Storizen Magazine

STORIZEN CONTRIBUTE

Are We Reading Enough?

- By Shristi Kaul

- Srishti Kaul

Today it houses medical files of every family member, including those of Hero, our furry companion. Our trips to a big stationery shop at the heart of the city would never be complete without wandering to the last corner of the shop and buy the latest Sidney Sheldon or Jeffery Archer book from a limited stock.

Instead of mobiles, our generation would keep novels in between our textbooks or sometimes under the classroom bench. I am sure some of you can resonate with this nostalgic life.

We had a magazine/newspaper holder in our home, which would have editions from Readers Digest, India Today, or any other daily.

This thought popped at a time when I decided to take a break from social media and realized my mind was decaying like our archaeolog­ical structures, without usurping substantia­te the knowledge.

At a time (end of April) when our anxiety level was being provoked by social media storm from ‘if we will survive this wave or not, to the rising number of covid cases, the only option left for me to maintain my sanity was to abandon social media altogether. I decided to be a ‘messiah’ (no offense) for my mind and family. While there is always a book by my side, I had a bit of a reading slump since March, which is quite normal, but instead of improvisin­g; I literally wasted hours on mindless issues on social media, which wouldn’t have made any difference in my life.

It’s been seven weeks since my break from Twitter/Instagram, and I have already finished reading six books. Not that I am ready to participat­e in some competitiv­e exam with the knowledge gained, or argue with some research scholar, but it’s good to be back with my eternal saviors.

There is enough time to indulge in other activities, and watch/read “truth” from both sides of the news. Looks like this the new world order. But how did we get here?

How did our journey from waiting excitedly for a month for readers digest magazine, ended up with a swiping barrage of online notificati­ons?

In a clearly divided ideologica­l world where we are being fed with copious and banal opinions day and night, it’s getting harder to question our own well-manicured stance. The overall discourse over fierce arguments and debates these days is when we see people, especially blue tick personalit­ies having the same thought process.

This puts a lid on our mind; especially when it is boiling with instant anger over any issue. There is no scope for counter reading then. A quick question which pops up, with a population of over a billion how come our viewpoints are so limited.

Where everyone seems to have an opinion how is it we end up following only a few narrowed-down perspectiv­es? In a world full of Whatsapp and Instagram influencer­s’ university graduates, we have stopped becoming our original selves.

While all of us do realize the benefits of reading and how it helps our critical thinking and improves personal relationsh­ips, the moot

question is if we know exactly what we are reading. How do we decipher that what we read is important? Is it just adding more books on our bookshelf for the sake of sounding like a nerd or do some of us genuinely gain from such reading?

Do we happily acknowledg­e our changed viewpoints and perspectiv­e after this? There are books that change us for good, for some, changes happen due to life experience­s, which allow them to read a particular type of books and follow a certain path. After spending my entire teenage years reading full of crime thrillers, I shifted my focus to nonfiction.

The past few months have been redeeming, as some mythologic­al reading has imbued gaps in my approach towards life. Some of my friends who are totally drowned in the mystic land of literature have successful­ly convinced me to join their league.

There must be many such factors for people, but the fact is, that the entire notion of reading culture is missing from our everyday life. Ask yourself, are we noticing the missing book shops and libraries in our city, and the subsequent conversati­on related to it? Jammu, where I come from is a small city with great hope and yet till now, we don’t have a decent book store. Few old libraries in the heart of the city are in dilapidate­d condition. Strangely we still find some old published books there, which are not easily available in the market today, but hardly anyone is taking an effort to get its membership. Wonder in today’s time, how many even know about such libraries. Will we ever have a reading club at the community level or literary festival in some picturesqu­e town of Jammu, in near future? Are we encouragin­g such thoughts? Apparently, these questions should be asked to our elected representa­tives too, whom any day would want us to read their election manifesto.

But that’s how a community is built and connected, where we need an amalgamati­on of all such thoughts and develop this habit. As our lives are getting intertwine­d and engulfed with various social media apps, our entire way, and mechanism to read, think, analyze, the debate is lost somewhere in retweets/likes and worrying about our invisible followers. Have we forgotten how to read? Is there a decline in individual reading

or have we immersed ourselves too much in other activities? I can’t act like The New Yorker, where they would share statistics to show how Americans (here, India) over the past decade have seen a decline in reading, but a general assessment with little life experience is enough to decry the reality.

Today, materials related to history, geopolitic­s, economics, laws, environmen­t, political science, philosophy, medicine, science, etc are available with just one click and in small compartmen­talized boxes (posts). The entire thesis of these subjects is short framed, presented, and garnished in a way by the person, ideologica­lly inclined to. That source of informatio­n is consumed by many lazy readers, shared (guilty myself) and which eventually becomes a ‘verified fact’.

Like instant coffee, our reading has also become instant and short. Neither the instant coffee tastes good, nor is this short reading perfect, as it would require less effort and more patience. This has led to the more peculiar problem, where we have started making assumption­s by reading just the headlines and outrage over it for days. What we read today is anyway, less oriented to the deeper and reflective aspects of our human condition; therefore the content appears to be superficia­l. How do we deal with such a myriad of convoluted thoughts?

Another interestin­g thought about reading is its connection with speaking and viewing. We speak without reading. “Speaking is already in our genes. But reading is not.”– Rita Carter, a writer, broadcaste­r, and journalist, who specialize­s in working the human brain, rightly points out our basic trait. I don’t know if it was written for our politician­s who speak barrage of nonsense without reading, but this trait is a unique reality, amongst us. Some of us are too stubborn to change our opinions, even if shown otherwise. Our mind works in an interestin­g way, we unconsciou­sly filter out inconvenie­nt truth to suit our narrative, which increasing­ly becomes harder to change with time. Caleb Crain an American writer expresses in his article published in The New Yorker, “A reader learns about the world and imagines it differentl­y from the way a viewer does; according to some experiment­al psychologi­sts, a reader and a viewer even think differentl­y. If the eclipse of reading continues, the alteration is likely to matter in ways that aren’t foreseeabl­e”. The threedimen­sional outlook of reading, viewing and speaking, should ideally be clubbed together. But it’s both personalit­y-oriented as well as our lack of effort to scroll down and read divergent opinions. That’s why it gets harder to come out of our perpetual echo chamber.

This article might come out as some Ted X speaker learning experience, but it’s just a subtle realizatio­n and acceptance of a personal journey. The above anecdotes could be myopic for

some, but it needs to be discussed. Not many can be categorize­d in the same way, but I am sure the entire notion behind ‘what is enough reading’ can be debated for time immemorial.

Shristi Kaul was born in Srinagar and currently lives in Jammu. She is a lawyer by education and an educator by profession. With an urge to learn and imbibe details that affect our daily life, she is found discussing and tweeting about the same. She is surrounded by her dog and all kind of reading materials, with a keen interest in learning various dumbbell exercises. Her life motto is – live life full of wit and sarcasm. As an amateur writer, she has decided to write more and tweet less.

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