose + flower + plant, including, excluding, and even replacing many of these puzzle pieces from all the connections that were srcinally made. The point is, each memory is actually distributed throughout a network of connections to many other memories; these memories will be stronger or weaker based on the number and strength of these connections, and then will be further affected by the number of times they are accessed. Over time, the more you know about red roses, the more connection points you will have established and will be available for similar information to be attached to. Every additional piece of information you store will make it faster and easier to store new pieces. This will also make information faster and easier to retrieve since there will be more connection points to access it from. For example, jus thinking of “red” might remind you of that particular rose and the occasion of that memory. Another variable that affects the memory process is age. For instance, the reason we don’t form longterm memories before the age of three is probably because we don’t yet have enough memories to firmly attach new information to. If an infant sees a table for the first time and then later sees a chair, the chair will not remind him of the previous table because no conceptual connections have been made between these two items yet. The table will be easily forgotten, as well as the chair and an other memories associated with either of these items. But by the time we have accumulated about three years of experiences, we will have created enough associations to begin to make connections strong enough to possibly last for years. Then later, after a certain age, the brain begins to suffer a slowdown in processing speed. But due to neuroplasticity, the brain can compensate for some of this slowdown by making use of the many more connection points available, the larger vocabulary, and the sharper language skills developed by that time. Regardless of age, though, the more you read, the more you exercise your brain. Furthermore, the more you put into your brain, the richer life becomes. Concentration and Focus Knowing how the brain reads and how to improve its functioning is important, but this knowledge is useless until put into practice. Knowledge is not power—it is only potential power. Power requires effort. All reading and comprehension takes mental effort, and trying to read and comprehend faster ill obviously require an increased effort. Most of this additional effort will be directed to paying more attention ; which involves an increase in concentration and focus . “Concentration” is applying more mental resources to your reading, it’s thinking more about what the information means. Increased concentration is like shining a brighter light on a subject. In this way, concentrating on your reading makes the information clearer and easier to see. “Focus” is tuning out internal or external distractions in order to narrow your attention to the material at hand. Focus increases your mental efficiency by minimizing the waste of resources. Increased focu is like looking at the subject through a magnifying glass, as it strengthens attention on the information being read and reduces attention to distractions. One way to maximize the overall mental energy you have available for these tasks, is to be sure your brain is operating in top condition. A good way to do this is by providing your brain with adequate fuel— and it uses lots of fuel. Amazingly, although the brain only makes up two percent of the body’s total weight, it uses twenty-five percent of the body’s oxygen and seventy percent of its glucose. The best wayif to a good fuel supply is through good helpful youensure get proper physical exercise, nutrition, andhealth; rest. so for maximum efficiency, it’s very Even though there are limits to the improvements that can be made to your brain, you can still strengthen it with mental exercise. In fact, practicing to enhance your reading abilities has a powerful impact, not only on your reading skills, but on your physical brain itself. Besides increased effort, it also takes time to develop better reading skills. You should also be aware that reading whole phrases and concentrating on conceptual ideas as you read is going to feel strange at first; changing old habits usually feels a bit uncomfortable. But if it doesn’t feel strange, then you probably aren’t doing anything different. So accept that it will take time for your mind to adjust to conceptual reading. Concentrating on whole thoughts and visualizing and conceptualizing whole ideas uses more of your brain. It spreads these communication tasks over a broader portion of the brain than simply decoding text into words would do. The visual, big-picture area of the right brain specializes in this complex, conceptual type of thinking. Reading with the Right Brain Most of the areas of the brain typically associated with reading are on the left side, and this is actually the area we are most familiar with. But the area this book is primarily concerned with is wa over on the right. Textual information arrives on the right side via the corpus callosum―a wide, flat bundle of neural fibers connecting the two brain halves. When you study how the brain reads, you will see a lot of information about processes and areas o the left brain. Over on the right side, it’s much more of an unexplored frontier. In fact, this side seems to get a lot less attention overall. For example, if you do a Google search for pictures of the brain, you’ll see that almost all the images are of the left side. The left hemisphere is where our language center is located—this is the side that talks to us. Maybe that’s the reason it’s so much easier to get to know than the silent right side. But the right side actually has a major role in effective comprehension. The right side is where concepts and visual images are formed. The difference the two hemispheres wasepileptic first discovered patients hadthat theirwhen corpora callosa severedbetween in attempts to eliminate severe seizures.when Doctors found these people were shown words to the left sides of their brains (paradoxically, through their right eyes), the signals were unable to cross to the right sides, and these patients were unable to identify pictures that matched the words. Likewise, if a picture was presented to the right sides of their brains, they were unable to produce the matching words. This lack of communication is what proved to neurologists that the separate hemispheres actually had very different functions. The right side of the brain thinks by looking at information as complete patterns. Unlike the left side, hich processes information in a step-by-step fashion, the right side looks at whole images or whole ideas together and sees the overall patterns and connections of the information. This unique talent allows the right side to handle the higher order cognitive processing, which means it can interpret information faster, more holistically, and recognize the big picture. This holistic ability is why the right side excels at things like imagination, intuition, facial recognition, and artistry, hile the left side can balance a checkbook. Both sides have their own important specialties, but reading only with the left brain is like squeezing information through a straw, compared to the wide river of information that the right brain can process simultaneously. After the left and right side process data, it is sent to the prefrontal cortex. This is the seat o consciousness, an area which regulates information, modulates impulses, and coordinates data coming from other brain centers. This area enables you to form plans, make decisions, spot errors, and break habits. It is also where working memory—the mental desktop—resides. While the prefrontal cortex’s job is to process data into meaningful information, there are aspects o information which could affect processing capabilities—emotion, for one thing. Dopamine, the neurotransmitter associated with joy and pleasure, primes the prefrontal cortex for action and strengthens its informational signals. Also assisting the prefrontal cortex in its processing are repeated, rhythmic, structured, and easily visualized information—all of which make information easier to remember. Practice Exercise #9 As you read this exercise, be aware of what your mind is doing. Reading words may be automatic fo you, but this doesn’t mean the rest of your brain and consciousness will automatically be involved. In order for you to get anything lasting out of your reading, it helps to understand how your brain orks and which form of information it works with best. This means paying attention to the real conceptual meaning of information, whether it is concrete or abstract. If you want your consciousness to stay involved and store this information into your long-term memory, you must concentrate, focus, and conceptualize. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of White Fang by Jack London White Fang Dark spruce forest frowned on either side of the frozen waterway. The trees had been stripped by a recent wind of their white coveringof frost, and they seemedto lean towards each other, black and ominous, in the fading light.A vast silence reigned over the land.The land itself was a desolation; lifeless, without movement,so lone and cold that the spirit of itwas not even that of sadness. There as a hint in itof laughter, but of a laughter more terrible thanany sadness—a laughter that was mirthless as the smile of the sphinx,a laughter cold as the frostand partaking of the grimnesso infallibility. It was the masterful and incommunicable wisdom of eternity laughingat the futility of life and the effort of life.It was the Wild, the savage, frozen-hearted Northland Wild. But there was life, abroad in the landand defiant. Down the frozen waterwaytoiled a string o olfish dogs. Their bristly fur was rimed with frost. Their breath froze in the air as it left their mouths, spouting forthin spumes of vapor that settled uponthe hair of their bodiesand formedinto crystals of frost. Leather harnesswas on the dogs, and leather traces attached them to a sledwhich dragged along behind. The sled was without runners.It was madeof stout birch-bark,and its full surface rested on the snow. The front endof the sled was turned up, like a scroll, in order to force down and under the bore of soft snowthat surgedlike a wave before it. On the sled,securely lashed, as a long and narrow oblong box.There were other thingson the sled—blankets, an axe, and a coffee-pot and frying-pan;but prominent, occupying most of the space, was the long and narrow oblong box. In advance of the dogs,on wide snowshoes, toiled a man. At the rearof the sled toiled a second man. On the sled,in the box,lay a third manwhose toil was over— a man whomthe Wild had conquered and beaten down until he would never movenor struggle again.It is not the wayof the Wildto like movement. Life is an offence to it,for life is movement;and the Wild aims alwaysto destroy movement.It freezes the waterto prevent it running to the sea;it drives the sap out of the treestill they are frozento their mighty hearts;and most ferociouslyand terribly of all does the Wild harry and crush into submission man—man who is the mostrestless of life, ever in revolt against the dictumthat all movementmustin the endcome to the cessationof movement. But at frontand rear, unawed and indomitable, toiled the two menwho were not yet dead.Their bodies were covered with fur and soft-tanned leather. Eyelashes and cheeks and lips were so coated ith the crystals from their frozen breaththat their faces were not discernible. This gave themthe seeming of ghostly masques,undertakers in a spectral world at the funeralof some ghost.But under i all they were men,penetrating the land of desolationand mockeryand silence, puny adventurers bent o n colossal adventure, pitting themselves against the might of a worldas remote and alien and pulseless as the abysses of space. They traveled onwithout speech, saving their breathfor the work of their bodies. On every side was the silence, pressing upon them with a tangible presence. It affected their mindsas the many atmospheres of deep water affect the bodyof the diver. It crushed themwith the weightof unending vastness and unalterable decree. It crushed theminto the remotestrecesses of their own minds, pressing out of them, like juices from the grape,all the false ardors and exaltations and undue selfvalues of the human soul,until theyperceived themselves finite and small, specks and motes,moving ith weak cunningand little wisdom amidst the play and inter-play of the great blind elements and forces. An hour went by,and a second hour. The pale lightof the short sunless daywas beginning to fade, hen a faint far cryarose on the still air. It soared upward with a swift rush, till it reached its topmost note,where it persisted, palpitant and tense, and then slowly died away. It might have beena lost soul wailing, had it not been investedwith a certain sad fierceness and hungry eagerness.The front manturned his head until his eyes met the eyesof the man behind.And then,across the narrow oblong box, each nodded to the other. A second cry arose, piercing the silence with needle-like shrillness. Both menlocated the sound. I as to the rear, somewhere in the snow expanse they had just traversed. A third and answering cry arose, also to the rear and to the left of the second cry. “They’re after us, Bill,” said the man at the front. His voice sounded hoarse and unreal, and he had spoken with apparent effort. “Meat is scarce,” answered his comrade. “I ain’t seen a rabbit sign for days.” Thereafter they spoke no more, though their ears were keen for the hunting-cries that continued to rise behind them. At the fall of darkness they swung the dogs into a cluster of spruce trees on the edge of the waterwa and made a camp. The coffin, at the side of the fire, served for seat and table. The wolf-dogs, clustered on the far side of the fire, snarled and bickered among themselves, but evinced no inclination to stray off into the darkness. “Seems to me, Henry, they’re stayin’ remarkable close to camp,” Bill commented. Henry, squatting over the fire and settling the pot of coffee with a piece of ice, nodded. Nor did he speak till he had taken his seat on the coffin and begun to eat. “They know… Chapter 10: Mindset The proper mindset for effective reading requires both, paying more attention, and knowing what to pay attention to. You must also treat your attention like the precious and finite resource it is, and direct it at the real purpose of reading—comprehension . Attention It might seem that there is something mystical or magical about speed reading, or that it’s some awesome ability only a few lucky geniuses have. If this is what you think, then be prepared to go fro being amazed to thinking, “What’s the big deal? It’s only about paying more attention.” And that’s the truth; it is only about paying attention. But paying attention is really huge. “Attention” is your conscious mind. If you had zero attention, you would be comatose—barely alive. Having more attention is being more alive. Attention is the “you” in your brain. More attention means more you. You might think that naturally you are paying attention, but attention is variable. Attention is not stuck at one level, and it’s not simply an on and off switch; it’s more like a dimmer switch that can be adjusted anywhere between very bright and very dim, and this adjustment varies throughout each day. The power of attention also varies among different people. Just like any part of the physical body, each person’s mental processes can also be stronger or weaker than those of others. You could even conclude that some people are more conscious than others. But believe it or not, the conscious mind can be strengthened with exercise. With regular reading exercise and You goodcan technique, you stretch memory, your attention, andyour strengthen your intelligence. also learn to can make moreyour efficient use oftighten the working memory of conscious mind, maintain better concentration and focus, and suppress external and internal distractions. Here’s a simple trick that will increase attention: pretend the reason you are reading something, is to explain it to someone else. Think, “How can I make this information clear? What is the gist of thi material? How do the different parts fit together? How could I defend this idea if someone were t disagree with it?” But this really isn’t just a trick, because youare going to explain it to someone else —your future self. Improving attention depends a lot on your mindset. In order to make good progress, your mind must be rested, fit, and positive. Imagine if you were at the gym. The first thing you would do is stretch to prepare your muscles and get them warmed up. Likewise, your brain should also be prepared before exercise so it can be in the right frame of mind, ready to concentrate and focus on the job at hand. Relaxation Prepare your brain for reading and learning by relaxing your mind and body. Relaxation clears your orking memory, erasing that mental white board. Relaxation also calms the amygdala and prefrontal cortex, your emotional and conscious areas. These two areas work closely together and will communicate better when they are undistracted and uncluttered. The amygdala is the hub of emotional responses and can produce a stimulating effect on the prefrontal cortex. The prefrontal cortex is the seat of executive function; it regulates your thoughts, actions, and emotions. There is a strong connection between these two regions and distractions in one will affec the other. Relaxing your mind clears the communication channel between them. If you’re not sure how to relax and clear your mind, then try this. Close your eyes, and think of nothin but your breathing. Then, picture in your mind each letter of the words READ FASTER. Picture the one at a time, and imagine each one inflating and then deflating as you breathe in and then out. This exercise will accomplish two things: it will clear your mind of extraneous distractions, and it will also warm up the visualizing areas of your brain. Another very easy trick is smiling! Strangely enough, the physical act of putting a smile on your face actually creates a positive mood, and a positive mood produces a relaxed and receptive mind. A positive mood even improves your vision, because happy and positive thoughts cause your pupils to dilate, letting in more light. Purpose It is also helpful to keep your goals in mind when deciding to read something. Any journey comes ith some measure of apprehension. You may wonder: “How long will it take me? Will it be worth it? How will I feel if I fail to achieve this goal?” Before investing in any goal, we want to know if it’s worth the effort by deciding how much effort it ill take, what will be gained if we succeed, and what will be lost if we fail. But before we can know how much effort a reading task is worth, we need to be clear about the reading goals. Having a clear goal will help any reading, regardless whether the goal is to hunt down specific knowledge or just indulge in recreation. Realize what you want, what it is worth, what it will cos you, and what you would be giving up if you forfeited it. Being clear about your goal will clear the road ahead, enabling you to focus undistracted attention on your reading, regardless of whether you’re reading a difficult textbook or a trashy novel. All reading has a purpose because it all adds knowledge—either knowledge of the world as it exists, or of its possibilities—either increasing your intelligence, or your empathy. And all knowledge changes you, because you literally become more of what you read. So decide on your reason for reading and read with motivation. Then read aggressively by actively seeking the information, not jus aiting for it to occur to you. Patience It’s also important to be patient with yourself. Don’t be overly concerned about how long it’s taking you to finish reading something. Your attention is limited, so pay attention to what you are doing right now rather than how far you are from the end. You’ve set your course, now keep your eyes on the road Are directly in front of Worrying you. Ignore the your little progress voice in only the back mind asking, “Are weknow there yet? we there yet?” about leadsofto your performance anxiety. You here you’re going; you know how to get there. Now, relax and enjoy the scenery. Be patient. Your goal is to read and understand the material, so concentrate on visualizing the information, and you ill get there faster. You should also accept that you still may not always understand everything you read. But when you come across something that is troublesome, stop and see if you can figure out why it is giving you a problem. If it is still not clear, then make note of it, continue reading, and see if it becomes clear later. Practice Exercise #10 As you read this next practice exercise, relax, be patient, and concentrate on imagining what you are reading. Attention, relaxation, purpose, and patience are important ingredients, although these should not require your conscious effort. By concentrating on the conceptual nature of what you read, you ill automatically be paying more attention, be more relaxed and read with purpose and patience. You will be filling your mind with conceptual ideas, and therefore will just naturally avoid distractions, tension, confusion, and impatience. Once again, remember to time your reading and record your words per minute on your progress form. Even though you are concentrating more on comprehension than speed, your speed is still a helpful indirect indication of your progress. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Memoi rs of Sherl ock Holm es by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes “I am afraid, Watson, that I shallhave to go,” said Holmes, as we sat down togetherto our breakfast one morning. “Go! Where to?” “To Dartmoor; to King’s Pyland.” I was not surprised. Indeed, my only wonderwas that he had notalready been mixed up in this extraordinary case, which was the one topic of conversation throughthe length and breadth o England. For a whole day my companion had rambledabout the roomwith his chin upon his chest and his brows knitted,charging and recharginghis pipe with the strongest black tobacco, and absolutely deaf any toofbe myglanced questionsor remarks. of every paper hadasbeen sentI up by our news agent,toonly overand tossedFresh downeditions into a corner. Yet, silent he was, knew perfectl ell what it was over which he was brooding.There was but one problem before the public which could challenge his powers of analysis, and that was the singular disappearance of the favorite for the Wessex Cup,and the tragic murderof its trainer. When, therefore,he suddenly announcedhis intentionof setting outfor the scene of the dramait was only whatI had both expectedand hoped for. “I should be most happy to go down with you if I should notbe in the way,” said I. “My dear Watson, you would confer a great favor upon me by coming. And I thinkthat your timewill not be misspent, for there are points about the case which promise to make itan absolutely unique one. We have, I think,just time to catch our trainat Paddington,and I will go furtherinto the matter upon our journey.You would oblige me by bringing with youyour very excellentfield-glass.” And so it happenedthat an hour or so later I found myselfin the corner of a first-class carriage flying along route for Exeter,while Sherlock with his sharp, eager face heframedin his earflappedentravelling-cap, dipped rapidly into Holmes, the bundleof fresh papers which had procuredat Paddington. We had left Readingfar behind us before he thrust the last one of themunder the seat, and offered me his cigar-case. “We are going well,” said he, looking out the windowand glancingat his watch. “Our rate at present is fifty-three and a half miles an hour.” “I have not observedthe quarter-mile posts,”said I. “Nor have I. But the telegraph postsupon this line are sixty yards apart,and the calculationis a simple one. I presume that you have lookedinto this matterof the murderof John Strakerand the disappearance of Silver Blaze?” “I have seen what the Telegraphand the Chroniclehave to say.” “It onethe of acquiringof those caseswhere the art of thetragedy reasonerhas should be uncommon,so used rather forcomplete the sifting thanisfor fresh evidence.The beenso andofofdetails such personal importance to so many people, that we are sufferingfrom a plethora of surmise, conjecture, and hypothesis. The difficultyis to detach the framework of fact—of absolute undeniable fact—from the embellishmentsof theorists and reporters. Then, having established ourselves upon this sound basis, it is our duty to see what inferencesmay be drawn and what are the special points upon which the whole mysteryturns. On Tuesday eveningI received telegrams from both Colonel Ross,the owner of the horse, and fromInspector Gregory,who is looking afterthe case, inviting my cooperation.” “Tuesday evening!”I exclaimed.