Submitted by Mandalorian326 t3_12222qj in books

I have this problem, that I can't even remember since when do I have it. Whenever I'm reading, and whatever I'm reading, I can't stop thinking: "When will this end?", I keep watching the number of the pages and can't wait for the chapter to finish. This has happened to me even with books that I've really enjoyed, but I always feel like what I'm reading won't end and I CAN'T WAIT for it to finish (even when I have nothing to do later). I wanted to know if someone could tell me why this happens because this makes reading a tough habit for me

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InvisibleSpaceVamp t1_jdogreh wrote

Maybe because information/entertainment is offered in smaller and smaller bits? Like, there is Tik Tok now because Youtube videos are apparently too long for some people. Or online articles that tell you it takes 3 minutes to read them or "online watch parties" because just watching a movie without some entertainment on the side is apparently not enough anymore.

Just a guess, but I bet this has some kind of effect on how people consume other types of media as well.

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Mandalorian326 OP t1_jdoiny0 wrote

I definitely think that TikTok and YouTube short videos have something to do, we are getting used to be permanently entertained and if anything bores us we just swipe and go back to being entertained. But I don't think that's the whole reason because it's something that has happened even with entertaining readings

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Khunjund t1_jdphc20 wrote

> Youtube videos are apparently too long for some people

Me who watches nothing but two-hour-long video essays on YouTube:

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jstnpotthoff t1_jdogcfg wrote

I don't have an explanation, but I experience the same thing. Some combination of impatience and anticipation. Are you, like me, basically never satisfied with what you're currently doing?

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Mandalorian326 OP t1_jdoiv4w wrote

Exactly, it feels like the thing I'm reading is never "enough", it's never entertaining enough for me to be doing this.

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Ellery-Queen t1_jdok8l5 wrote

You’re not alone OP. I’m an elder millennial. Elder enough to remember a mostly analog world. In my childhood and teen years, even my early 20s, I could get lost in a book for hours. I would be fully absorbed in it. I got my first smartphone at age 26, and after a year or two that definitely changed, and now in my late 30s it’s worse than ever. Just like you, it doesn’t matter if I’m reading a dry Victorian novel or a fast paced modern thriller or horror novel, I cannot stay focused on it. Even if I love it. I do a lot of the same things. Checking to see how many pages are left in a chapter, etc. I’ve tried doing “digital detox” before but I can’t seem to stick with it very long. I used to read 20 or more books a year. Now I’m lucky if I get through 4. It’s somewhat embarrassing and also makes me kinda sad. At the end of the day we’re just monkeys chasing dopamine hits. I don’t think our brains were “built” to contend with unlimited high speed internet access at our fingertips 24 hours a day.

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Mandalorian326 OP t1_jdolgyp wrote

Definitely, this new entertaining system is highly incompatible with traditional reading habits (at least for people whose attention is not great)

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Ellery-Queen t1_jdom7qf wrote

My attention span was far better than that of most of my peers all through school. It’s been totally destroyed lol

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Cultured_Ignorance t1_jdojypr wrote

Why do you read? To me this sounds like a sort of emptiness in the intention to read, where the only goal is simply to 'consume' or 'achieve' the book, and the only counterbalancing force is ecstasy or enjoyment. This reduces reading to a mere task and you attend to it like other tasks- always looking beyond it as a burden to release.

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Mandalorian326 OP t1_jdolozy wrote

Sometimes it does feel like a task but when I finish a book or even a chapter that I liked I feel happy and satisfied for what I just did

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km1495 t1_jdpetnz wrote

I get this way but I also have diagnosed OCD. I'm always counting page numbers and wondering when I'll finish or if I'll ever finish. I have to remind myself to take a deep breath and pause and visualize/enjoy the page I'm reading

You may also need something structured like a timer set when you read. And telling yourself, I will only read until the timer is up. Then I will put it down no matter what page I'm on. May help you enjoy it in smaller chunks?

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Significant_Good_301 t1_jdoj0xj wrote

Maybe try audio books. My sister hates to read but loves listening to books. I am the opposite.

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vixenreviews t1_jdompqt wrote

Lol, I get this way. I just want to know what happens at the end of the story. I skim books with a ton of inner monologue for this reason.

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vivian_lake t1_jdpe3aq wrote

I don't know if what I do is really the same thing but I am often almost racing for the end but it's less of a 'when will this be over' and more of a 'when will I know' kind of deal. It's like I can't wait to finish so that I know what happens, there's no desire for the reading to be over just for the knowledge that comes from finishing.

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oofstudiozine t1_jdpf9z3 wrote

I’m the same sometimes. I stop and start and keep checking how many pages to the next chapter and how many chapters left in the book. A part of it is attention span issues and a part of it is anxiety—I’ve reached a part of the book that’s a little too intense and am distracting myself from continuing. But then the action draws me in and I forget to count, at least for the next little while.

It would be interesting to maybe try reading a book without chapters (which I haven’t done in a while) and see if that affects the way I read.

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DafnissM t1_jdpugmo wrote

It’s happens to me too, I’m a very anxious person and even when I’m watching a movie or a video I will constantly check the time left but it’s not to a degree that bothers me, I’ve even learnt to skim carefully to just see the page number and avoid spoilers in books lol.

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mitkah16 t1_jdpxduk wrote

Something extra:

I went from reading up to 30-40 books a year to a declining 3-10 starting 2017. Different situations for me to read presented. I was reading while commuting, now I had a more dynamic commute with almost no time, I was reading during lunch and now I was more engaged with my colleagues during lunch.

It all changed in 2021. That year I read 40 books again!! Last year I reached 55! This year I already have 12 done.

And books actually helped me get into that. “Atomic Habits” (if you read it, my only advice is to skip the chapter 1) and “The art of not giving a f*ck” practically helped me finding what is important to me and why, remove what I don’t find helpful in the life I want and find time for the things I enjoy.

I have at the moment a huge list of “Want to Read” in my Goodreads that might never go to 0 as it keeps growing. And I try to read different topics simultaneously (one chapter a day from one or the other, or few pages a day from few). I separated them in: mental health, work related, fantasy, people (biographies), hobby, fiction and such. And I try to have 1 from each category in my “Currently Reading”. That way I keep my brain challenged and interested by learning from different topics. If I want something lighter, or if I feel like crying or so. I am a curious person by nature and I love learning, I am thirsty for information always, so that also helps, but with today’s media-driven society, your brain might get a bit updated.

Only remember: your brain is yours and you are the driver. You can make it do ANYTHING you want. I know sometimes we need the help of externals like meds or docs, but in general, it is yours to command. Be open to question it and try new things and hack it :)

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mitkah16 t1_jdpva7o wrote

Sounds like anxiety. And today’s world is only created for short-spans. To hook you with one phrase. To sell you with one look. Meditating can help tons. But do not expect results soon, it’s a life-long practice.

I love TV series. Not movies that much. As I want the story to develop longer, like in a book. So I think in a sense I also read my books as if they were a TV show, “in parts”, and I enjoy the cliffhangers I leave myself with.

Just with anything in life, it is about the journey, not the destination. Try to focus on the journey instead. Not to mark the book as read but to enjoy everything that comes with reading it, maybe even learn something from it.

Maybe ask yourself: why do I read? What do I gain from reading?

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