• TiredThinker
    819
    I recently started reading a very large book and perhaps because I'm middle aged, eye strain, terrible brain function and the like I worry my reading speed isn't quite up to par. How does everyone else do in that department?

    Assume 450 words per page on average, college level reading, very high-falutin dialogs.
    1. How many minutes to read 10 pages? (4 votes)
        20 Mins
        25%
        25 Mins
        50%
        30 Mins
          0%
        40 Mins
          0%
        45 Mins
        25%
  • L'éléphant
    1.4k
    You should allow little breaks.
  • MAYAEL
    239
    I am very very slow because I have to read it a minimum of 3 or 4x in order to grab all the parts I missed because of my stupid dyslexia. Ironically though before I had dyslexia back when I was 6 or 7 I could speed read faster then any adult I knew and I got in trouble for it I was constantly accused of "skipping over it" untill I told them what the page said in order to prove it to them lol . Oh the good old days
  • Sir2u
    3.2k


    I have dyslexia, it has mild affects most of the time but is more noticeable when under stress or tired. I was always behind as a kid when it came to speed but I did like to read. I got better and faster when I started reading more in my 20's and developed habits and methods to help myself. The effects of dyslexia were hard to notice.
    I had to stop reading so much for a couple of reasons, age and my previous profession screwed up my eyes, not as much time as before and the lack of availability of books that I wanted to read. Where I live English language books are rare and expensive.

    But I solved the problem by finding places were I could download audio books for free. Now I can sit back, close my eyes and listen all day.
  • Sir2u
    3.2k


    Are you sure you have dyslexia? It is usually considered a neurological problem that prevents kids from developing the ability to read, not a condition that undoes already learned abilities
  • L'éléphant
    1.4k
    I was never a voracious reader. My reading habits only developed when I studied philosophy. So, my reading habits is what you get when you read philosophical writings -- you read passages not the whole book, you jumped from one philosopher to the next, you jumped from one notion to another, you only really focus on one idea at a time, and you neglect to read fiction.
  • Jack Cummins
    5.1k

    Do you read all writing at the same speed? I vary according to what I am reading, but not simply on the basis of whether the writing is grabbing my attention although that may be a factor. I go more slowly if I am wishing to stop and think about the ideas. So, sometimes I skim through books which don't seem paying that much attention to and often spend the longest time on the ones that seem worth reflecting on.

    I do have some eye problems too, so try to take breaks, especially when reading online because the blue light can have bad effects on the retina.
  • TiredThinker
    819


    Phone reading has become easy for me, but book reading is harder. I recommend blue light reduction options. The speed certainly depends on the language and phrasing and tendencies towards run on sentences.
  • L'éléphant
    1.4k
    Time yourself using different philosophers. I used Schopenhauer for this purpose. But try JS Mill, god damn! Archaic language. Descartes -- you should meditate on his meditation to get his point. Aristotle -- he's good to read -- like an ocean wave.
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