“And this is Thursday morning.Why didn’t yougo down yesterday?” “Because I made a blunder, my dear Watson—which is, I am afraid,a more common occurrencethan any one would thinkwho only knew methrough your memoirs.The fact is that I could notbelieve it possible that the mostremarkable horse in England could long remain concealed, especially in so sparsely inhabited a place as the north of Dartmoor.From hour to houryesterday I expected to hear that he had been found,and that his abductorwas the murderer of John Straker.When, however, another morning had come,and I foundthat beyond the arrest of young Fitzroy Simpsonnothing had been done, I felt thatit was time for me to take action. Yet in some ways I feel that yesterday has not been wasted.” “You have formed a theory, then?” “At least I have got a grip of the essential facts of the case. I shall enumerate them to you,for nothing clears up a case so much as stating it to another person, and I can hardlyexpect your co-operationif I do not show you the position from which we start.” I lay back against the cushions, puffing at my cigar, while Holmes, leaning forward, with his long, thin forefinger checking off the points upon the palm of his left hand, gave me a sketch of the events which had led to our journey. “Silver Blaze,” said he, “is from the Somomy stock, and holds as brilliant a record as his famou ancestor. He is now in his fifth year, and has brought in turn each of the prizes of the turf to Colonel Ross, his fortunate owner. Up to the time of the catastrophe he was the first favorite for the Wessex Cup, the betting being three to one on him. He has always, however, been a prime favorite with the racing public, and has never yet disappointed them, so that even at those odds enormous sums o money have been laid upon him. It is obvious, therefore, that there were many people who had the strongest interest in preventing Silver Blaze from being there at the fall of the flag next Tuesday. “The fact was, of course, appreciated at King’s Pyland, where the Colonel’s training-stable i situated. Every precaution was taken to guard… Chapter 11: Comprehension I don’t know why, but few people seem to recognize that we are not trying to read WORDS—we ar trying to read IDEAS. Reading is all about comprehension. Reading without comprehension is like reading with your eyes closed. Comprehension means more than just understanding words and definitions; it means understanding the ideas being communicated. Comprehension depends on the writer and the reader; it is a connection between two minds, and good comprehension depends on both ends of this connection. Since comprehension is the purpose of text, it would be helpful to consider what comprehension is, hat affects it, and how to maximize it. Reading IS Comprehension Sure, we all know comprehension is important. We want to read faster while maintaining good comprehension. But this is looking at the process completely backwards. Comprehension is the goal of reading and the only reason for reading. It is not a part of reading to be simply maintained . Wha you really want to have is good comprehension… and then also have fast reading. Even though it seems obvious to everyone that comprehension is important, most reading improvement courses not only ignore comprehension, but even actively discourage it. We are told we can ignore comprehension while pressing ahead with our “reading” speed. We are told thatafter we develop the habit seeing words our comprehension will somehow catch up. I’m afraid it just doesn’t work like of that, as you havefaster, probably discovered for yourself. Pushing your speed and expecting your comprehension to catch up is like flooring the accelerator on your car and expecting your driving skills to catch up. Your car would soon crash as certainly as your comprehension would. Comprehension is a skill, a complex mental skill that doesn’t improve on its own. Like most skills, you have to master proper technique before you can perform the skill faster. Improved comprehension is what leads to speed, not vice versa. Not only does comprehension fail to automatically improve with faster reading, it is also possible to read words and have absolutely no comprehension at all. How often have you read an entire page ith your mind on autopilot, only to discover that you didn’t remember a thing? Here’s another example of “reading” without understanding. Even though I do notunderstand Spanish, the phonetic rules of the language are logical enough that I could probablysay all the words. This means I could read a Spanish book aloud and most Spanish speaking people would understan hat I was saying. But just because I could say the words wouldn’t mean I was actually reading them I would only be decoding written symbols into their associated sounds. In the end, I am not takin away any information, just sounds. This is the same if I were to read English while ignorin comprehension. Comprehension must come first—without it, you aren’t really reading at all. The path to faster reading isimproving comprehension by conceptualizing meaning . By following this path, your reading speed will increase automatically—a natural result of faster understanding. With more effective comprehension, you’ll not only read faster, but you’ll have more to show for it. Information Density The information density of a piece of text depends on how much new information is contained within that text, and this can have a huge effect on comprehension. Data that contains no new information is the easiest to read because most of this empty data will be simply discarded by the prefrontal cortex. But after this filtering, data that includes new information is going to go through additional processing to be sorted, prioritized, and finally connected to previous knowledge through shared attributes. During this process, some of you the may knowledge may be reading deemedmomentarily interesting enough to require furtherthis contemplation, in which case even halt your to ponder and examine important discovery and make further mental attachments. Imagine your reading to be like walking through a museum. You move quickly past displays you’ve seen before, slow down to consider those new and interesting items, and then sometimes stop and stare at the most surprising finds. Information density also affects your ability to stay connected with the material and to prevent your mind from wandering. Since the prefrontal cortex tries to be energy efficient, it attempts to ignore low density information. When information density is too low, you will have a tendency to begin skimming the text, which will make it harder to keep your mind firmly connected with it. However, when information density is too high, you may be forced to slow down so much that it can become difficult to keep the larger picture of the information in your mind. Being aware of how information density changes and affects your comprehension will help you accommodate these changes by accepting a constantly changing reading speed. Information Attachment Conceptualizing information is still not the very end of the reading process. Information that is no attached to previous knowledge will quickly evaporate and disappear. Information attachment takes place via attributes the new information shares with existing information. Do you enjoy a sport or a hobby? If you do, you will easily remember a new record or achievement in that field. Your current personal knowledge base was built out of those things you found interesting in the past. This existing knowledge is what supplies attachment points for new related information. Your interest in a subject will improve your comprehension because you will have many other pieces of related information with which to quickly associate and attach new information. It is literally true to describe an interest as an “attachment” to the subject, because new information about the subject will easily find more attachments to your existing knowledge. Furthermore, if you have a larger number of interests, there will be more subjects that will be easier and more interesting to read about. This actually creates a virtuous circle: the more you know abou each subject, the more interesting it becomes; and then the more interesting it becomes, the more you’ll want to know about it. This is a terrific cure for boredom. In fact, when something seem boring, it’s often not the material that’s boring—it’s us. Developing more interest in a subject will also change your reading from passive to aggressive. You ill find that you will tend to aggressively seek information as you read about these subjects, rather than passively wait for ideas to occur to you. Thought-Unit Attachment Another form of information attachment is the attachment between the thought-units in each sentence. Each of these meaningful phrases will attach to the prior and next phrases, and your comprehension ill depend on these bonds. Although it’s easier and faster to comprehend words in meaningful groups than one at a time, these groups also become more meaningful in the context of their neighboring groups. For example, you will notice that when you first start reading something, your comprehension ma start off feeling weak and tenuous, but then it begins to strengthen as you continue reading. This is because each thought-unit you encounter is assisting those around it by supplying additional supporting context. Each new piece of information elaborates on the preceding piece and then narrows the possibilities of what’s coming next. This takes effect, whether you are starting a book, a chapter, a page, a paragraph, or even a sentence. It takes a bit of effort to get traction as you encounter each new idea. Let’s walk part way through a sentence to demonstrate this. Consider this sentence: “Now, as it turned out, the Rebellion was achieved much earlier and more easily than anyone had expected.” Dividing this into thought-units could look like this: Now, as it turned out, the Rebellion was achieved much earlier and more easily than anyonehad expected. Now When you come acrossbut theotherwise first thought-unit, “ would ,” it would this is likely some kind o exclamatory statement, the meaning still beappear pretty that vague. But the next phrase, “as it turned out ,” adds to the meaning of “Now,” which now appears to indicate when somethingturned out . And not only does the second phrase add to the meaning of the first, it also gives a clue as to what the next phrase might be about. It doesn’t tell youwhat the next phrase is going to be, but it narrows the list of likely possibilities. This makes the third phrase easier to understand because you know it will be limited to something that will make sense in the context of the previous phrase. Next, when you come to “the Rebellion ,” the same principle applies. This phrase clarifies the information of the preceding phrase and again narrows the possibilities of the following phrase. We now know, “as it turned out, ” refers to some rebellion; additionally, we know that the upcoming phrase will probably describe something about the rebellion. While this has been a ratherthought-units long-windedto description, microseconds. mental process of attaching one anothertheiswhole so fastprocess as to beoccurs almostinunconscious, butThe it’s important to understand that the thought-units and ideas are parts of a chain. Reading should be a smooth stream of comprehension, with each piece fitting into its neighbors in a continuous flow o information in context. Therefore, your comprehension will usually start out slower as you collect this context and then accelerate as the information becomes more meaningful and the larger ideas emerge. A good metaphor for this process is thoughts connected by a string. First, you have to be sure you have a firm grip on the string; then, you can gradually start to pull, and the rest of the string will come along. But if you yank too hard or too quickly, your mental string will break and your comprehension ill slip away. Also, some sections of a string may be more fragile than others, which means you will have to pull more slowly and carefully to maintain comprehension. Since it takes a bit of reading to first develop a context for the material and to understand what it is about,asit’s thatmaterialize you are willing let your reading be slower at first and then speed up on its own theimportant larger ideas aroundtothis context. Flow Another thing that affects reading comprehension is writing style. Writing that flows well, that jus seems more natural, is always a lot easier to understand. If the author’s words have a natural rhyth and they flow well, it will take less mental energy for you to translate the writing back into ideas, leaving you more energy left for processing those ideas. Good writing flow is an important factor in reading comprehension. Good flow probably has more impact on comprehension than sentence length or vocabulary. Unfortunately, good flow is not easily achievable for writers; few excel at creating it. Below are two sentences to compare. Both are examples of good writing, taken from famous novels; but one flows better than the other. From The Velveteen Rabbit: For at least two hours the Boy loved him,and then Aunts and Unclescame to dinner,and there was a great rustling of tissue paper and unwrapping of parcels, and in the excitementof looking atall the new presents the Velveteen Rabbitwas forgotten. From The Jungle Book: Mother Wolf laywith her big gray nosedropped across her four tumbling,squealing cubs, and the moon shone into the mouthof the cave where they all lived. Although both examples contain good writing, you will probably notice that the first one seems to low better—it’s somehow just a little easier to understand. This is true even though the first sentence is longer, and its words are no shorter or easier than the second sentence. The difference here is flow. Flow has to do with the flow of ideas—either through time or from big picture to detail. Good writing flow progresses logically, the way we think. It is easier to understand a sentence that describes a period of time if it moves from past to future, rather than backwards as a series of flashbacks. It is also easier to understand a sentence that describes a scene if it starts with the overall image and then zooms in on the details, rather than focusing on multiple minutiae and making us wait to see what they add up to. The first example above flows from one moment in time to the next in a logical fashion, making i easy for us to understand where the ideas are going. The second example moves through space—instead of time—but from detail to big picture, rather than vice versa; so that we need to hold the details in mind until the whole picture emerges. The result of good flow is that it takes the reader carefully through the information, ensuring the shortterm memory is never overburdened with unsupported moments in time or unattached fragments of a scene. With good flow, each new piece of information is easily and logically associated with the prior piece, and the reader is not required to wait to assemble the pieces like a jigsaw puzzle at the conclusion of the sentence. Being aware of density, attachment, and flow means actively maintaining a balance between speed and comprehension. A lot of things can affect your comprehension. Allowing your speed to fluctuate not only allows for better comprehension, but it even helps maintain your attention. If you read at a constant, mechanical, unchanging speed, it can be like listening to a boring, monotone speaker. So mix it up. Slow your pace when necessary, and be ready to sprint when you can. Practice Exercise #11 Read this next exercise, making sure that you are concentrating on comprehension. See each ide because this is key to getting the right brain involved. The right brain doesn’t understand words, i understands ideas. But feed it ideas only as fast as it can handle them—no faster, but no slower. Remember, it’s your comprehension speed that you want to maximize, not just words per minute. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Voyages of Dr. Dolittle by Hugh Lofting The Voyages of Dr. Dolittle My name was Tommy Stubbins,son of Jacob Stubbins, the cobbler of Puddleby-on-the-Marsh;and I as nine and a halfyears old. At that time Puddlebywas only quite a small town. A river ran through the middle of it; and over this river there was a very old stone bridge, called Kingsbridge, which led you from the market-place on one side to the churchyardon the other. Sailing-ships came up this riverfrom the sea and anchored near the bridge. I used to go downand atch the sailors unloading the shipsupon the river-wall. The sailors sang strange songs as they pulled upon the ropes; and I learned these songs by heart. And I would sit on the river-wall with my feet danglingover the water and sing with the men,pretending to myself that I toowas a sailor. For I longed always to sail away with those brave ships when theyturned their backson Puddleb Church and went creeping down the river again,across the wide lonely marshes to the sea. I longed to go with themout into the world to seek my fortunein foreign lands—Africa, India, China and Peru! When they gotround the bendin the river and the water was hidden from view, you could still see their huge brown sailstowering over the roofs of the town,moving onward slowly—like some gentle giants that walked among the houseswithout noise. What strange thingswould they have seen,I ondered, when next they came backto anchor at Kingsbridge!And, dreaming of the landsI had never seen, I’d sit on there,watching till they were out of sight. Three great friendsI had in Puddleby in those days. One was Joe, the mussel-man,who lived in a tiny hut by the edge of the water under the bridge. This old manwas simply marvelousat making things.I never saw a man so clever with his hands. He used to mendmy toy ships for me,which I sailed upon the river; he built windmillsout of packing-casesand barrel-staves; and he could makethe most onderful kites from old umbrellas. Joe would sometimestake me in his mussel-boat,and when the tide was running outwe would paddle down the river as far as the edge of the seato get mussels and lobsters to sell. And out thereon the cold lonely marshes we would see wild geese flying,and curlews and redshanks and many other kinds of seabirds that live among the samphireand the long grassof the great salt fen.And as we crept up the river in the evening,when the tide had turned,we would see the lights on Kingsbridge twinkle in the dusk,reminding us of tea-timeand warm fires. Another friendI had was Matthew Mugg,the cat’s-meat-man.He was a funny old personwith a bad squint. He looked rather awful but he was really quite nice to talk to. He knew everybodyin Puddleby; and he knewall the dogs and all the cats. In those timesbeing a cat’s-meat-man was a regular business. And you could see onenearly any daygoing through the streetswith a wooden tray full of pieces of meat stuck on skewers crying, “Meat! M-E-A-T!” People paid him to give this meat to their cats and dogsinstead of feeding themon dog-biscuits or the scraps from the table. I enjoyed going roundwith old Matthewand seeing the cats and dogs come runningto the gardengates whenever they heard his call.Sometimes he let megive the meatto the animals myself;and I thought thiswas great fun. He knew a lotabout dogs and he would tell methe namesof the different kinds as we went through the town.He had several dogs of his own; one, a whippet, was a very fast runner, and Matthewused to win prizes with her at the Saturdaycoursing races; another, a terrier, as a fine ratter. The cat’s-meat-manused to make a businessof rat-catching for the millers and farmers as well as his other trade of selling cat’s-meat. My third great friend was Luke the Hermit.But of himI will tell you more later on. I did not go to school; because my father was not rich enough to send me.But I was extremely fondo animals. So I used to spend my timecollecting birds’ eggs and butterflies, fishing in the river, rambling throughthe countryside after blackberries and mushroomsand helping the mussel-manmend his nets. Yes, it was a very pleasant life I lived in those days long ago—though of courseI did not think so then. I was nine and a halfyears old; and, like all boys, I wanted to grow up—not knowinghow well off I was with no cares and nothing to worry me.Always I longed for the timewhen I should be allowed to leave my father’s house, to take passage in one of those brave ships, to sail down the river through the misty marshes to the sea—out into the world to seek my fortune. One early morning in the springtime, when I was wandering among the hills at the back of the town, happened to come uponfor a hawk squirrel claws. It was a rock and thelike squirrel as fighting very hard its life.with Thea hawk wasinsoitsfrightened whenstanding I came on upon it suddenly this, that it dropped the poor creature and flew away. I picked the squirrel up and found that two of its legs ere badly hurt. So I carried it in my arms back to the town. When I came to the bridge I went into the musselman’s hut and asked him if he could do anything fo it. Joe put on his spectacles and examined it carefully. Then he shook his head. “Yon crittur’s got a broken leg,” he said—“and another badly cut an’ all. I can mend you your boats, Tom, but I haven’t the tools nor the learning to make broken squirrel seaworthy. This is a job for a surgeon—and for a right smart one an’ all. There be only… Chapter 12: Habits Do you think bad habits are causing you to be a slow reader? Do you think your reading would improve if you could stop those bad habits? What are these habits? Subvocalizing? Regression? Mind-wandering? Of course these things are associated with slow reading, but are they thecause? Or are they just symptoms? Subvocalizing Subvocalizing is the internal speech that we often do when reading. Even when not making a sound, or even moving our lips, there is often a tendency to still at least say the words in our heads. But why do we subvocalize? Is it really true that it’s just a habit we picked up in third grade when our teachers asked us to read aloud? Maybe it started out that way, but I’m sure there are plenty of habits from third grade we, thankfully, no longer have. So why would we still have this one? First of all,than subvocalizing only a we symptom of to poor comprehension, but it it’s alsoaudevelops intoThis a habit. It’s more just a habit isthough; hang on subvocalization because seful habit! is because it’s an effective way of increasing comprehension . When something is difficult to understand, it can be a big help to verbalize it internally—or even out loud. This verbalizing accomplishes two things: 1. The additional sensation of sound makes information stick in our minds better. 