WHY WE NEED TO READ BOOKS :
1. READING MAKES
YOU MORE EMPATHETIC
Reading is a way to escape your own life, and
can take you to faraway lands, other times, and put you in other people’s
shoes. By viewing the world from a point of view that is not your own, you
become more empathetic.
In fact, “the currently predominant view is that literary fiction... can be
linked to the human capacity to comprehend that other people hold beliefs and
desires and that these may differ from one’s own beliefs and desires”
2. READING KEEPS
YOUR BRAIN HEALTHY
Just as exercise
helps your body stay healthier longer, reading is an exercise that helps keep
your brain fit. As they say, use it or lose it! Doing puzzles and reading as
you age is proven to slow Dementia and Alzheimers (2). The next time you cozy
up to read with a cup of tea, you can say you are getting your daily dose of
(brain) exercise.
3. READING REDUCES
STRESS
If you could
reduce your stress levels in under ten minutes by doing something you enjoy,
would you? A popular study done by the University of Sussex showed that “stress
levels declined by 68 percent after participants read for just six minutes”
(3). A good book transports you to another place where your own stresses don’t
exist, allowing you to relax.
4. READING HELPS
YOU SLEEP BETTER
In this time of
constant technological connection, our sleep is suffering. The blue light
emitted from screens disrupts melatonin levels. By checking “one last email”
you are waking your brain up when you should be relaxing. Then there is the
stress of reading the news. As we now know, reading a book helps you to relax.
Having enough
restful sleep makes a big impact on how you feel and how productive you are the
next day. Instead of checking your work emails or surfing the web before bed,
put the screens away and reach for a good book instead. You will thank yourself
the next day!
5. READING SETS AN
EXAMPLE FOR KIDS
Is reading
important to you? If it is, it likely will be important to your children. It is
proven that “parents are children’s first and most enduring educators and have
a huge influence on their development” (4).
Reading to your
child is of course key, but so is showing them that reading matters to you,
too. Most parents know that children are excellent mimics, so give them access
to books and let them see you reading. It won’t be long until you catch your
little person reading to their stuffed animals or curled up with a book instead
of watching television.
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