2. Verbalizing automatically adds intonations that divide information into meaningful packets. Both of these are very helpful for improving comprehension. The additional sensation of sound (even internally) makes a stronger impression on our conscious mind and short-term memory. Our conscious mind pays more attention when it hears something, and spoken words also seem to stick around longer in our short-term memory. Sounding out text also helps you listen for subtle changes in pitch that we normally use in speech. When we speak, we involuntarily add vocal inflections to our words. Changes in pitch are automatically used to indicate where each segment of thought begins. These intonations are done so naturally that we are usually unaware of them—they just happen as we speak sentences the way we think theyought to sound. As an example, verbalize the following sentence: Listen carefully—to the first word—of each phrase. This is not the only way you could divide this sentence, but however you divide it, you will verball indicate where you want each phrase to begin, by slightly lowering your pitch on the first word of the phrase. Lowering your pitch does not mean speaking more quietly or with less stress, but simpl dropping your pitch to a lower note. On a musical scale, the intonation would rise and fall something like this: The lower tone of the underlined words indicates to the listener that this is the beginning of a new piece of information, a new thought-unit. These audio clues are obviously not available in text, so we have a tendency to verbalize to ourselves when we read so that we can then listen for them. This process helps us break sentences into bite-size, meaningful phrases, to make the sentences easier to understand. So subvocalizing is actually a tool, more than a habit. Or in this case, since it also slows us down, this tool could be considered more of a crutch. But the more You you visualize and focus on not theto—you real meaning of what read, thetoless you ill you’ll want tofind subvocalize. won’t even have to try just won’t needyou it. It’s hard know for sure if subvocalizing completely goes away or if you just don’t notice it anymore, but you’ll begin ignoring sounds and even words. They will be banished as irrelevant thoughts. The sounds will fade away, the words will become invisible, and you will only be aware of ideas and concepts. Of course, verbalizing will still remain an occasional part of your reading—in some reading more than others. For example, verbalizing is always useful when learning new words. When you firs learned to read, all the words were new, but of course you are no longer just recognizing words— you’re now recognizing ideas . Regression Regression is simply going back and rereading. There are two types of regression: 1. Backward saccades 2. Mind-wandering Saccades are just eye movements. The eyes do not move smoothly over text, but in imperceptibl quick little jerking motions. These are saccades. A backward saccade is when the eyes, which normally move from left to right, jump back to the left again. With an average reader, about one out of four saccades is a jump backward. It’s an automatic response to try to make more sense of a current piece of text by jumping back to reconnect it within the context of prior text. The second type of regression is when you go back even further, several words or sentences. You do this because you either didn’t clearly understand something, or your mind temporarily found something more interesting to think about, or you just noticed the text was no longer registering—your mind “blanked out.” When this happens, you need to go back far enough to pick up the thread of the topic again. You can’t just blame your disobedient mind for regression. Maybe your mind had nothing to do and simply got bored. Your mind is made for thinking; it’s all it does. If you give it nonsense, something it doesn’t understand, or something repetitive or boring, it will likely look for something else to think about. If you are reading with poor comprehension, you simply can’t expect your mind to continue paying attention. If your reading is all sound and no content, what can you expect? Who could pay attention to “blah, blah, blah” without falling asleep or wandering off? Just like verbalizing, both types of regression are also only symptoms. Regression is no more a habi than bending down to pick up a dropped wallet. You bend down and pick up the wallet only because you previously dropped it. Rather than trying to break the “habit” of bending down, you would try to stop dropping the wallet in the first place. To stop regressing, you must stop your reason for doing it. And what causes regression is reading ithout comprehension. Regression will stop automatically when you conceptually understand the ideas and make meaningful connections to the information you are reading. Concentrate on concepts and ideas. Read with purpose and curiosity. It’s up to you to make your reading interesting enough for your mind to pay attention to it. Replace Bad Habits It’s always difficult to concentrate on NOT doing something. Don’t yawn. Don’t itch. Don’t loo down. Don’t think of a blue elephant. Trying to not do something often has the opposite affect b drawing more attention to the thing you’re trying not to do. When I was learning to ride a motorcycle, I discovered how riders tend to “steer” with their eyes For example, if you see a road hazard you want to avoid, you have a natural tendency to stare at it. It’s obviously dangerous, so you don’t want to let it out of your sight. The problem is that staring at i ill actually make you steer towards it. I learned to always look where I wanted to go, not where didn’teffective want to go, motorcycle would automatically mekeep wheremyI was This of ledroad to more wayand to the steer on twisting mountain roads. I take would eye looking. on a section ahead, and that is where the bike would go. Your mind follows your attention, whether it’s positive or negative. Thinking about your bad habits only strengthens them. Instead of thinking about what you don’t want to do, think about what youdo ant to do. Concentrating on stopping bad habits is also distracting because it’s one more thing to think about. You can’t really think of two things at the same time. You are either thinking about what you are reading or thinking about stopping a habit. Focus on the ideas and that is where your mind will go. Try to visualize and imagine what you read. Picture the ideas and conceptualize what the text is saying. Think about what it means. This will mak the ideas behind the text more meaningful and easier and faster to understand. It will make it almos unavoidable to read faster. So far we’ve discussed skills, history, and the brain. This big picture, conceptual understanding o how and why reading with the right brain works should give you a meaningful context for the techniques to be discussed in the next two chapters. But you don’t need to really think about all these things while you are reading. That is one of the beauties of reading for meaning. You don’t need to concentrate on a lot of rules, tricks, and tips. You only needmind to concentrate imagining the ideas you are reading. Concentrate on seeing the meaning, and your will do theonrest. Practice Exercise #12 In this next practice exercise, instead of thinking about eliminatingbad habits, think about creating new habits. No concentration should be wasted. Just think about seeing the meaning of what you’re reading, and let all the rest naturally take care of itself. Relax, ignore the bad habits, and let them go away on their own. Imagine an airplane racing down the runway. You hear the rumbling noise of the wheels on the ground, but this wheel noise stops as soon as the plane leaves the ground. Concentrate on the ideas, and the sound will stop when your reading takes off. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Daniel De Foe The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe I was born in the year 1632,in the city of York,of a good family,though notof that country,my father being a foreigner of Bremen,who settled first at Hull: he got a good estate by merchandise, and leaving off his trade, lived afterwards at York, from whence he had married my mother,whose relations were named Robinson,a very good familyin that country,and from whomI was called Robinson Kreutznaer;but by the usual corruption of words in England,we are now called, nay we call ourselves, and write our nameCrusoe, and so my companionsalways called me. I had two elder brothers, one of which was lieutenant-colonel to an Englishregiment of footin Flanders, formerly commandedby the famous Colonel Lockhart,and was killed at the battle near Dunkirk against the Spaniards.What becameof my second brotherI never knew, any more thanmy father or motherdid know what was become of me. Being the third sonof the family,and not bred to any trade, my head beganto be filled very early with rambling thoughts:my father,who was very ancient,had given mea competentshare of learning,as far as house educationand a country free-schoolgenerally go, and designed me for the law; but I ould be satisfied with nothingbut going to sea; and my inclinationto this led me so stronglyagainst the will, nay the commandsof my father,and against all the entreaties and persuasions of my mother and other friends,that there seemed to besomething fatalin that propensionof naturetending directly to the life of misery which was to befall me. My father,a wise and grave man,gave me serious and excellent counselagainst what he foresawwas my design.He called me one morninginto his chamber,where he was confined by the gout, and expostulated very warmly with meupon this subject:he asked mewhat reasons more thana mere andering inclination I had for leavingmy father’s houseand my native country,where I might be ell introduced, andHe hadtold a prospect of raising my by application life o ease and pleasure. me it was for men of fortune desperate fortunesonand oneindustry,with hand,or of aaspiring superior fortuneson the other,who went abroad upon adventures,to rise by enterprise, and make themselves famous in undertakingsof a natureout of the common road;that these thingswere all either too far above me, or too far below me; that mine wasthe middle state,or what might be called the upper stationof low life, which he had foundby long experience was the best statein the world, the most suitedto human happiness,not exposed to the miseries and hardships, the labor and sufferingsof the mechanic partof mankind,and not embarrassedwith the pride, luxury, ambition, and envy of the upper part of mankind,he told me,I might judgeof the happiness of this state by this one thing, viz. that this was the state of life which all other people envied; that kingshave frequently lamented the miserable consequences of being born to great things,and wish they had been placed in the middle of the two extremes, between the mean and the great;that the wise mangave his testimony to this as the just standardof true felicity,when he prayed to haveneither poverty nor riches. He bid me observe it, and I should always find,that the calamitiesof life were shared among the upper and lower part of mankind;but that the middle stationhad the fewest disasters, and was not exposed to so many vicissitudesas the higheror lower part of mankind;nay, they were not subjected to so many distempersand uneasinesses,either of body or mind,as those were, who by vicious living, luxury, and extravagances,on one hand,or by hard labor, want of necessaries, and mean or insufficient diet,on the other hand,bring distempers upon themselves by the natural consequences o their way of living;that the middle stationof life was calculated for all kind of virtuesand all kind o enjoyments; that peace and plentywere the handmaidsof a middle fortune;that temperance, moderation, quietness, health, society, all agreeable diversions, and all desirable pleasures, were the blessings attending the middle stationof life; that this waymen went silentlyand smoothlythrough the orld, and comfortably out of it,not embarrassed withthe labors of the handsor of the head, not sold to the life of slaveryfor daily bread, or harassed with perplexed circumstances, which rob the soul o peace, and the body of rest; not enraged with the passion of envy, or secret burning lust of ambition for great things; but in easy circumstances sliding gently through the world, and sensibly tasting the sweets of living, without the bitter, feeling that they are happy, and learning by every day’s experience to know it more sensibly. After this, he pressed me earnestly, and in the most affectionate manner, not to play the young man, not to precipitate myself into miseries which nature and the station of life I was born in seemed to have provided against; that I was under no necessity of seeking my bread; that he would do well for me, and endeavor to enter me fairly into the station of life which he had been just recommending to me; and that if I was not very easy and happy in the world, it must be my mere fate or fault that mus hinder it, and that he should have nothing to answer for, having thus discharged his duty in warning me against measures which he knew would be to my hurt: in a word, that as he would do very kind things for me if… Chapter 13: Visuali zing The Key It’s not possible to think of two things at the same time. You can’t concentrate how on you are reading, while also concentrating onwhat you are reading. The recommended techniques discussed so far may seem obvious, maybe even platitudinous. Sure, i ould be helpful if we read groups of words at a time and yes, better comprehension could avoid verbalizing and regression. And few would disagree with trying to conceptualize or see the big picture and true meaning of what you read. But you can’t possibly think of all these things while also thinking about what you are reading. The key to these reading techniques isvisualizing . Visualizing is not just one of the techniques—it is thekey to engaging these other techniques while you are reading. Visualizing doesn’t interfere with thinking about what you are reading, because IS it thinking about what you are reading. Visualizing is just thinking about it with your right brain, the parallel-processing hemisphere that has its own very effective way of rapidly understanding large amounts of information. Whenever you try to visualize information, you are asking your right brain to take a look at it. This is the reason that visualizing is the key to the other techniques; it leads your right brain to automatically do the following: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Conceptualize ideas. See the big picture. Read in phrases. Recognize the real meaning. Read in silence. Move forw ard without regression. Filter out internal and external distractions. Notice connections between new and existing knowledge. Save information in the long-term memory. Comprehend faster. 11. Increase reading speed. Visualizing is actually a method of staying tuned in to and making stronger connections to your reading. Visualizing is not always easy—nor is it always perfect—but the more you visualize, the more the other effective habits will follow. Visualizing is what tips over the first domino as you start reading with the right brain. Focusing on visualizing automatically involves the right brain, because this is the part of your brain that handles visualizing. It sees pictures as whole ideas, not just strings of information like your lef brain does. These big-picture ideas are the larger, more meaningful representations of information. Visualizing with the right brain is when the real “mind-meld” takes place, linking your mind to the author’s. It’s when yousee the author’s thoughts. The information that started as a concept in the author’s mind now becomes a concept in yours. Types of Visualizing Words, letters, spelling, and phonics are simply communication tools. They are symbols and devices used to send ideas from one mind to another. Actual communication occurs only after ideas are transmitted, received and then finally connected to related ideas in the receiving mind. Visualizing helps you move beyond communication symbols to concentrating on the actual content o the communications. To visualize the content, you must concentrate on meaning. This does not mean stopping to mentally draw a beautifully detailed image of the meaning of each idea. Instead, think more in terms of rapid movie frames flashing through your mind, each idea going by in an instant. Some are simple; some are vague. Some are clear; some are complex. Some may b mere ghosts of an idea, and some may be realistic. And some may not be images at all. You can easily imagine a picture of anobject , but what about ideas you can’t imagine as a picture? What about abstract ideas? There are two ways to handle abstract ideas: 1. Metaphorical Visualizing 2. Conceptual Visualizing Some ideas, although abstract, can sometimes be visualized as images metaphorically. An example ould be imagining a heart to represent an abstract phrase like“fell in love.” But visualizing can also mean simply imagining the idea itself— that is, visualizing its concept . In this case, you wouldn’t see any real picture at all, but instead just imagine themeaning. Rather than seeing images, this type of visualizing would be more like what you do when you say, “Isee what you mean.” An image is only one part of a concept. Some concepts can include both pictorial and abstrac information, while others can be completely abstract with no pictorial images at all. For these abstract ideas, you would be visualizing concepts . Visualizing Concepts To understand visualizing concepts, you first need to be clear what is meant by concepts and what is meant by visualizing. Here are some dictionary definitions of concept: 1. A general notion or idea. 2. An idea of something formed mentally combining all its characteristics or particulars. 3. A directly conceived or intuited object of thought. So you could combine these definitions to say a concept is ageneral idea—formed by combining all its characteristics —into an object of thought . To conceptualize something is to mentally combine all of its characteristics. These characteristics are the attributes of the idea, its distinguishing traits, qualities, and properties. Considered together, these attributes represent the essence of the thing or idea. For example, the concept of the word “dog” is a mental model including all the things that make something doggish. To conceptualize “dog,” you could imagine something with the attributes of fur, four legs, and a tail. But concepts are not limited to physical attributes. Your concept of “dog” could also include canine behaviors and dogs you’ve known, as well as what you think of dogs. Basically, the concept of “dog” is everything “dog” means to you. And your concept of “dog,” although probably similar to the concept held by most people, is uniquely your own; it is based on your very own life experiences and ideas. So when you read “dog,” you can instantly imagine your concept of a dog. Since a dog is a physical thing, your concept might also still include an actual image of a dog. But what about the concept of “pet”? The concept of “pet” is more abstract than “dog.” There ar many types of pets, so which pet should you picture? You could select an arbitrary pet to imagine, or else a group of many types of pets together, but the real concept of “pet” is actuallyany pet, not one or a group. To visualize the concept of “pet,” you would need to imagine something pet-like, a generic, nondescript concept which includes all the attributes—friendly, docile, loyal, etc.—that make something pet-like to you. But it will be difficult to create a real mental picture of “pet.” This is how conceptualizing an abstrac idea is different than merely visualizing a mental picture. For the more abstract concepts, you don’ icture the idea, because there is no picture; instead, you imagine all the attributes that, in your mind, contribute to the concept. Now for one step further into abstraction. How would you conceptualize “friendly”? The idea o “dog” might at least have a generic image, and “pet” may possibly have too many images, but “friendly” has no physical image at all. You can’t draw a picture of “friendly,” but you can still imagine all the attributes (helpful, trusting, pleasant, etc.) common to all the other “friendly” things you know. What you are doing is considering the essence of what things are, whether this includes physical attributes or abstract. That’s why considering the essence of ideas is more than just a reading technique, but a way of thinking. Visualizing what you read is thinking conceptually . This type o thinking is what lifts your reading to another level—to right brain reading. What’s In a Name? Now that we’ve put physical images in their place as just one type of attribute, what about the name attribute? The name attribute is the actual word or words used to describe the information, such as the words “dog,” “pet,” or “friendly.” The name is one attribute of the concept, but it is not even necessary for conceptual understanding. In fact, it’s quite possible to conceptualize something before you even know what it is called. Here’s a food I’d never seen until recently. I didn’t know its name, but I could still conceptualize it as a food, a plant, probably a fruit, and as something very strange looking to me. It could have had a sign over it, describing it like this: After seeing this sign, the next time I wanted to find one of these items, I could look for it by “name” by looking for this sign. But I would be “reading” the sign without saying the word, because ouldn’t know the sound of the word since I don’t know Chinese. The point here is that it is possible to read and understand words without thinking of the words or their sounds. I could simplylook at this “word” and this would lead me to conceptualize this food. I wouldn’t have to know that this was pronouncedfat-sau-gam in order to conceptualize the meaning of the word. But even knowing one of the English names—fingered citron, Buddha’s hand, o bergamot—would really add nothing to my understanding. No matter what the name is, the idea—the concept—would still be the same, and the name would still be irrelevant. The same goes for more familiar items. This could be described as or as “apple.” Either name, written or verbal, is still just a symbol. You could conceptualize this item as a group of several attributes, such as taste, shape, color, food group, texture, andname, but the name is just one attribute —one that is only required for communication, not conceptual understanding. An apple by any other name—or no name at all—is still an apple. Visually imagining ideas as you read, involves using faster and broader information pathways. Complex information processing is the most special of all human talents. As primarily visual animals, visualizing ideas is simply applying our special mental talents to the important task of information processing. Visualizing is more than just a reading trick. You could consider it the foundation of speed reading. To read faster than speech, you need to switch to reading ideas, whether physical or metaphorical images, or abstract concepts. Visualizing creates a strong mental conduit between the text and our conscious mind by adapting the information to the type of brain we have—a powerful, visual, pattern recognizing machine. The act o visualizing also forces us to pay more attention to our reading; thinking of the ideas rather than just “listening” to ourselves read the words. Visualizing forces us to form a conceptual idea of the information and ask the important question of, “What does this mean to me?” Visualizing harnesses the full range of the cortical skills of your right brain: the imagery, the conceptualizing, the big-picture and essence of information, and all the instant connections those larger ideas initiate in your mind. This type of massive parallel processing is what allows your mind to move more information at a time. A mental picture truly is worth a thousand mental words. Practice Exercise #13 Ready for another exercise? Then tip that first domino by focusing your attention on visualizing wha you are reading. You can see pictures or simply imagine ideas, but get that right brain involved and forget about the words and sounds. Each phrase has a meaningful idea behind it; look at this idea. Your high-speed right brain will then begin to quickly process information in these larger, unified units of meaning. And remember that you only want to see theideas . The words are only the silent messengers transferring those ideas to your brain. When you look at a meaningful word-group and see what i means, skip the words and sounds. Quickly imagine the idea and move on. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift Gulliver’s Travels My father hada small estate in Nottinghamshire:I was the thirdof five sons. He sent meto Emanuel College in Cambridgeat fourteen years old,where I resided three years, and applied myselfclose to my studies; but the charge of maintaining me,although I had a very scantyallowance, being too great for a narrow fortune,I was bound apprentice to Mr. James Bates, an eminent surgeonin London,with hom I continuedfour years. My father now and thensending me smallsums of money,I laid the out in learning navigation, and other parts of the mathematics,useful to those who intend to travel,as I always believed it would be, sometime or other, my fortune to do.When I left Mr. Bates,I went down to my father:where, by the assistance of him and my uncle John,and some other relations,I got fort pounds, and a promise of thirty pounds a yearto maintain me at Leyden:there I studied physic two years and seven months,knowing it would beuseful in long voyages. Soon after my returnfrom Leyden,I was recommended by my good master, Mr. Bates, to be surgeon to the Swallow, Captain Abraham Pannel,commander;with whom I continuedthree years and a half, making a voyage or twointo the Levant,and some other parts.When I came backI resolved to settle in London;to which Mr. Bates,my master, encouraged me,and by himI was recommendedto several patients. I took partof a small house in the Old Jewry; and being advised to alter my condition,I married Mrs. Mary Burton,second daughter to Mr. Edmund Burton,hosier, in Newgate-street, with hom I received four hundred poundsfor a portion. But my good master Batesdying in two years after,and I having few friends,my business began to fail; for my conscience would not suffer meto imitate the bad practice of too manyamong my brethren. Having thereforeconsulted with my wife,and some of myacquaintance, I determinedto go again to sea. I was surgeonsuccessively in two ships, and made several voyages,for six years, to the East and West Indies, by which I got some additionto my fortune.My hours of leisureI spent in reading the best authors, ancient and modern, being always provided with a good numberof books; and when I was ashore, in observing the mannersand dispositions of the people, as well as learning their language;wherein I had a great facility, by the strength of my memory. The last of these voyagesnot proving very fortunate, I grew weary of the sea, and intended to stay at home with my wifeand family. I removed fromthe Old Jewry to Fetter Lane,and from thenceto Wapping, hoping to get businessamong the sailors; but it would not turn to account.After three years expectation that things would mend,I accepted an advantageous offerfrom Captain William Prichard, master of the Antelope,who was making a voyageto the South Sea.We set sail from Bristol,May 4, 1699, and our voyage was at first very prosperous. It would not be proper,for some reasons, to trouble the reader with the particularsof our adventures in those seas; let it suffice to inform him,that in our passagefrom thenceto the East Indies,we were driven by a violent storm to the north-westof Van Diemen’s Land.By an observation,we found ourselves in the latitude of 30 degrees 2 minutes south.Twelve of our crew were dead by immoderate laborand ill food; the rest were in a very weak condition. On the 5th of November,which was the beginningof summer in those parts,the weather beingvery hazy, the seamen spied a rockwithin half a cable’s length of the ship; but the wind was so strong, that e were driven directly upon it,and immediately split.Six of the crew, of whom I was one,having let down the boatinto the sea, made a shiftto get clear of the shipand the rock. We rowed, by my computation,about three leagues,till we were able to work no longer, being already spent with labor hile we w ere in the ship. We thereforetrusted ourselves to the mercyof the waves, and in about halfan hour the boatwas overset by a sudden flurry from the north.What becameof my companionsin the boat, as well as o those who escaped on the rock,or were left in the vessel, I cannot tell; but conclude they were all lost. For my own part,I swam as fortunedirected me, and was pushed forward by wind and tide. I often let my legs drop,and could feel no bottom;but when I was almost gone,and able to struggle no longer, I found myself within my depth; and by this time the storm was much abated. The declivit as so small, that I walked near a mile before I got to the shore, which I conjectured was about eigh o’clock in the evening. I thenI advanced half a that mile,I did but could not discover of houses or inhabitants; a least was in soforward weak a near condition, not observe them. Iany wassign extremely tired, and with that and the heat of the weather, and about half a pint of brandy that I drank as I left the ship, I foun myself much inclined to sleep. I lay down on the grass, which was very short and soft, where I slep sounder than ever I remembered to have done in my life, and, as I reckoned, about nine hours; fo hen I awaked, it was just daylight. I attempted to rise, but was not able to stir: for, as I happened to lie on my back, I found my arms and legs were strongly fastened on each side to the ground; and m hair, which was long and thick, tied down in the same manner. I likewise felt several slender ligatures across my body, from my arm-pits to my thighs… Chapter 14: Conceptualizing Conceptual Thinking Not only are words—written or verbal—irrelevant after they are used to communicate, but words can actually interfere with conceptual understanding. Sometimes we mentally replace the real idea with its symbol or name. This is not thinking, but simply memorizing. Memorizing is not conceptualizing, but the more primitive perceptualizing—the kind of thinking animals do, and the kind of thinking we do as children. Memorizing is an important skill, but just collecting facts won’t make you any smarter than inanimate objects such as books or computers. Sometimes seems like weabout wouldn’t be able if it weren’t for of words. When thinking we thinkis abou thinking, weitgenerally think self-talk. For think this reason, the power conceptual often overlooked, and people frequently mistake thinking with speaking. But it is just as possible to thin ithout speaking, as it is to speak without thinking. The right brain may be silent, but it is actually where the higher order cognitions of conceptualizing and pattern recognition take place. It does not have verbal abilities, so we don’t get to hear what it’s doing, but this also means it is not confused by communication symbols. As an example of conceptual versus perceptual thinking, here is how I taught my son Jason hi numbers. Instead of showing him the symbols 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, I made up flash cards tha looked kind of like dominoes, and each number was represented by a distinct pattern of dots like this: So, instead of thinking2 + 3 = 5, he would think: The result was that all his later arithmetic lessons made more sense to him; he was thinking of the concept of numbers rather than their memorized perceptual names. By learning his numbers conceptually rather than perceptually, he was able to quickly learn to add up strings of three-digit numbers in his head before he even started kindergarten. I’m embarrassed to sound like I am braggin here, but this is one of the best examples I can think of to demonstrate the power of conceptual thinking. As you can tell, conceptual thinking goes beyond reading. Even when listening to someone speaking, you will find that you can listen more deeply if you conceptualize the things being said. With practice, you will get into the habit of noticing and appreciating real concepts during all types o communication. I hope I don’t appear to be overdoing this idea of conceptualizing, but the understanding of concepts is very important, and if it is unclear, the rest of this method could be difficult to follow. It’s either going to sound like I’m only stating the obvious, that you should simply “think about” what you are reading, or it’s just not going to work for you, and you won’t know why. Conceptual Reading Hopefully this istosomewhat interesting I’m background, sure this might seemtolike lot to about whilealltrying read. However, all to of you, this but is just an also attempt be asure wethin are talking about the same thing. While actually reading, you are only going to get quick flashes in your mind of what each concept is. The important point is that these are going to be flashes of what the ideas mean to you, rather than jus listening to what the words sound like. You might be surprised at how much information you can pass to your mind in an instant when your right brain is conceptualizing information as whole ideas. For example, when you read the word “elephant,” a lot of information moves from your eyes, through the various parts of your mind, and on to the many areas of your brain representing all the things this ord means to you; and all of this happens virtually instantaneously. It sounds impossible, but so does the act of reaching your hand out to accurately intercept the trajectory of a ball without consciously performing any differential calculus. You don’t have to completely understand how visualizing concepts works; you just need to recognize that it does work and how to take advantage o it. Not only does conceptualizing create more meaningful connections to information, but simply the fac that you are paying more attention increases comprehension. So regardless of how many or how few attributes you associate with a concept, just applying this type of concentration—conceptual concentration—will make a big difference in the level of comprehension you experience. This is because the act of trying to visualize forces you to remain more involved with the material, and encourages you to think more about what you are reading. The ideas you read will become more real, ill make more mental connections, and these connections will be made quicker and stronger than they would be from decoding the mere sound of words. Conceptual Practice As you practice, you will need to apply your imagination in order to visualize ideas. This means yo may have to go slower at first, glancing at a phrase and then thinking of an image of the idea. If you read, “The man,” you might picture a man. Then if you read, “lived in a house,” you may picture the man in his house. And if you next read, “in the Northeast,” you might picture the house in the top-righ corner of a map. The first two images would be physical images and the third a metaphorical representation. Anything ill do, but just try to quickly visualize the meaning. If no good images instantly come to mind, then conceptualize the idea—that is, think about what i means to you. For example, “for a long time” is more of an abstract idea, but you would conceptualize hat this means to you; it could mean consistency, waiting, many years, or a large part of your life. Or, instead of an abstract concept, it could also be a metaphor, such as the image of a calendar. Everyone will do this differently because ideas mean slightly different things to each person. The only important thing is to practice actively thinking and imagining the meaning of what you are reading. This may seem difficult at first. Reading with the right brain is almost like learning to write with you other hand. The left brain will always be where the text is converted into words, and it will take practice to develop the habit of passing this data to the right side, to recognize whole phrases as complete conceptual ideas. But practice will make this skill quick and automatic, and the task of visualizing will no longer compete so much for mental resources. Until you reach that point, however, it will take more energy to visualize an idea than to simply continue to decipher words into sounds and definitions. For tha reason, you may have to slow down at first while you learn to see the ideas. Like any skill, someone can show you how, but you still have to do it yourself. Instruction is nothing ithout construction . Someone can give you instruction, but only you can complete the construction. Although proper instruction is important, you need to supply the practice. For example, simpl reading about how to swim wouldn’t prevent you from drowning. You have to jump in and practice on your own to form new habits. But once conceptualizing does becomes a habit, the ideas will see to float off the page directly into your consciousness. Learn to swim, and then swim. -John Lennon when asked, “What’s the meaning of life?” Practice Exercise #14 Read the next practice exercise with your attention on the conceptual meaning of each phrase. Thin about its real essence. Look through the words at the meaningbehind them. Allow this to slow you down at first if necessary, but make sure to imagine the ideas and then allow this clearer comprehension to lift your reading speed. Conceptualize ideas and read with your whole mind. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jule s Ve rne Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea The year 1866 was signalized by a remarkable incident, a mysterious and puzzling phenomenon, hich doubtless no one has yet forgotten.Not to mention rumors which agitated the maritime population and excited the public mind, even in the interiorof continents,seafaring menwere particularly excited. Merchants, common sailors, captains of vessels, skippers, both of Europe and America, naval officers of all countries, and the Governmentsof several States on the two continents, ere deeply interested in the matter. For some time pastvessels had been met by“an enormous thing,”a long object, spindle-shaped, occasionally phosphorescent, and infinitely largerand more rapid in its movementsthan a whale. The facts relatingto this apparition(entered in various log-books) agreed in most respectsas to the shape of the object or creaturein question, the untiring rapidity of its movements,its surprising power of locomotion, and the peculiar life with which it seemed endowed. If it was a whale, it surpassed in size all those hitherto classified in science. Taking into considerationthe mean of observationsmade at divers times—rejecting the timid estimateof those who assigned to this objecta length oftwo hundred feet,equally with the exaggerated opinionswhich set it downas a mile in width and three in length—we might fairly concludethat this mysteriousbeing surpassed greatly all dimensions admitted by the learned ones of the day,if it existed at all. And that it DID existwas an undeniable fact;and, ith that tendencywhich disposes the human mindin favor of the marvelous, we can understand the excitement produced in the entire world by this supernatural apparition. As to classing it in the list o fables, the idea was out of the question. O n the 20th of July,1866, the steamer Governor Higginson,o f the Calcutta and BurnachSteam Navigation Company, had met this moving massfive miles off the east coast of Australia. Captain Baker thought at firstthat he wastwo in columnsof the presence of an unknown sandbank;he prepared to determine its exact positionwhen water, projected by the mysteriouseven object,shot with a hissing noise a hundred and fifty feetup into the air. Now, unless the sandbankhad been submitted to the intermittenteruption of a geyser, the Governor Higginsonhad to do neither morenor less than ith an aquatic mammal,unknown till then,which threw up from its blow-holes columns of water mixed with air and vapor. Similar facts were observed on the 23rd of Julyin the same year,in the Pacific Ocean, by the Columbus,of the West Indiaand Pacific Steam Navigation Company. But thisextraordinary creature could transport itself from one place to another with surprising velocity;as, in an interval of three days, the Governor Higginsonand the Columbushad observed it at two different pointsof the chart, separated by a distance of more thanseven hundred nautical leagues. Fifteen days later,two thousand milesfarther off, the Helvetia, of the Compagnie-Nationale,and the Shannon,of thetheRoyal MailStatesand Steamship Company,sailing windward that portion of other the Atlantic lying between United Europe, respectivelytosignaled theinmonsterto each in 42° 15’ N. latitude and 60° 35’ W. longitude.In thesesimultaneous observationsthey thought themselves ustified in estimatingthe minimum lengthof the mammalat more thanthree hundredand fifty feet,as the Shannon and Helvetia were of smaller dimensions than it,though they measured three hundred feet over all. Now the largest whales, those which frequent those parts of the searound the Aleutian,Kulammak, and Umgullich Islands,have never exceeded the lengthof sixty yards, if they attain that. In every place of great resort the monsterwas the fashion. They sang of itin the cafes, ridiculed it in the papers, and represented it on the stage.All kinds of stories were circulated regarding it. There appeared in the papers caricatures of every gigantic and imaginary creature,from the white whale,the terrible “Moby Dick” of sub-arctic regions, to the immense kraken,whose tentacles could entangle a ship of five hundred tonsand hurry itinto the abyss of the ocean. The legendsof ancient times were even revived. Then burst forththe unending argumentbetween the believers and the unbelieversin the societies o the wise and the scientific journals.“The question of the monster” inflamed all minds. Editors o scientific journals, quarrelling with believers in the supernatural, spilled seas of ink during this memorable campaign, some even drawing blood; for from the sea-serpent they came to direct personalities. During the first months of the year 1867 the question seemed buried, never to revive, when new facts ere brought before the public. It was then no longer a scientific problem to be solved, but a real danger seriously to be avoided. The question took quite another shape. The monster became a small island, a rock, a reef, but a reef of indefinite and shifting proportions. On the 5th of March, 1867, the Moravian, of the Montreal Ocean Company, finding herself during th night in 27° 30’ latitude and 72° 15’ longitude, struck on her starboard quarter a rock, marked in no chart for that part of the sea. Under the combined efforts of the wind and its four hundred horse power, it was going at the rate of thirteen knots. Had it not been for the superior strength of the hull o the Moravian, she would have been broken… Chapter 15: Reading Speeds Averages What reading speed would you like to achieve? Although the average reading speed is two hundred fifty words per minute, more than half of the people read below that speed. If it seems like a discrepancy that more than half read below average, it’s only because those very rare, really fast readers are pulling up the overall average of everyone else. For example, if in a group of eight people, seven people read at 200 WPM and one person reads a 600 WPM, then the average for all eight people would be 250 WPM, because (200 x 7 + 600) / 8 250. So in this example, even though the average is two hundred fifty, most people are still reading below average, at only two hundred words per minute. The chart below gives you an approximate idea of the distribution of adult reading speeds. As you can see, half the readers (the left half of the chart) are reading below two hundred words per minute. And although there is a gradual increase in faster readers to the right, there are only a very few who are reading above four hundred words per minute, fewer still who read above six hundred (the generally accepted “speed reading” level), and an absolutely microscopic number of people who reach one thousand words per minute. For college students, the average speed is slightly higher at three hundred words per minute, with most students reading between two hundred and four hundred words per minute. But only one in twenty college students reads faster than four hundred words per minute. Of course we’re talking here aboutreal reading, reading for content and comprehension. Other types of text consumption and their associated average college-level speeds are below: Scanning: 600 WPM Skimming: 450 WPM Reading: 300 WPM Learning: 200 WPM Memorizing: 130 WPM In fact, for real reading, the upper limits are usually much lower than most people are aware (especially compared to the inflated claims of many “speed reading” courses). Ronald Carver, author of the 1990 bookThe Causes of High and Low Reading Achievement , has done extensive testing of readers and reading speeds, thoroughly examining the various speed reading techniques and actual improvements likely to be gained. One test he completed pitted four groups o the could findprofessionals against eachwhose other. jobs The required groups consisted of champion speed readers, fast fastest collegereaders readers,hesuccessful a lot of reading, and students who had scored highest on speed reading tests. Carver found that of his superstars, none could read faster than six hundred words per minute with more than a seventy-five percent retention rate. Even though the claims of most speed reading courses offer more hype than hope, there is still plent of room for honest and impressive improvement. For most people, this means they are very possibl able to double or triple their reading speed. If your reading rate falls in the middle of the average reading speeds, and you double your speed from two hundred to four hundred words per minute, this could be life-changing, because reading quickly is a very different experience than reading slowly. Faster reading is much more interesting, more memorable, and less frustrating. And just consider the time savings. If someone who read two hundred words per minute picked up a average novel of eighty thousand words, it would take that person six hours and forty minutes o reading time to reach the end of the novel—that’s spending most of a whole day reading. But at four hundred words per minute, it would only take three hours and twenty minutes to finish that same book, leaving the rest of the day free for anything else. What if you didn’t want to finish the book in one sitting, though? How about reading one chapter? Assuming an average page of three hundred words and an average chapter of twenty pages, the chapter would take either a half an hour or fifteen minutes if you read two hundred or four hundred ords per minute. Or you could look at it is the difference between reading forty pages per hour versus eighty pages per hour. OK, that’s a lot of numbers, but hopefully they give you an idea of what even a modest speed increase can do for you. If you think about the ability to read eighty pages per hour, you will realize that you ill read more, not just because you are saving time, but because a lot more reading will be worth your effort with that lower time requirement. Also, note that all of these figures are average numbers. Average people are not reading thought-units. Most fast reading is done simply by pushing the reading speeds, basically applying brute force to the task. Reading phrases is about training your mind to read in your imagination instead of in your ears, learning to use a different part of your brain and use it in a different way. But learning to do this takes a completely different way of looking at reading and a different way of thinking about the process. So even though the averages may be slower than many people realize, using a different approach to reading willplease make itremember easier to reach the higher speeds those rare But still, that increased readingofspeed can speed only readers. come as a result of faster comprehension. If you forget this, you will concentrate on the wrong thing. To learn to read faster, you must learn to comprehend faster. Flexibility As mentioned in chapter nine, conceptual processing is the part of reading which takes the most time. This is the weakest link in reading and is also where the largest variations in speed occur. Most of this speed variation is due to the difficulty of—or your preexisting knowledge about—the material. A useful analogy is to imagine riding a bicycle over a changing terrain. If you riding over a nice,tosmooth, level, could switch into a higher gear and ridewere much faster. Similar this, when youand arefamiliar readingterrain, easy oryou more familiar text, you can take in larger word-groups at a time and at higher speeds. When you encounter harder or unfamiliar material, you need to automatically slow down and also read shorter word-groups, just as you would switch to a lower gear and cover less distance with each rotation of your bicycle pedal. Writing style can also slow you down. A text that is strangely worded or full of unusual words may require you to slow way down, as you would when riding on an uneven or bumpy road. And then there are the occasional unknown words or even grammatical errors where you must slow down and be even more careful, like riding over an old rutted dirt road. In fact there are many reading situations which will constantly impact your speed: Lists Names Dialogue Narration New words Convoluted sentences Spelling or grammar errors Passive versus active sentences Beginnings of sentences, paragraphs, and chapters You can never read at a constant static speed and expect your comprehension to adjust. Instead you must let comprehension take the lead, and allow your speed adjust. Contextual Reading One helpasyou comprehension is to make sureyou youshould have aalways firm grasp on hat tip youthat arewill reading youfind getyour started. Regardless ofspeed the reading terrain, start of slow, in first gear. This gives you time to get your balance and to establish traction while you get a firm grip on the subject and context of what you are reading. Starting off slowly is helpful, but it can also be awfully hard to remember because we can be so anxious to read fast that we kind of forgetwhy we are reading (to understand the text, right?). Bu each time you start reading, you usually need to go slow for a bit until you pick up the thread of the ideas. This can also be useful, to a lesser degree, at the beginning of paragraphs and sentences. So, if you concentrate on the ideas and not on your speed, you will find your speed will increase hen it’s ready. Of course, concentration on visualization and conceptualization will go a long way to automatically accommodate these changes; the information itself determines the time it takes for you to visualize and conceptualize and will therefore automatically control your reading speed. By allowing yourself time to make a connection with your reading, you will start to “see” the ideas and your reading will begin to flow. Forcing the speed too quickly will only leave you skimming over the material without comprehension. This can be a difficult habit to overcome, because you will wan to push your speed, but you have to get connected, and stay connected, to the material before you can read fast. Maintaining this contextual connection while reading can have a major effect on what the text means to you. For example, look at how the first phrase changes your perception of the second in these two combinations: 1. Wash dishes. Polish silverware. 2. German dishes. Polish silverware. "Polish silverware" different in example one. Thito is why taking a littlemeans more something time whenquite you first start in to example read willtwo givethan youitadoes strong enough context better anticipate the proper meaning. Thinking Ahead Similar to contextual reading; is anticipatory reading. Anticipatory reading lets you get in sync with the material to more easily anticipate upcoming phrases. When you do this, you can fly past those anticipated phrases as you merely need to verify your predictions. This also makes your reading smoother. Thinking ahead while you are reading is like looking farther down the road instead of at the pavement right in front of you. This makes it much easier to go faster as there are fewer course corrections necessary; comprehension is increased due to the contextual clues of the preceding text. Thinking ahead and anticipating what the text will say will also help you stay in the zone by avoiding surprises. Like when you ride a bicycle, you’re a lot less wobbly when you look ahead rather than down at the ground beneath you. Anticipatory reading is reading aggressively, looking ahead and anticipating where the author is going. Everything you read will therefore be more firmly attached to what has gone before and wha lies ahead. Speed Minimums Although comprehension will determine your speed, it is a good idea to try still to maintain a certain minimum speed if possible. Just as riding a bike too slowly can make it difficult to maintain your balance, reading too slowly makes it difficult to take in larger ideas at a time and to avoid slipping into the old habit of verbalizing. Of course, it will still be necessary to read very slowly at times, but unless the situation demands it, a slightly faster speed will usually be helpful. You don’t want to read faster than your comprehension, but reading fast enough can also help comprehension by maintaining your reading momentum. It’s a balancing act, and sometimes you will even lose your balance, but just be flexible and do your best. Another way to apply the bicycle analogy is by comparing the black and gray text used in this book to training wheels. It is a tool which helps you by removing one of the tasks—balancing the bike or finding the phrases—while you practice and get comfortable with the rest of the skills you need to acquire—pedaling and steering or reading whole ideas and visualizing. I hope I didn’t stretch this analogy too far, but analogies can be very powerful aids to understanding concepts. In fact, analogies are actually quite conceptual in their very nature because they work b attaching new ideas to familiar ones via the attributes they have in common. But no matter how fast or slow you read,any speed is better than reading without comprehension. As much as you would love to read faster and no matter what your current capabilities are, there is no reading at all if you do not understand what you read. So even if you think reading conceptually is slowing you down at first, it may be that your old “faster” speed wasn’t really reading at all, but merely recognizing the words. Everyone learning to improve their reading, starts at a different place and with different strengths and eaknesses. Since this book is designed to help people read better, the more help you need, the more help this book will be able to offer. Some people will make more gains than others, and no one really knows what theirtime potential until they before reach it. But alltopractice is good and a waste of time. The only wasted is the is time wasted deciding start improving yournever reading. Practice Exercise #15 As your read the next practice exercise, remember that speed will only come from more powerful comprehension. Read for the ideas; if you visualize it, the speed will come. The two main things to remember about reading faster are to concentrate on comprehension, and be flexible. Speed will be the reward of this comprehension and flexibility. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas The Three Musketeers On the first Mondayof the monthof April, 1625, the market town of Meung,in which the authoro ROMANCE OF THE ROSEwas born, appeared to be in as perfect a state of revolution as if the Huguenotshad just madea second La Rochelle of it. Many citizens,seeing the women flyingtoward the High Street,leaving their childrencrying at the open doors,hastened to don the cuirass, and supporting their somewhat uncertain couragewith a musketor a partisan, directed their steps toward the hostelry of the Jolly Miller, before which was gathered, increasing every minute,a compact group, vociferous and full of curiosity. In those timespanics were common, and few days passed without some city or other registering in its archives an event of this kind.There were nobles, who made war against each other; there was the king, who made war against the cardinal; there was Spain, which made war against the king.Then, in addition to these concealed or public, secret or open wars, there were robbers, mendicants, Huguenots, wolves, and scoundrels, who made war upon everybody. The citizens always took up arms readily against thieves, wolves or scoundrels, often against noblesor Huguenots,sometimes against the king,but never against cardinal or Spain. It resulted, then,from this habitthat on the said first Monday of April, 1625, the citizens, on hearing the clamor,and seeing neither thered-andyellow standard nor the livery of the Duc de Richelieu,rushed toward the hostelof the Jolly Miller. When arrived there,the cause of the hubbubwas apparent to all. A young man—we can sketch his portrait at a dash. Imagine to yourselfa Don Quixoteof eighteen;a Don Quixotewithout his corselet,without his coat of mail,without his cuisses;a Don Quixote clothe in a woolen doublet, the blue color of which had fadedinto a nameless shade between lees of wine and a heavenly azure;face long and brown; high cheek bones,a sign of sagacity;the maxillary muscles enormously developed,an infallible sign by which a Gascon may always be detected,even ithout his cap—and our young man worea cap set off with a sort of feather;the eye openand intelligent; the nose hooked, but finely chiseled. Too big for a youth,too small for a grown man,an experienced eye might have taken himfor a farmer’s son upon a journeyhad it not been for the long sword which, dangling froma leather baldric, hit against the calvesof its owner as he walked, and against the rough side of his steed when he was on horseback. For our young manhad a steed which was the observed of all observers. It was a Bearn pony,from twelve to fourteen years old,yellow in his hide, without a hair in his tail, but not without windgalls on his legs, which, though goingwith his head lower than his knees,rendering a martingalequite unnecessary, contrived nevertheless to perform his eight leagues a day. Unfortunately,the qualities o this horse were so w ell concealed under his strange-colored hide and his unaccountable gait, that at a time when everybody was a connoisseur in horseflesh, the appearance of the aforesaid pony at Meung —which place he had entered about a quarter of an hour before, by the gate of Beaugency—produced an unfavorable feeling,which extended to his rider. And this feelinghad been more painfully perceived by young d’Artagnan—for so was the Don Quixote of this second Rosinante named—from his not being ableto conceal from himselfthe ridiculous appearance that sucha steed gave him,good horseman as he was.He had sighed deeply, therefore, when accepting the gift of the ponyfrom M. d’Artagnanthe elder. He was not ignorantthat such a beast was worth at least twenty livres; and the words which had accompaniedthe present were above all price. “My son,” said the old Gascon gentleman,in that pure Bearn PATOISof which Henry IVcould never rid himself, “this horse was born in the houseof your fatherabout thirteen years ago,and has remained in it ever since, which oughtto make you love it. Never sell it; allow it to die tranquilly and honorably of old age, and if you makea campaign with it,take as muchcare of it as you would of an old servant. At court, provided you have ever the honor to go there,”continued M. d’Artagnanthe elder, “—an honor to which,remember, your ancient nobilitygives you the right—sustain worthily your name of gentleman,which has been worthily borne by your ancestors for five hundred years, both for your own sake and the sake of those who belong to you. By the latter I mean your relative and friends. Endure nothing from anyone except Monsieur the Cardinal and the king. It is by hi courage, please observe, by his courage alone, that a gentleman can make his way nowadays. Whoever hesitates for a second perhaps allows the bait to escape which during that exact second fortune held out to him. You are young. You ought to be brave for two reasons: the first is that you are ataught Gascon, that you my thews son. Never feara wrist quarrels, but seek I hav you and howthe to second handle aissword; youarehave of iron, of steel. Fightadventures. on all occasions. Fight the more for duels being forbidden, since consequently there is twice as much courage in fighting. I have nothing to give you, my son, but fifteen crowns, my horse, and the counsels you have ust heard. Your mother will add to them a recipe for a certain balsam, which she had from a Bohemian and which has the miraculous virtue of curing all the wounds… Chapter 16: Comprehension Speeds Information Speed Information speed is the speed at which information enters your mind. If this could be measured, i ould be more meaningful than words per minute. In fact, words per minute is actually prett meaningless without considering information speed. Since real reading is comprehension, the speed of your real reading is the speed in which you are collecting information. Instead of words per minute (WPM), it would be more useful to think in term of information per minute (IPM). IPM would be the speedometer that tells you how fast you ar actually spinning.traveling, whereas WPM would be the tachometer that only tells you how fast your engine i In other words, sometimes you would be reading at a high WPM over easy material, and at othe times slowing down to a lower WPM to conceptualize a new idea. But your real IPM speed woul actually be much more constant with a consistent flow of information per minute continually reaching your brain. The reason IPM is more stable is because it is generally determined by the speed you brain can process ideas. But there is another factor which can affect WPM—language density. Not only does the amount o information in text vary, but the length of text needed to express this same information can also be longer or shorter. An author can choose longer or shorter words to say roughly the same thing. He can use a "five dolla ord rather than a fifty-cent word," as Mark Twain put it. For example, an author could use the word "accomplish" when the word "do" would do, use the word "expenditure" for "cost," or use "fundamental" for "basic." When measuring pages per minute or standard word length per minute, it would seem that you were reading faster when longer words were used. However, you would really only be pedaling faster, not making any additional progress since your true information speed would be unchanged. This is not to say whether longer or shorter words are better, since this depends on the author’s style and vocabulary. This is only to demonstrate that information speed is quite separate from “reading” speed and that even when your words per minute rate slows down, you are not necessarily “reading” any slower. Language Speed Another indication that information speed is more constant than word speed is the impact tha different languages have on speaking speed. Each language has its own natural speed. When you listen to some languages, people often sound as if they are speaking very fast. This is because mos languages are less dense than English, which means they require more syllables to communicate the same ideas. French researchers at Lyon University constructed an interesting comparison of language density. They measured the total length of time and number of syllables per second it takes people speaking different languages to express the same sentences translated into their own languages. The research study found that the average Spanish speaker speaks twenty-five percent more syllables per second than the average English speaker. But the same translated sentences still took about the same overall time to speak in each language. The Spanish language used more syllables to say the same thing, but they still communicated roughly the same amount of information per minute. If you’ve ever listened to someone speaking Spanish, you may have thought they were speaking faste than what you are accustomed to hearing in English. They are… but still they aren’tcommunicating any faster. For example, compare the following sentences in English and Spanish. This is an example of text in English and Spanish. You can see how much longer Spanish is tha nglish. ste es un ejemplo de texto en Inglés y Español. Se puede ver cuánto tiempo más el español es d nglés. Each sentence says the same thing, and although the written sentences are similar in length (due to the strangeness of English spelling), the number of syllables is 30% longer in Spanish (35 syllables i Spanish vs. 27 in English). But each native speaker would still take about the same length of time t say the sentence. Each language studied showed the same pattern—languages that used more syllables to express the same ideas were spoken at a higher rate of syllables per minute and higher density languages were spoken at a slower rate. Two conclusions can be made from this: 1. Comprehension speed is more constant than language speed (IPM is more constant than WPM). 2. Comprehension determines speed—not only in reading but even in speech. We apparently have a certain speed that we can comprehend information, and it’s that speed limit hich determines both how fast we speak and how fast we read. This is just more evidence that to read faster, you must comprehend faster. Fiction vs. Non-Fiction Here’s a common lament: "Why would I want to read fiction faster? Wouldn’t I want to read it slowl in order to savor it?" Or there’s this: "How could I possibly read non-fiction faster? Wouldn’t I nee to go slow in order to understand or remember it?" From these two comments, it seems like you can only read fast, if the book is not fiction… and not non-fiction! As to fiction, yes, you may want to read this slower if you wish to savor the sounds of the language. I this case, you are more interested in reading as a performance—like reading poetry. If, however, you are reading to enjoy a story, then it wouldn’t make any more sense to read this story slowly than it ould to “savor” a movie in slow-motion! "But wait," I hear you saying, "I only want to read it at ‘regular’ speed!" Oh? Are you sure your current speed is regular and other speeds are not? There is no “right” speed. As long as you understand what you are reading, then you are reading at the right speed. It’s the speed of thought, not the speed of the clock, which determines your comprehension speed. For example, have you ever noticed that what might have seemed like a long dream when you were sleeping actually occurred over a very short time? This is because time is relative, and the faster you think, the slower time appears to be. When you were dreaming, you were thinking faster and the dream events were happening faster than in “real” time. This shows not only that the experience o time is relative, but also that you are actually capable of much faster thinking than you may have realized. The truth is, youcan enjoy a book at faster speeds. In fact, faster speeds are even more enjoyable in some ways.andThis because you get tobetter. the middle of the book, you will still remember the beginning, the is whole bookwhen will tie together Now, non-fiction. Yes, it is very true that you must often slow down to read non-fiction. In fact, you often need to come to a complete stop while you consider something fascinating that you have never considered before. But this is not reading; this is pondering—a very enjoyable activity on its own, bu a special side benefit of non-fiction. Stopping to consider something is not reading; it’s more like sightseeing. The one other step involved in reading non-fiction is the extra memory processing. If you are readin to learn something, then you need to do more than just understand it; you need to place it firmly in your memory where you can easily find it again. This is where information becomes knowledge. Thi step often takes time while you consider the different effects this new information has on your existing knowledge. What are all the connections and relationships to be considered? This too is not really part of reading, but of organizing ideas after you read them and connecting them in new ways to create your own new ideas. Not everything about non-fiction makes it slower to read though. There are some things about nonfiction which actually help you read faster. For one, non-fiction authors are often trying to convince you of something. This means an author will generally make a special effort to make his case logically and systematically, and extra effort put into the explanation can make it faster and easier to consume. If you have the ability to read faster, you can always decide on your own what speed you prefer for fiction or non-fiction, but at least you will have the choice. The best reading speed is the fastest speed you can understand. There’s no way to go faster and no need to go slower than comprehension speed. Internal Factors There are factors other than the material itself which will affect your comprehension speed, and these must also be accommodated. These are internal speed variations—things that are unique to you and your current situation. Your own mental processing abilities will change based on things such as the time of day, your mood, or external and internal distractions. Although these factors come from within you, you don’t really have much control over them except to recognize them and take them into account. The best you can do is to be patient with yourself. You must allow yourself to be able to assimilate the information you read. If you are finding this difficult to do, then you must slow down. You almost have to be Zen-like in your reading, letting the information come to you. This does not mean readin ords and just seeing what ideas come along. It means to visualize, and focus on conceptualizing, and let the text choose the speed. Relax and engage your imagination, forgetting about speed and immersing yourself in the information. In my experience, this is the hardest part of reading faster—to stop concentrating on speed. It is natural to want to push your speed, and in fact this is what most speed reading courses recommend, that you push your speed as fast as you can. They even give you eye exercises to speed up your eyeballs, enabling them to bounce back and forth at maximum frequency. But speed reading ideas requiresand youtotomake do the exact you must force yourself to slow down to the of for comprehension sure youopposite; have grasped a conceptual understanding of each piece of information before going to the next. Of course, this better grasp of the information will lead to faster reading, but in the meantime it can feel like you are forcing yourself to slow down. All you are really doing, however, is forcing yourself to remain connected to your real reading—your reading comprehension. No matter how difficult it is to hold your reading speed to your comprehension speed, it is imperative that you let the speed come to you rather than chase after it. It’s really a balancing act wherein on the one hand you have to be willing to let go of the words and move on as soon as you “get it,” while on the other hand, not allow your speed to run away on you. The takeaway is that to learn speed reading, you need to learn speed comprehension, because speed depends on comprehension and not vice versa. If you push your speed beyond your comprehension, i ill be like Lucy andlittle Ethelgetting working at that chocolate-wrapping conveyer belt, with chocolates flyin everywhere and very wrapped. Practice Exercise #16 As you read this next practice exercise, relax, be patient, and concentrate on imagining what you are reading. And instead of thinking about reading faster, just concentrate on meaning. Also, remember to time your reading and record your words per minute in the chart you printed or in some other convenient place. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Moby Dick by Herman Melville Moby Dick Call me Ishmael.Some years ago—never mindhow long precisely—having little or no moneyin my purse, and nothing particularto interest me on shore,I thought I wouldsail about a little and see the atery part of the world. It is a way I have of driving offthe spleen and regulatingthe circulation. Whenever I find myselfgrowing grimabout the mouth;whenever it is a damp, drizzly Novemberin my soul;whenever I find myselfinvoluntarily pausing before coffin warehouses, and bringing up the rear of every funeral I meet;and especially whenever my hypos getsuch an upper hand of me,that it requires a strong moral principle to prevent me from deliberately stepping into the street,and methodically knockingpeople’s hats off— then, I account it high timeto get to sea as soon as I can. This is my substitutefor pistol and ball. With a philosophicalflourish Cato throws himselfupon his sword; quietlysometime taketo theorship. There is nothingsurprising in this.If they but knew almost men in their Idegree, other,cherish very nearlythe same feelings towards the it, ocean withallme. There now is your insular city of the Manhattoes,belted round by wharves as Indian isles by coral reefs—commerce surrounds itwith her surf. Right and left,the streets take youwaterward. Its extreme downtown is the battery,where that noble moleis washed by waves, and cooled by breezes, hich a few hours previous were out of sight of land. Look at the crowds of water-gazers there. Circumambulate the cityof a dreamy Sabbath afternoon.Go from Corlears Hook to Coenties Slip, and from thence,by Whitehall, northward. What do you see?Posted like silent sentinels all around the town,stand thousands upon thousandsof mortal menfixed in ocean reveries. Some leaningagainst the spiles; some seated upon the pier-heads;some lookingover the bulwarks of ships from China; some high aloftin the rigging,as if striving to geta still better seaward peep. But these are all landsmen; of week days pent up in lath and plaster—tied to counters,nailed to benches,clinched to desks. How then is this? Are the green fieldsgone? What do they here? But look!Here come more crowds, pacing straight for the water, and seemingly boundfor a dive. Strange! Nothing will content them but the extremest limit of the land;loitering under the shadylee o yonder warehouses will not suffice. No. They must get justas nigh the wateras they possibly can ithout falling in.And there they stand—miles of them—leagues. Inlanders all, they come fromlanes and alleys, streets and avenues—north, east, south, and west. Yet here they all unite.Tell me, does the magnetic virtueof the needles of the compassesof all those ships attract them thither? Once more. Say you are in the country;in some high landof lakes. Take almost any path you please, and ten to oneit carries you down in a dale, and leaves you there by a pool in the stream. There is magic in it. Let the mostabsent-minded of men be plungedin his deepest reveries—stand that manon his legs, set his feet a-going,and he will infallibly lead you to water, if water there be in all that region. Should you ever be athirst in the great American desert,try this experiment,if your caravan happen to be supplied with a metaphysical professor. Yes, as everyone knows,meditation and water are wedded forever. But here is an artist.He desires to paint youthe dreamiest, shadiest, quietest, most enchanting bito romantic landscapein all the valley of the Saco. What is the chief elementhe employs? There stand his trees, each with a hollow trunk,as if a hermit and a crucifix were within; and here sleeps his meadow, and there sleep his cattle; and up from yonder cottagegoes a sleepy smoke.Deep into distant woodlands winds a mazy way,reaching to overlappingspurs of mountainsbathed in their hill- side blue. But thoughthe picture lies thus tranced, and thoughthis pine-tree shakes down its sighs like leaves upon this shepherd’s head, yet all were vain, unless the shepherd’s eyewere fixed upon the magic stream before him. Go visit the Prairies in June, when for scores on scores of miles you wade knee-deep among Tiger-lilies—what is the one charm wanting? Water—there is not a drop of water there! Were Niagara but a cataract of sand, would you travel your thousand milesto see it? Why did the poor poet of Tennessee, upon suddenly receiving two handfuls of silver, deliberate whether to buy him a coat, which he sadly needed, or invest his money in a pedestrian trip to Rockaway Beach? Wh is almost every robust healthy boy with a robust healthy soul in him, at some time or other crazy to go to sea? Why upon your first voyage as a passenger, did you yourself feel such a mystical vibration, hen first told that you and your ship were now out of sight of land? Why did the old Persians hol the sea holy? Why did the Greeks give it a separate deity, and own brother of Jove? Surely all this i not without meaning. And still deeper the meaning of that story of Narcissus, who because he could not the tormenting, mild sawand in the fountain, intoofit the and ungraspable was drowned. But thao samegrasp image, we ourselves seeimage in all he rivers oceans. It isplunged the image phantom life; and this is the key to it all. Now, when I say that I am in the habit of going to sea whenever I begin to grow hazy about the eyes and begin to be over conscious of my lungs, I do not mean to have it inferred that… Chapter 17: Techni ques What techniques can keep your mind from slipping into its old reading habits and keep your attention on conceptualizing? Sometimes having the proper perspective of what you are doing will help. Here is one analogy I find helpful in keeping my mind on the conceptual track. I imagine my readin like slot car racing. Those toy cars have small pins extending from the bottom which fit into a slot in the track. The little pin is what keeps the car on course. However, this pin can slip out of the slot, and if that happens, the car will suddenly go flying off the track. Of course this happens whenever you go too fast around a sharp corner. The trick to slot car racing then is to go as fast as you can while keeping that little pin in the slot. is like But this.coming Speeding along andorfamiliar reading material is likeyou’ve racing got dowto aReading straightaway. into morethrough difficultsimple material complex writing style means slow down, otherwise you’ll find you are reading along, when all of a sudden nothing more is entering your mind. This is because you lost comprehension and slid off the track. This requires yo to stop and go back to where you lost comprehension. Plus, each time you restart, you will then need to avoid the temptation to immediately lurch back to full speed; which would only cause you to lose traction, spin your wheels, and get nowhere. Just like in racing slot cars, pushing your speed in reading can be counterproductive. The only way to read faster is to concentrate on technique by doing the following: Maintain concentration (pin firmly in the slot). Vary your speed depending on reading material (track conditions). Avoid mind wandering (flying off the track). Avoid regression (needing to put the car back). Gain speed gradually while you develop context (get traction). So, are there any techniques to help you get the most speed at all times, in all types of reading? Are there any specific tactics—as opposed to general strategies—some kind of reading tricks that will keep you focused and concentrated on what you are reading? Yes, there are some techniques which can be of assistance when trying to read and comprehend faster. I mention them here not as stand-alone gimmicks for faster reading, but as things to try in context with reading phrases and concentrating on whole ideas. The most important thing is still to be totally focused on conceptualizing ideas, but these techniques can be helpful in maintaining that focus. The Only Finger Pacer Although most of the wacky finger waving methods so popular in many speed reading courses are laughable, it can be helpful to run your finger down the right-hand side of each page or column of text as you read. Doing this appears to be a helpful reminder as to which line your eyes should line up on next, and it also keeps you moving ahead. Try it, and see if it works for you. This does not mean forcing yourself to try to keep up with your hand—the hand is quicker than the brain—but use it as a gentle guide and prompt to keep your place and keep you moving forward. I personally find this one of the most helpful tricks for starting off and getting into the material. And although, as I’ll explain in the next chapter, the famous Evelyn Wood never recommended any o the odd-ball finger waving patterns so common in many of today’s speed reading courses, she did apparently advocate this simple finger pacer technique, as evidenced in a rare occurrence she made th, 1961. You can see it here in thisshort clip on the What’s My Line television game show on June 29 on YouTube:http://youtu.be/zyyh9o08FW4 Skipping Line Ends As your eyes approach the end of each line of text, try jumping back to the start of the next line jus before your focus actually gets all the way to the last letter of the line. This doesn’t mean not to read the whole line, but to trust your peripheral vision to pick it all up so that you can be processing the very end of the line during the time your eyes are moving down and across to the next line When reading whole phrases at a time, your focus point is usually aimed somewhere near the middle of each word-group, but there can still be the tendency to continue moving your eyes to the very end of each line even after you have “read” the last phrase. This can be tricky, as you can’t afford to distract yourself by mentally thinking about doing this, but you just have to be willing to let your eyes move back a bit sooner than normal. Focusing Ahead Focus your attention slightly ahead of each phrase. As you are processing one phrase, already be moving your focus to the next. Of course you can’t go forward until you understand the previous phrase, but you can start to move your eyes slightly sooner if you think you’ve got it. This will tend to happen automatically when you get in the zone; your reading will begin to flow more smoothly because you will already be anticipating the next phrase. Slowing at the Start Start off reading slowly, being sure to imagine what you are reading in order to establish mental traction while you pick up the thread of the subject matter. Do this by spending a few nanoseconds longer on the first phrase of each sentence than those that follow. This may be too small a time period to be even consciously aware of, but you must make sure you conceptually understand what the first phrase means in order to have a better connection to where the sentence is going. This “slowing down” may ironically result in faster reading overall due to the stronger conceptual connection. Speeding at the End Likewise, at the end of each sentence, spend a few nanoseconds less reading it than you did the thought-units before it. If you are reading in an anticipatory mode, you will likely already have predicted what the last phrase will be anyway. All you need to do is verify your suspicion and move on. You can spend that extra time picking up the thread of the next sentence. One way to do this is to mentally focus on locating the first words of sentences as you read. This will have the effect o umping you ahead and putting a few extra nanoseconds onto these initial words. Most of these speed adjustments are actually too tiny to consciously measure though. What you are really doing is concentrating on imagining the meaning of what you are reading and giving yoursel ermission to slow down or speed up as needed. In the end, you are primarily trying to avoid the staccato, mechanical, fixed rate of reading. Reading Distance Hold the reading material at a comfortable distance—close enough to be clear but also far enough to reduce unnecessary eye movement between phrases. You’ll see what distance works best. This seems simple, but you will be surprised how effective proper distance is. Stop When Necessary Be careful not to stumble over unknown words, phrases, or ideas because these can derail your attention. Your mind will ill register in the text thatinstantly follows.respond to these mental potholes by blanking out, and nothing else This is one of the major sources of mental blank-out and one of the main things to look out for. Man times when you find yourself reading empty words, you will discover that if you look back a bit, you ill see something in the text which was not clear to you. If you don’t understand something, stop and figure it out before going on. Relaxing Relaxing is not actually a “trick” but is still a very important ingredient. Relaxing relates back to no allowing yourself to start pushing your speed. As much as you might want to read fast, this pressure ill only serve to sabotage your efforts. It will be like trying to pull your fingers apart in those Chinese finger traps. Relax and let your speed occur as a natural result of clearer understanding for more comfortable and enjoyable type of fast reading. All you want to do is get the information. All reading and all writing are different. All readers are different, too. Even each time you read the same text can be different depending on many internal and external factors. In fact, because of these factors, you can never really read the “same” book twice. Practice Exercise #17 In this exercise, let your speed vary as necessary to maintain maximum comprehension. This natural variation in speed is like an automatic transmission, where a higher or lower rpm is selected depending on changing driving conditions. Similarly, be flexible with your reading and let the content automatically choose the speed. This can mean slowing, speeding, or stopping. It can even mea going back to pick up the trail if necessary. Also, try some of the techniques discussed in this chapter and see how they work for you. Bu remember, these techniques are just suggestions. If you find they work for you, great, but your primary focus should remain pursuing the ideas and letting the speed come to you. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley Frankenstein Letter 1 To Mrs. Saville, England St. Petersburgh, Dec. 11th, 17— You will rejoice to hear that no disaster has accompanied the commencementof an enterprisewhich you have regardedwith such evil forebodings. I arrived here yesterday, and my first taskis to assure my dear sister of my welfare and increasing confidencein the success of my undertaking. I am alreadyfar north of London,and as I walk in the streets of Petersburgh,I feel a cold northern breeze play upon my cheeks, which braces my nervesand fills me with delight. Do you understand this feeling? This breeze, which has traveled from the regions towardswhich I am advancing,gives me a foretaste of those icy climes.Inspirited by this windof promise, my daydreams becomemore fervent and vivid. I try in vainto be persuaded that the pole is the seat of frostand desolation; it ever presents itself to my imaginationas the region of beautyand delight. There, Margaret, the sunis forever visible, its broad disk just skirting the horizon and diffusinga perpetual splendor. There—for ith your leave, my sister, I will put some trustin preceding navigators—there snow and frostare banished; and, sailing over a calm sea, we may be wafted to a land surpassing in wondersand in beauty every region hitherto discovered on the habitable globe.Its productionsand features may be ithout example,as the phenomenaof the heavenly bodiesundoubtedly are in those undiscovered solitudes. What may not be expectedin a countryof eternal light? I may there discoverthe wondrous power which attracts the needleand may regulatea thousand celestial observations that require only this voyage to rendertheir seemingeccentricities consistent forever.I shall satiate my ardentcuriosity ith the sightof a part of the world never before visited, and maytread a land never before imprinted by the foot of man. These are my enticements,and they are sufficientto conquer all fear of danger or death and to induce meto commencethis laborious voyage with the joy a child feels when he embarks in a little boat, with his holiday mates,on an expeditionof discovery up his native river. But supposing all these conjectures to be false, you cannot contestthe inestimable benefitwhich I shall confer on all mankind,to the last generation, by discovering a passage near the pole to those countries, to reach at present so many monthsare requisite; or by ascertainingthe secret of the magnet,which, if at all possible, can only be effected by an undertaking such as mine. These reflections have dispelled the agitation with which I began my letter,and I feel my heartglow ith an enthusiasmwhich elevates meto heaven, for nothing contributesso much to tranquillizethe mind as a steady purpose—a point on which the soul may fixits intellectual eye.This expedition has been the favorite dreamof my early years. I have read with ardor the accountsof the various voyages hich have been madein the prospect of arriving at the North Pacific Ocean through the seaswhich surround composed the pole. You may rememberthat a Thomas’ historyof library.My all the voyagesmade purposeso discovery the wholeof our good Uncle educationwasfor neglected, yet I as passionately fond of reading. These volumeswere my studyday and night,and my familiarity ith them increasedthat regretwhich I had felt,as a child, on learning that my father’sdying injunctionhad forbidden my uncle to allow me to embarkin a seafaring life. These visions faded when I perused,for the first time,those poets whose effusions entranced my soul and lifted it to heaven.I also became a poet and for one year lived in a paradise of my own creation;I imagined thatI also might obtaina niche in the templewhere the names of Homer and Shakespeare are consecrated. You are well acquaintedwith my failureand how heavily I bore the disappointment. But just at that timeI inheritedthe fortune of my cousin,and my thoughtswere turned into the channel of their earlier bent. Six years have passed since I resolved on my presentundertaking. I can, even now, remember the hour from whichI dedicated myselfto this great enterprise.I commencedby inuring my body to hardship. I accompaniedthe whale-fishers on several expeditions to the North Sea;I voluntaril endured cold, famine, thirst, and want of sleep; I often worked harderthan the common sailorsduring the day and devoted my nights to the study of mathematics, the theory of medicine, and those branches of physical science from which a naval adventurer might derive the greatest practical advantage. Twice I actually hired myself as an under-mate hired myself as an under-mate in a Greenland whaler, and acquitted myself to admiration. I must own I felt a little proud when my captain offered me the second dignity in the vessel and entreated me to remain with the greatest earnestness, so valuable did he consider my services. And now, dear Margaret, do I not deserve to accomplish some grea purpose? My life might have been passed in ease and luxury, but I preferred glory to every enticemen that wealth placed in my path. Oh, that some encouraging voice would answer in the affirmative! M courage and my resolution is firm; but my hopes fluctuate, and my spirits are often depressed. I a about to proceed on a long and difficult voyage, the emergencies of which will demand all my fortitude: I am required not only to raise the spirits of others, but sometimes to sustain… Chapter 18: Mythical Exercises The field of speed reading, and by extension much of the whole arena of reading improvement, has been somewhat tarnished by several misconceptions and misrepresentations. I would prefer not to be critical, but without addressing these myths, I am concerned that the information in this book—since i departs from many of these “accepted” practices—may result in questions, confusions, or misunderstandings. Here are some of the most persistent myths which should be debunked in order to begin making real progress in your reading improvement. Push Your Speed Pushing your speed is the main thrust of most speed reading courses. It’s presented as a habit to develop. Some suggest that once you develop the habit of seeing words faster, your comprehension ill adapt to this higher speed and improve on its own. You are told that you can reach any reading speed you wish this way, particularly if you increase in small increments at a time. Some examples suggest that a mechanical metronome is all that is needed to teach yourself to read faster. Simply find your “possible” reading speed, increase the metronome by one beat per minute at each reading, and voila! You’re reading faster. After all, it’s just one beat per minute; how hard could it be, right? Well then, by this logic, you could use a metronome to learn to doanything faster. At just one more beat at a time, a runner could go from jogging along at a leisurely pace to breaking the land-speed record at the Bonneville Salt Flats. The truth is, whenever you push your speed—no matter how incrementally you do it—you won’t even be “reading,” but merely waving your eyes back and forth. Pushing your speed beyond your comprehension leads to nothing more than exhaustion and frustration. Finger Waving Patterns This myth is a classic. It comes from the story of Evelyn Wood, who supposedly threw her book o the ground in frustration at her inability to learn to read as fast as the incredible speeds of a professor she knew. Then, as the story goes, after collecting her composure and picking up the book, she brushed off the dirt that had gathered on the open page and suddenly had an epiphany and the secret o speed reading was born! They say that by waving her hand across the page, Evelyn suddenly began to read at “supersonic speeds.” However, none of this is true. According to a friend of hers whom I spoke with, Mrs. Wood hersel said it was “baloney,” made up by the folks she sold her company to. As further proof, this incredible story doesn’t even appear in Evelyn’s own 1958 book,Reading Skills , in which she mentions nothing about any of the now classic finger waving patterns. However, if you look in The Evelyn Wood Seven-Day Speed Reading and Learning Progra , ritten in 1990 by Stanley D. Frank, ED.D, you will find plenty of descriptions of “The Famous and fundamental—Evelyn Wood speed-reading hand motions, with illustrative diagrams.” In chapter five, you not only learn the “Underlining Hand Motion,” but then move on to the “‘S’ Hand Motion, the “Question Mark,” the “‘X’ Hand Motion,” the “Loop Hand Motion,” the “‘L’ Hand Motion,” a ell as a brief discussion of the “Horseshoe,” the “‘U’ Hand Motion,” the “Brush,” and the “Half Moon.” Of course, Wood’s srcinal hand-waving pattern was supposedly the Brush (brushing off the book). I you have trouble making this one work, perhaps you need to try it with the book she was reading at the time—Green Mansions . Maybe it only worked with that book. Or maybe you only need to tr some of the other patterns, like the “Zigzag,” the “Vertical Wave,” the “Double Margin,” or the “Laz S.” The reason Evelyn Wood never mentioned any of these patterns in her own book is because she never recommended as a way to read she faster. Unfortunately, as a paid spokesperson for the new entered owners of her Readingthem Dynamics company, never publically disclaimed them, either, and so they speed reading lore as a sort of speed reading creation myth. Eye Exercises Following Javal’s discovery in 1879—that faster readers made fewer saccades as their eyes moved across each line of text—instructors began striving to train everyone to change their eye movements. Students were told over and over that they must “widen the eye span” and were put through a wide variety of exercises to do so. They would intensely strain to widen their fields of vision, forcing their eyes to almost bulge out of their sockets. But the only result of these exercises (besides possibly a severe headache) was that they could barely concentrate on what they were reading. The same was true of the many exercises meant to train the eyes to move faster. The eyes have always been quicker than the mind. Regardless of how wide your eye span is, or how fast you move your eyes, there is nothing to see until your mind sees it. The fallacy of trying to change the physical movement of the eyes is a classic case of treating the symptom rather than the cause. Eye movements in reading are simply the symptoms of the mental processes the person uses while reading. The eyes are only servants of the mind. Concentrate o seeing whole ideas, and the eyes will comply by automatically fixing on the appropriate sets o ords. Don’t concentrate on the symptom; focus on the mental process of seeing ideas and let your eyes do their job on their own. Subvocalization Distractions Verbalizing or subvocalizing is often considered the bane of reading improvement. How wonderful i e could eliminate this one most destructive habit! And how easy it is to do according to several speed reading courses—just distract yourself. Believe it or not, it is common to suggest that if you ere to repeat nonsense sounds aloud while you read, then you would not be able to internally hear the sounds of the words you were reading. For example, one course recommends reciting the vowels while you read a book; say, “A E I O U over and over while you follow your finger across each line of text. I couldn’t even understand what I as reading if someone else were standing in the room reciting vowels, let alone if I were doing i myself. Where is the common sense? If you want to read faster, you need all the concentration you can muster. You aren’t going to help things if you are distracting yourself with verbal gibberish. Skipping Unimportant Words One suggestion to read faster is to simply readfewer words ; this is accomplished by skipping all those “unimportant” words. But if you are going to skip any words at all, you first have to know which words you are going to skip. That means you have to check each word to see if it’s unimportant. This seems to defeat the purpose, since you have to at least peek at each word to see i you can ignore it. Not only is this method unworkable, but even attempting to concentrate on this word filtering process ould subtract a lot of mental energy that could be used for comprehension. Plus, there is a good chance that you might skip some words that were actually very important to the text’s meaning— ords that could completely alter the essence of what you read. And besides, if it were really possible to speak or write with fewer words, I’m sure we would be speaking and writing that way already—why would we continue to waste our time with all those orthless and avoidable, unimportant words? PhotoReading PhotoReading was developed by Paul Scheele in 1993 and claims to teach you how to read with onl a quick glance at each page. It sounds like this would be wonderful, but so would the ability to fl ith only the help of a Superman cape. Some people have shown they have the ability to read this fast. The most famous was Kim Peek, wh read and remembered more than nine thousand books at a speed of about ten seconds per page, with each eye scanning its own page independently! But Kim was a savant. Savant syndrome is a rare bu extraordinary condition in which persons with serious mental disabilities, including autism, have some “island of genius” which stands out from the general population. There have probably been fewer than one hundred real savants in the past century. Even though savants appear to have incredible reading skills, they are “reading without reckoning.” There is one interesting fact about savants which might have a strange bearing on reading with the right brain. A few people have actually become savants later in life, often after suffering damage to the brain’s left hemisphere. It seems, perhaps, that shutting off certain left-brain activities might have somehow liberated previously latent right-brain skills. This means that those exceptional skills ma lie dormant, to some degree, in all of us, so perhaps by purposefully applying our imagination and visual skills, we are activating those very areas which savants are using. (This is just a thought, bu please don’t give yourself a brain injury to try this.) PhotoReading among the non-savant population, however, has never been proven. In fact, PhotoReading was specifically studied by the NASA Ames Research Center and researchers came t the following conclusion: “These results clearly indicate that there is no benefit to using the PhotoReading technique. Th extremely rapid reading rates claimed by PhotoReaders were not observed; indeed the reading rate ere generally comparable to those for normal reading. Moreover, the PhotoReading experts showe an increase in reading time with the PhotoReading technique in comparison to normal reading. Thi increase in reading time was accompanied by a decrease in text comprehension. These results were found for two standardized tests of text comprehension and for three matched sets of expository texts.” In the end, as a course of study for improving your reading, I would suggest that pursuing bette comprehension is going to lead to a lot more success than trying to become a savant. Practice Exercise #18 I really wish there were some secret magical ways toinstantly read faster and avoid the necessity o exercise and practice, but gimmicks only waste the little precious time we have available for making real improvement. Instead, exercise your comprehension skills by concentrating on meaning in order to improve your real reading speed. Practice with this next exercise and continue to focus your attention on imagining the meaning of each thought-unit. Faster reading comes from broadening that information channel, widening it from the narrow word-by-word method to passing along whole concepts and ideas at a time. ote: The following exercise, although taken from a fascinating and popular novel, may not be suitable for children due to the nature of the subject matter. It was included here because it is a compelling piece of literature that does a good job of keeping the reader’s attention. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of The Scarlet Pimpernel by Baroness Orczy The Scarlet Pimpernel PARIS: SEPTEMBER, 1792 A surging,seething, murmuring crowd of beingsthat are humanonly in name,for to the eye and ear they seem naughtbut savage creatures, animated by vile passions and by the lustof vengeance and o hate. The hour,some little time before sunset, and the place, the West Barricade,at the very spot here, a decade later, a proud tyrant raisedan undying monumentto the nation’s gloryand his own vanity. During the greater part of the dayguillotine had been kept busyat its ghastly work:all that France had boasted of in the past centuries,of ancient names,and blue blood, had paid toll to her desire for liberty and for fraternity.The carnagehad only ceased at this late hour of the daybecause there were other more interesting sightsfor the people to witness, a little while before the final closing of the barricades for the night. And so the crowd rushed away from the Place de la Greve and made for the various barricades in order to watch this interesting and amusing sight. It was to be seen every day, for those aristos were such fools! They were traitors to the people o course, all of them,men, women, and children, who happened to be descendantsof the great menwho since the Crusadeshad made the gloryof France: her old NOBLESSE.Their ancestors had oppressed the people, had crushed themunder the scarlet heelsof their dainty buckled shoes, and now the people had become the rulers of France and crushed their former masters—not beneath their heel,for they went shoelessmostly in these days—but a more effectual weight, the knifeof the guillotine. And daily, hourly, the hideous instrument of tortureclaimed its many victims—old men, young omen,Queen. tiny children until the daywhen it would finallydemand the headof a King and of a beautiful young But this wasas it should be: were not the people now the rulers of France? Every aristocrat was a traitor, as his ancestors had been before him: for two hundred years nowthe people had sweated, and toiled, and starved, to keep a lustful courtin lavish extravagance;now the descendantsof those who had helped to make those courtsbrilliant had to hide for their lives—to fly, if they wished to avoid the tardy vengeanceof the people. And they didtry to hide, and tried to fly: that was just the funof the whole thing.Every afternoon before the gates closed and the market cartswent out in procession by the various barricades, some fool of an aristo endeavored to evade the clutches of the Committeeof Public Safety.In various disguises, under various pretexts,they tried to slipthrough the barriers,which were so well guarded by citizen soldiers of the Republic.Men in women’s clothes,women in male attire,children disguised in beggars’ rags: there were some of all sorts: CI-DEVANT counts,marquises, even dukes, ho wanted to fly from France,reach Englandor some other equally accursed country,and there try to rouse foreign feelingsagainst the gloriousRevolution, or to raise an armyin order to liberate the retched prisoners in the Temple, who had once called themselves sovereigns of France. But they were nearlyalways caught at the barricades, Sergeant Bibot especially at the West Gatehad a wonderful nose for scenting an aristoin the most perfectdisguise. Then, of course,the fun began. Bibot would look at his prey as a cat looks upon the mouse,play with him, sometimes for quitea quarter of an hour,pretend to be hoodwinked by the disguise, by the wigs and other bits of theatrical make-up which hid the identityof a CI-DEVANT noblemarquise or count. Oh! Bibot had a keensense of humor,and it was well worth hanging roundthat West Barricade,in order to see him catch an aristo in the very act of trying to flee from the vengeanceof the people. Sometimes Bibotwould let his prey actually out by the gates, allowing him to thinkfor the space o two minutesat least that he really had escaped out of Paris, and might evenmanage to reachthe coast of England in safety,but Bibot would let the unfortunate wretchwalk about ten meterstowards the open country,then he would send two men after himand bring him back,stripped of his disguise. Oh! That was extremely funny,for as often as not the fugitivewould prove to be a woman, some proud marchioness, who looked terribly comical when she found herselfin Bibot’s clutchesafter all, and knew that a summary trial would await her the next day and after that, the fond embrace o Madame la Guillotine. No wonder that on this fine afternoon in September the crowd round Bibot’s gate was eager an excited. The lust of blood grows with its satisfaction, there is no satiety: the crowd had seen a hundred noble heads fall beneath the guillotine today, it wanted to make sure that it would see another hundred fall on the morrow. Bibot was sitting on an overturned and empty cask close by the gate of the barricade; a small detachment of citizen soldiers was under his command. The work had been very hot lately. Those cursed aristos were becoming terrified and tried their hardest to slip out of Paris: men, women and children, whose ancestors, even in remote ages, had served those traitorous Bourbons, were all traitors themselves and right food for the guillotine. Every day Bibot had had the satisfaction o unmasking some fugitive royalists and sending them back to be tried by the Committee of Public Safety, presided over by that good patriot, Citoyen Foucquier-Tinville. Robespierre and Danton… Chapter 19: Mythical Stories There are so many amazing stories about speed reading, in fact about reading in general. That is one reason this book includes a discussion about what reading is and how it works, to help to demonstrate hy these stories are so preposterous. Reading is a more complex mental task then many people realize. It’s actually pretty amazing that it’s possible at all. At the same time, reading faster is also a lot simpler than is often expected. It’s not learned by a bunch of bizarre exercises, but by simply learning to focus your attention on the meaning of what you read. Let’s go over some of the popular speed reading stories and see why they don’t make sense. Thousands of Words per Minute It’s unfortunate that the business of helping people improve their reading skills has been hijacked by so many charlatans. The myth that we can learn to read at freakishly fast speeds is continuall perpetrated in order to sell the maximum number of books and courses. For example, here is a sample claim from one speed reading book:“Read at any speed you wish to rom 1 to 20,000 words per minute, dependent entirely upon your reading goals.” "Entirely upon your goals "? Well then you wouldn’t need the book, would you? All you need is the goal! Choose the goal and you’re done. And then, what about that low range of ONE word pe minute? That actually sounds more difficult than the twenty thousand (and I also suppose twent thousand andone would be completely out of the question). As proof of how successful their methods are, the same book lists the “World’s Top Ten Speed Readers.” Their listed speeds range between 1,560 and 3,850 words per minute (not 20,000 though). However, none of these names show up on a Google search, making it sound like these top ten amazing readers were only known to the author of that book. It is not necessary to name this book because these claims are not unusual, and you would have no problem confirming this with your own research. The biggest problem with claims like these is that they become the common expectation of people hen they think of speed reading. These types of results are not true, and they end up costing people in lost time and money and in their unfortunate feelings of frustration. When people learn that it’s not possible to read thousands of words per minute, they figure, “Wh bother trying to improve at all?” Well, think of it like this. Imagine you have a painful limp and any walking is a frustrating and difficult chore. In fact, everywhere you go, you have to resort to using crutches just to keep fro falling down. Then, a therapist tells you she can help. She can show you some exercises that will cure you. Wit these exercises, you will be able to walk with ease, go wherever you want, explore all the places that ere out of reach before—and even run if you wish—without pain. You could throw those crutches away. It would be a dream come true, but you would turn her down. You would say, “Walking is not fast enough. I want to run at super-human speeds like the Flash in the DC comic books! I want to run s fast that my friends will be amazed. And besides, I’ve heard that I could learn to do this in sixt minutes with just a few secret running tricks.” So you hobble out of the therapist’s office, taking your crutches with you. Well, where are all these Flashes? Where are all these people whose only reading limit is how fas they can flip pages? Give up your belief in comics. Instead, throw away the crutches of subvocalizing and regression, an begin to enjoy your reading. Explore all the information out there waiting to be discovered withou the pain of exhaustion and frustration. eal speed reading is six hundred to one thousand words per minute, and most people find four hundred words per minute a stubborn hurtle. But why continue stumbling along at less than two hundred words per minute, and with poor comprehension, if there is a way to make reading a joy rather than a chore? And who knows? Maybe you can be one of those who reach the thousand words per minute mark. I so, you still have to pass four hundred first. To do that, you need to put on the coveralls and do the ork. But regardless of your ultimate achievement, any improvement in your reading speed and comprehension can have a powerful effect on many aspects of your life. The truth may be a disappointment to some, but in the end, reality is always easier to handle than delusion. Comprehension Follows Speed This is actually pretty amazing when you think about it, but doesn’t it seem like hardly anybody is concentrating on teaching readers tocomprehend better? Instead, they usually suggest that your comprehension will magically improveafter you learn to “read” faster. Here’s a passage from a popular speed reading book: "If you have difficulty with concentration an comprehension… go fast er rather than more slowly, and you may fi nd a great improvement." In the same book, it instructs,"Practice as fast as you can for 1 minute, not worrying about comprehension." In another book, the author says,"Research is increasingly showing that the faster you read, the better your comprehension. " And then another shouts,“DO NOT CONCERN YOURSELF WITH COMPREHENSION.” Actually, this is the overwhelming advice in speed reading books and courses. But does this make sense to anyone? Whose research is this? Research could also show that faste racecar drivers had better skills, but which came first? Wouldn’t it make more sense that skill led to speed, rather than vice versa? Comprehension Tests Most speed reading courses will include comprehension tests. They have you read a passage and the ask you to answer questions about the passage. But these comprehension tests are ineffective. The are not only a waste of time, they are often used to fool students into thinking they have improved their reading. Ineffective It would certainly be important to know whether or not you understood what you have read. Ho awful to spend hours reading a book and, only after finishing it, find out that you didn’t understand anything. What a waste of time! But just as when I’m listening to somebody talk, when I’m reading, generally if I’mwith getting it or not—in real not after some test. The mainknow problem comprehension teststime, is that theyI take are really testing other things besides comprehension—things such as memory and even test-taking skills. Comprehension tests generally consist of a list of multiple choice or true-false questions at the end o a reading assignment. The problem with such tests is that so much depends on your previous knowledge of the content. And nearly as much depends on your ability to guess which facts you should probably remember for the test. And not all people would pay attention to the exact same things. For example, an article about 3 printers would be viewed very differently by an engineer, a salesman, and an investor. Each would pay attention to and remember, either, how it works, who would buy one, or what its business growth potential was. However even though each of us reads for our own reasons, we all know while we are reading hether or not we are grasping the information that’s important to us. Deceptive Not only are comprehension tests poor indicators of comprehension, but they are sometimes used to deceive students into thinking they have improved when they haven’t. The trick is to make the initial test more difficult than the final one, giving the indication that the student’s comprehension has “improved.” For example, the first reading test is often loaded with names, numbers, and lists; whereas the final test can be of a more general nature, resulting in the kinds of questions you could likely answer correctly even if you didn’t read the article. Again, I’ll use an example from a popular speed reading book. There are ten reading tests throughou this particular book. The article for the first test is nineteen hundred words long and contains: 43 numbers 32 proper names 2 bulleted lists (twenty and seven items long) 11 comma-delimited lists (i.e. “to problem solve, to analyze, to prioritize, to create and to communicate”) with up to eleven items on each list Not only is the article difficult, but many of the questions are misleading. For example, question one on the first test reads, “True or false? The top eighty percent of British companies invest considerable money and time in training." The correct answer is “false,” but take a look at the text from the article : "… of the top 10% o ritish companies, 80% invested considerable money and time in training…". It says eighty percent of thetop ten percent! That is a sneaky trap. And also notice that the number “80” is used in the text, but the word “eighty” is used in the question. Additionally, the suggestion before taking that first test is,"Don’t worry about getting low scores in either speed or comprehension." So a student would obviously show improvement on the last tes because before reading as you possibly can.” the last article, students are instructed to “ Just trust yourself and read as fast Plus, this last article is easier to read and has easier questions. The last article is only fourtee hundred words long (three-quarters the length of the first), much more general in nature, and only contains: 5 numbers 2 proper names No lists And the questions are absolute softballs. This trick of unequal tests is used by many speed readin courses. They multiply your reading speed by your comprehension percent to establish your “effective” speed. By making the last test easier than the first, they make is seem as if you have made a miraculous improvement during the course! What’s worse is that this “improvement” is quite often used to disqualify you for any refund, the ording of which typically sounds something like, “Double youreffective reading speed or your money back.” JFK the Speed Reader It’s amazing that this popular speed reading myth has gone on so long. Many speed reading books and courses tell the story of how President Kennedy took the Evelyn Wood course and learned to rea twelve hundred words per minute. This success story has been used as proof that “You can do it, too!” The JFK’s reading fit the withreading the popular of the time—that our new presiden as story young,ofhandsome, and prowess clever—so story narrative spread quickly. The bandwagon didn’t even have to slow down for dozens of other speed reading courses to hop on and quote this “fact.” But President Kennedy never read twelve hundred words per minute. This figure was only an off-the cuff answer he gave when a reporter questioned him about his reading speed. It’s true he took the Evelyn Wood course, but he never finished it, and so he never tested his final speed. I doubt JFK was being intentionally dishonest; this may have been the speed at which he coul skim to get the gist of material. But according toThe Causes of High And Low Reading Achievemen by Ronald P. Carver, JFK’s reading speed was probably five to six hundred words per minute, a excellent reading speed but not one that belongs in the annals of speed reading legends. The Phonics Method Causes Subvocalizing There has long been controversy over how best to teach reading to young children. There is particula contention between the whole-word people and the phonics people. One of the aspersions cast upon the phonics folks is that by teaching kids to sound out words, they are condemning them to a life o vocalizing while they read. One problem with that logic is that it’s never been shown that whole-word students readwithout vocalizing. And you could also wonder that if the habits of adults are cast in stone as children, then hy aren’t we saying each letter too? Because after all, they taught us the alphabet before they taugh us phonics. Besides all that logic stuff, it just so happens that vocalizinghelps comprehension—plain and simple. You do it every time you try to decipher anything complicated. It’s natural to vocalize to make things easier to understand. Although subvocalizing does supply a comprehension benefit, it is still a very strong habit. However, it’s definitely easier to replace this habit than suppress it, and you replace it by applying your visual and imagining skills. Subvocalizing is a crutch, and you will stop using it when it is no longer needed. Reading vs. Skimming and Scanning If you want to learn how toread faster, you won’t do it by practicing the piano or learning to dance. Skimming and scanning are excellent and very helpful skills to have, but they are not reading. Too many “speed reading” courses intentionally confuse these skills with reading. When you push your speed and ignore your comprehension, you areskimming—not reading. When you search the tex for a pertinent piece of information, you are scanning—not reading. Yes, learn to do these things, but don’t walk away thinking you were speed reading. Practice Exercise #19 Continue to practice real speed reading throughspeed comprehension . Forget all the speed reading fables, and create your own true reading success story by involving and strengthening that powerful and often ignored silent partner on your right side. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Littl e Women by Louisa May Alcott Little Women “Christmas won’t be Christmaswithout any presents,” grumbled Jo, lying on the rug. “It’s so dreadful to be poor!” sighed Meg,looking down at her old dress. “I don’t think it’s fairfor some girls to have plenty of pretty things,and other girls nothing at all,” added little Amy,with an injured sniff. “We’ve got Father and Mother,and each other,” said Beth contentedly from her corner. The four young faceson which the firelight shone brightened at the cheerful words, but darkened again as Jo said sadly, “We haven’t got Father,and shall not have him for a long time.” She didn’t sa “perhaps never,” but each silently added it, thinking of Fatherfar away, where the fighting was. Nobody spoke for a minute;then Meg saidin an altered tone,“You know the reasonMother proposed not having any presentsthis Christmaswas because it is going to be a hard winter for everyone; and she thinkswe ought notto spend moneyfor pleasure, when our menare suffering so in the army.We can’t do much,but we can make our little sacrifices, and ought todo it gladly. But I am afraidI don’t,” and Meg shook her head, as she thoughtregretfully of all the pretty thingsshe wanted. “But I don’t thinkthe little we should spend would do any good. We’ve each got a dollar, and the army wouldn’t be much helped by our giving that. I agree not to expect anythingfrom Mother or you, but I do want to buy Undine and Sintranfor myself.I’ve wanted it so long,” said Jo, who was a bookworm. “I planned to spend minein new music,” said Beth, with a little sigh,which no one heard but the hearth brushand kettle-holder. “I shall get a nice box of Faber’s pencils; I really need them,”said decidedly. “Mother didn’t sayanything aboutdrawing our money, and she won’t wish usto giveAmy up everything.Let’s each b uy what we want, and have a little fun;I’m sure we work hard enoughto earn it,” cried Jo, examining the heelsof her shoes in a gentlemanly manner. “I know I do—teaching thosetiresome children nearly all day, when I’m longingto enjoy myselfat home,” began Meg, in the complaining toneagain. “You don’t havehalf such a hard timeas I do,” said Jo. “How would you like to be shut up for hours ith a nervous, fussy old lady, who keeps you trotting,is never satisfied, and worries you till you’re ready to fly out the windowor cry?” “It’s naughty to fret,but I do think washing dishes and keeping things tidyis the worst work in the orld. It makes me cross,and my hands getso stiff, I can’t practice well at all.” And Beth lookedat her rough handswith a sigh that anyone could hearthat time. “I don’t believe any of you sufferas I do,” cried Amy, “for you don’t have togo to school with impertinent girls,who plague youif you don’t knowyour lessons, and laugh atyour dresses, and label your fatherif he isn’t rich, and insult youwhen your noseisn’t nice.” “If you mean libel,I’d say so, and not talkabout labels, as if Papa was a pickle bottle,” advised Jo, laughing. “I know what I mean,and you needn’t bestatirical about it. It’s proper to use good words, and improve your vocabilary,” returned Amy,with dignity. "Don’t peckat one another,children. Don’t you wishwe had the moneyPapa lost when we were little, Jo? Dear me! How happy and good we’d be, if we had no worries!” said Meg, who could remember better times. “You said the other dayyou thoughtwe were a deal happier than the King children,for they were fightingand frettingall the time, in spite of their money.” “So I did, Beth. Well, I think we are.For thoughwe do have to work, we make fun of ourselves,and are a pretty jolly set,as Jo would say." “Jo does use such slang words!”observed Amy, with a reproving look at the long figurestretched on the rug. Jo immediately satboyish!” up, put her hands in her pockets, and began to whistle. “Don’t, Jo. It’s so “That’s why I do it." “I detest rude, unladylike girls!” “I hate affected,niminy-piminy chits!” “Birds in their little nestsagree,” sang Beth,the peacemaker,with such a funny facethat both sharp voices softened to a laugh, and the "pecking” ended for that time. "Really, girls, you are both to be blamed,” said Meg, beginning to lecture in her elder-sisterly fashion. “You are old enoughto leave off boyish tricks,and to behave better, Josephine. It didn’ matter so muchwhen you were a little girl, but now you are so tall, and turn up your hair,you should remember that you are a young lady.” “I’m not! And if turning up my hair makes me one, I’ll wear it in two tails till I’m twenty,” cried Jo pulling off her net, and shaking down a chestnut mane. “I hate to think I’ve got to grow up, and be Miss March, and wear long gowns, and look as prim as a China Aster! It’s bad enough to be a girl anyway, when I like boy’s games and work and manners! I can’t get over my disappointment in not being a boy. And it’s worse than ever now, for I’m dying to go and fight with Papa. And I can only stay home and knit, like a poky old woman!” And Jo shook the blue army sock till the needles rattled like castanets, and her ball bounded across the room. “Poor Jo! It’s too bad, but it can’t be helped. So you must try to be contented with making your nam boyish, and playing brother to us girls,” said Beth, stroking the rough head with a hand that all the dish washing and dusting in the world could not make ungentle in its touch. “As for you, Amy,” continued Meg, “you are altogether too particular and prim. Your airs are funny now, but you’ll grow… Chapter 20: Reading on Y our Own The phrase-highlighted practice text in this book gives you an excellent opportunity to experience reading whole phrases and to practice visualizing and conceptualizing the ideas while you read. The final goal, however, is to be able to use this skill to read regular text, without assistance. So, what happens when you remove the training wheels and read on your own? Practice with Normal Text Practice reading with normal text whenever you can. This will help you transfer the skill to you regular reading. Scanning normal text for phrases will help you learn what works best for you. Plus, you want to discover what special challenges are faced when you are in charge of both steps; not only conceptualizing whole word-groups at a glance, but simultaneously picking out those wordgroups on your own. The most common question about picking out word-groups is, “How do you know which words to pu together?” And the second most popular question is, “How can you select the word-groups fas enough while also concentrating on your reading?” The answer to both is the same, and is similar to the answer on how to stop subvocalization and regression: by visualizing! Remember that you can only concentrate on one thing at a time, and while you’re reading, that one thing should only be: comprehending the text. Just as you use visualizing for replacing, rather than suppressing, bad habits, you can use visualizing forfinding the phrases. It maywill seem impossible zoom at first, when you look for meaningful ideas that you can visualize, your mind automatically in but on the phrases for you. Here’s an example. As you read the following sentence, don’t worry about your speed, but concentrate on looking for images and ideas. r. Jones, of the Manor Farm, had locked the hen-houses for the night, but was too drunk to remember to shut the popholes. Read it over if you need to in order to come up with something to imagine for each separatel meaningful piece of the sentence. You’re just looking at the sentence and thinking, “What could I imagine here?” Different readers may group the words together differently, but here is one way the sentence could be read. Each line represents the words your eyes might see at a glance, but the dark text represents the part which your mind might pick out as a separate visual idea. This is an idea you could instantl imagine and conceptualize. Read each dark phrase and look at the suggested image. As shown here, there isn’t really a rigid fixation on each phrase, but a general focus on larger portions of the sentence. You will be aware of the surrounding text but the units of meaning will stand out as imaginable ideas when you are looking for ideas to visualize. The generic images above are only samples of what you might imagine; any attention paid to imagining the meaning will work, though. And remember again, not every idea has an easy to imagine picture; paying attention to just the conceptual ideas will also work. The word-groups chosen in this example are also subjective. There is no perfect grouping, althoug this particular grouping may possibly be close to what many people would come up with, depending on the number of words at a time they are comfortable with. But which words you group and which images or ideas you imagine are much less important than the effort tosee the groups of words as ideas. Just scan the text and look for ideas. If concentrate on seeing words clump the only way they makeyou sense. It’syou a little bit like looking forideas, all thetheblue sky will pieces whentogether you areinmaking a jigsaw puzzle; are more likely to see something if it’s in the forefront of your mind and you are looking for it. Just look for each meaningful chunk of information and you will feel your right-brain say, “Aha,” as i recognizes the meaning of the phrase. Cautions One thing you must look out for while reading normal text is excessive speeding. Reading without the assistance of highlighted phrases is going to be slower as you obviously have more to do now. But at the same time, there will probably be an overwhelming urge to push your speed as fast as you can go. Instead, slow down and pay attention to each phrase. You must make comprehension your main, no, your only pursuit. Chasing after speed is chasing your shadow. Slow down if necessary, because i you aren’t comprehending, you aren’t reading! Make sure you are looking at the ideas and concentrating on their images and meaning; this is when the speed will come. Another temptation—probably made even stronger when reading regular text—is to take in too man ords at once. It will seem to be an easy way to read faster, by simply reading larger phrases, but you need to let the visualizing right brain decide where the ideas are, even if you end up only picking one or two words at times. Yes, I said even one word, because the goal is to visualize ideas as you read, and multi-word phrases are used only because they are easier to visualize. But sometimes even a single word can represent a separate distinct thought. Just be flexible and patient and look for the conceptual ideas while you read. Lastly, you may find it difficult to enforce phrase-reading, and instead may try toflow through the text in a steady stream of individual words. It’s true that the more you concentrate on ideas of whole ord-groups, the more you will get into the “zone”—where theideas will become a smooth flow— but in order to do that, you must be looking at the text in distinct phrases. Be sure to focus your attention on those meaningful phrases that you can imagine as visual, conceptual ideas. Even if this is strangely difficult to adhere to, you must correct yourself if you notice that you are running individual ords together in a steady string. Isolating the distinct phrases is just as important to comprehension speed as is having spaces between words. Don’t ignore the phrases—they are like the cogs in the comprehension gears. Types of Reading So what kinds of reading can you apply this to? Well, it’s probably not for reading small items like street signs or product ingredients. But the more continuous the flow of ideas, the more reading for ideas will help you see the bigger picture. And although this can be used for many types of reading, each type may still require a somewhat different approach. Educational Reading educational material requires a higher degree of flexibility than most reading. The ver nature of educational reading is meant to be one of discovery. All of this type of reading must be new to you in order for it to even be educational. Any type of reading non-fiction reading isgoing goingtotoincrease includethe frequent havebut read. stop-and-go is naturally time itstops takestotoponder finish what such you a book, youThis are doing more than just reading; you are also stopping to consider what you have read. Regardless of the overall speed, reading in thought-units can make any complicated material easier to understand by breaking it up into meaningful, bite-size pieces of information. Just remember to stop when necessary to carefully consider something you have learned. Also, make sure to start off slowly when you begin again, ensuring you are paying attention to the new material rather than the old. Current Events Keeping up with the news can involve a lot more skimming than reading. There is so much news available that you have to be very selective. Glance at headlines and skim articles that loo interesting, only the ready to dropreading it and move on. few that merit deeper understanding. Even then, you should always be Personal Interest Personal interest reading could include most pastime reading, such as hobbies, sports, or entertainment. Even more than with current events, this type of reading needs a ruthless filtering because much of it you will already know—or at least suspect. This type of reading is more like a treasure hunt. Skim until you find the nuggets of novelty, and don’t hesitate to put the material down i you decide it is not offering you anything new or helpful. Stories This is where you can lose yourself in your reading. Whether it’s fiction or non-fiction, reading a storyofisthe likeworld watching a movie. This isYou where easiest to get into and the zone, mental rest simply falls away. canit’s tune out everything enter athis new place world.where Herethe is here reading with your right brain will turnlistening to a story into living it. Your imagination and visualized ideas will make you a part of the story, and your faster reading will make the story move along more fluidly. You won’t be pushing your speed; your speed will increase as you are being pulled through the story. Comics How could you speed read a comic book, and why would you? It’s a funny thing about reading in phrases, but it becomes a habit. And when faced with a small balloon of text, it is often natural to see it as a whole idea and read it all at once. I was surprised when I first noticed this, but I suppose th ord bubbles in comics are already more like thought-units than long dissertations. And then, i you’re not in a rush, you could use the extra time to enjoy the pictures. Last Words And finally, a few last words to keep in mind. Realize that reading for ideas won’t always wor perfectly. It is not magic. It is a tool to help you focus and concentrate on ideas rather than words. As such, it will be a much more effective way of reading than concentrating on the words and the sounds they make. Look for the ideas and they will appear; realize that a lot depends on the type of text, the type of writer, and even (maybe especially) your own frame of mind. Reading for ideas is the path to better and faster comprehension, and the more you take this path, the smoother it will become. Two other things that can be helpful while you practice are to set small reading goals and take regular breaks. Pick up a book and decide how many pages you are going to read. Put a bookmark at tha ending page and then stop when you get there—but not until you get there. Don’t stop and don’t le any other thoughts interfere with your reading until you reach that bookmark. Train yourself during these short sprints to only think of what you are reading. Do as many sprints as you want in one sitting, but allow yourself a breather between each. Make it a habit to onlyread while you read. Make the action of picking up a book an automatic switch that toggles your mind into its reader mode. And again, remember also to be patient with yourself. It is self-defeating to criticize you performance because you are only reinforcing those negative ideas. Being impatient also increases the urge to push your speed beyond of your comprehension. It is good to critique yourself, if that means to honestly appraise your strengths and weaknesses, but i you find yourself being overly self-critical, then stop reading and do something else until you can approach your reading practice with a more productive attitude. Also, realize that you are not responsible for all your reading success. It is a tango between you an the author. It is an unfortunate truth, but many authors do not write as fluently as we might like. As Nathaniel Hawthorne put it, “Easy reading is damn hard writing.” No matter how hard you try, som text is just slower to understand and read. And today, with so much writing and so many writers, thanks to the internet and self-publishing, I’m sure you’ve noticed that there are surprising amounts o poor spelling, poor grammar, and even typing errors. But that’s the way it is. Do the best with what you have. Some of these texts, littered with grammatical land mines, may still contain enough amazing gems of information to make the effort worthwhile. Jus be patient and flexible. You will succeed because success is simply being on the right path. If you know what you need to do, then you only have to do it. What you need to do is read text as ideas by visualizing whole units o meaning. That’s it. The rest is practice. I hope this book has given you some new tools as well as a new perspective on reading. All reading takes place in our brains, not our eyes. Our eyes are only tools for delivering the text to our brains, the same way our hands are tools for holding the book. Real reading only takes place when information is integrated into our existing knowledge base. This internal process of information assimilation is where all real reading improvement has to take place, not in any external changes like the speed at which we move our eyes or the width of our “eye span.” Reading IS comprehension. That means comprehension is not just a part of reading, it is all tha reading is. If we read text with fifty percent comprehension, then we are only reading fifty percent o the text. The rest of the text is only looked at—and maybe sounded out—but not “read.” Once that text enters the brain, it’s not inside some mysterious black box where we have no control o how it is processed. Much of what goes on in our brains may be outside our conscious view; wha goes on may be mysterious, but it’snot out of our control. We might not be able to control exactly how our brains process we can steer them what in more directions, theunderstanding same way a rider directs a horse. Thetext, riderbut doesn’t have to know the productive horse is thinking, but by the horse’s capabilities and by using proper techniques, he can cause the horse to do his bidding. By understanding reading and understanding your brain, you can read for ideas by reading with the right brain. Practice Exercise #20 We now arrive at our last practice exercise, but remember, there is still a lot of skill to gain by going back over the exercises and reapplying your improved reading habits. When you’re ready, begin reading the first thousand words of Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy Anna Karenina Happy families are all alike; every unhappy familyis unhappyin its own way. Everythingwas in confusion in the Oblonskys’ house.The wife had discovered that the husbandwas carrying on an intriguewith a French girl, who had been a governessin their family,and she had announcedto her husbandthat she could notgo on living in the same housewith him. This position o affairs had now lasted three days, and not onlythe husband and wifethemselves, but all the members of their family and household, were painfully conscious of it. Every person in the house felt thatthere as no sense in their living together,and that the stray peoplebrought together by chance in any inn had more in commonwith one another than they,the members of the familyand household of the Oblonskys. The wife did not leave her own room, the husbandhad not been at homefor three days. The children ran wild all over the house;the English governessquarreled with the housekeeper, and rote to a friendasking herto look outfor a new situation for her;the man-cookhad walked off the day before just at dinner time; the kitchen-maid,and the coachmanhad given warning. Three days after the quarrel, Prince Stepan Arkadyevitch Oblonsky—Stiva, as he was called in the fashionable world—woke up at his usual hour,that is, at eight o’clock in the morning,not in his ife’s bedroom, but on the leather-covered sofa in his study.He turned over his stout,well-cared-for person on the springy sofa,as though he would sinkinto a long sleep again;he vigorously embraced the pillow on the other sideand buried his face in it; but all at once he jumped up,sat up on the sofa, and opened his eyes. “Yes, yes, how was it now?” he thought,going over his dream.“Now, how was it? To be sure! Alabin was giving a dinner at Darmstadt;no, not Darmstadt, but something American. Yes, but then, Darmstadt was in America. Yes, Alabin was giving a dinner on glass tables, and the tables sang,Il mio tesoro— not table, Il mio though, but too,” something better, and there were some sortof little decanters on the and tesoro they were women, he remembered. Stepan Arkadyevitch’seyes twinkled gaily, and he pondered with a smile. "Yes, it was nice, very nice. There was a great deal more that was delightful,only there’s noputting it into words, or even expressing it in one’s thoughts awake.”And noticinga gleam of lightpeeping in beside one of the serge curtains, he cheerfully dropped his feet over the edge of the sofa, and felt about with themfor his slippers, a present on his last birthday, worked for him by his wife on gold-colored morocco. And, as he had done every day for the last nine years,he stretched out his hand, without getting up, towards the place where his dressing-gownalways hungin his bedroom. And thereuponhe suddenly remembered that he was not sleepingin his wife’s room, but in his study, and why: the smile vanished from his face, he knitted his brows. "Ah, ah, ah!Oo!…” he muttered,recalling everythingthat had happened. And again every detailo hisorst quarrel his fault. wife was present to his imagination,all the hopelessness of his position, and of all,with his own “Yes, she won’t forgive me,and she can’t forgive me.And the most awfulthing about itis that it’s all my fault—all my fault,though I’m not to blame.That’s the point of the whole situation,”he reflected. “Oh, oh, oh!”he kept repeatingin despair, as he remembered the acutely painfulsensations caused him by this quarrel. Most unpleasant of allwas the first minutewhen, on coming,happy and good-humored,from the theater, with a huge pear in his handfor his wife, he had notfound his wife in the drawing-room,to his surprise had not found herin the study either,and saw her at last in her bedroom with the unlucky letter that revealed everythingin her hand. She, his Dolly,forever fussing and worrying overhousehold details, and limited in her ideas,as he considered, was sitting perfectly still with the letter in her hand,looking at himwith an expressiono horror, despair, and indignation. “What’s this? This?” she asked, pointing to the letter. And at this recollection, Stepan Arkadyevitch,as is so often the case, was not so much annoyedat the fact itself as at the way in which he had methis wife’s words. There happened to himat that instantwhat does happen to people when they are unexpectedly caught in something very disgraceful. He did not succeed in adapting his face to the position in which he was placed towards his wife by the discovery of his fault. Instead of being hurt, denying, defending himself, begging forgiveness, instead of remaining indifferent even—anything would have been better than what he did do—his face utterly involuntarily (reflex spinal action, reflected Stepan Arkadyevitch, who was fond of physiology)—utterly involuntarily assumed its habitual, goodhumored, and therefore idiotic smile. This idiotic smile he could not forgive himself. Catching sight of that smile, Dolly shuddered a though at physical pain, broke out with her characteristic heat into a flood of cruel words, and rushed out of the room. Since then she had refused to see her husband. “It’s that idiotic smile that’s to blame for it all,” thought Stepan Arkadyevitch. “But what’s to be done? What’s to be done?” he said to himself in despair, and found no answer. Stepan Arkadyevitch was a truthful man in his relations with himself. He was incapable of deceivin himself and… The End How well you master these techniques will depend on how much you practice them. I know how har it is to find time to practice, but as with all worthwhile goals, you do what you HAVE to do now, so that you can do what you WANT to do later. Although few goals are free of effort, some certainly have bigger paybacks, and having good reading skills has huge paybacks. Just as I srcinally discovered, the main thing to remember is thatreading IS comprehension . The more you comprehend, the deeper your experience will be and the more interesting the world will be. Bonus Material As a small way to thank you for reading my book, I have created black and gray versions of the full books for the first four exercises. You can download the free pdf files here. ww.readspeeder.com/books/the-velveteen-rabbit.html ww.readspeeder.com/books/pride-and-prejudice.html ww.readspeeder.com/books/the-picture-of-dorian-gray.html ww.readspeeder.com/books/the-war-of-the-worlds.html Thank you for reading my book. If you found this book helpful, will you please leave a review? I ver much appreciate it. On the off chance that you really didn’t like my book, could you contact me at [email protected] instead of posting a review? The choice is ultimately up to you of course Other Books by David Butler READING THOUGHT-UNITS Faster Reading through Faster Comprehension with 12 Specially Formatted Short Stories About the Author David Butler is a retired mechanical design engineer. He has applied his conceptual approach fo solving design engineering problems, to developing a solution to his lifelong struggle with slow reading, and enjoys sharing this solution with others not only through this book but with the free course at www.readspeeder.com, and the free tool atwww.phrasereader.com, as well as on the blog at www.thoughtunits.com. David lives in the scenic mountain forest of Southern California, but whe the weather is 75° and sunny, he can usually be found riding his beach bike along the ocean with his beautiful wife.