Hat Tip to Michael Hyatt at his blog for passing along this video. Watch and listen to the entire clip. Watch your assumptions.
Read a Book a Week
The Contraction of the Consumer
An Update On Consumer Frugality: Americans Staying Home More, Reading Books | zero hedge
While people did spend more on luxury items and things to help them improve their mood during these tumultuous times, there was still very much a frugal ‘stay at home’ cocooning theme in the spending report.

Read a Book a Week – eBook News 1/29/10
Anybody doubting the viability of Ebook readers over the long term needs to take a close look at these numbers. There is a reason why many companies are currently tripping over themselves in an attempt to get into this market.

Read a Book a Week – 2009 Results
1.0 per week in 2009.
Experience matters. Now I know why from the following NYT article.
Better pattern recognition, significance recognition, and faster solutions.
I hope you kept some of your older underwriters on the payroll.
Adult Learning – Neuroscience – How to Train the Aging Brain – NYTimes.com
Recently, researchers have found even more positive news. The brain, as it traverses middle age, gets better at recognizing the central idea, the big picture. If kept in good shape, the brain can continue to build pathways that help its owner recognize patterns and, as a consequence, see significance and even solutions much faster than a young person can.

Read a Book a Week – Change Your Brain Structure
Reading Practice Can Strengthen Brain ‘Highways’ : NPR
Intensive reading programs can produce measurable changes in the structure of a child’s brain, according to a study in the journal Neuron. The study found that several different programs improved the integrity of fibers that carry information from one part of the brain to another.

Read a Book a Week – 3Q 09 Update
1.02 is the number of books I’ve read per week so far in 2009.
One more quarter to go.
Read a Book a Week – 2Q 09 Update
2008 was a tad bit disappointing as I managed to read just 0.9846 books a week.
Drum roll please…
The year is half gone and I’ve read 1.0384 books a week.
Reminder – I list a lot (not all) of the books I’ve read on bookins.com where they are available to other members for a nominal shipping charge. Membership is free and my list of books can be seen by clicking the link on the sidebar.
Read a Book a Week – Advice From Tim Sanders
Sanders Says: The total confidence reading plan
Sanders is a former Yahoo exec with some interesting ideas about everything.
Read a Book a Week – Get (almost) Free Books
What do you do with books after they have been read?
- Build a library
- Clutter the house or apartment
- Rent a storage unit
Like most avid readers I like to keep a lot of my books. So I’m into bullet points 1 & 2. But to avoid bullet point 3 you need a plan. My plan is to give most of my books away. I’ve created a sidebar link that will take you to a list of available books on Bookins. The only cost to you will be S&H charges. Check it out.
Read a Book a Week (or 0.9846)
I came up short in my 2008 efforts to read a book a week. Every year I have the same goal – read a book a week. Hitting or exceeding that number is not the point. The point of this simple exercise in goal setting is establishing motivation to read. The beauty is in the simplicity. One. You know when you are on track. You know when you are off the pace.
Last year I read or listened to 40 books. I got busy with other stuff and my reading got less time. But the end of 2008 marked the completion of five years of practicing this simple success strategy. Over that time period, I have read 256 books or 0.9846 books per week. So while I missed my goal in the short term, over the longer term I am reading about one book a week.
Here are some strategies I plan on using in 2009 to raise my average to 1.0:
- More audio-books. You can get a lot of “reading” done by listening. This is especially effective when exercising.
- Find little blocks of time to read. Get up 30 minutes earlier and read. Listen to a book in your car on your way and from work. Read when you’re waiting in a line.
- Read something you normally don’t read. Personally, this means less business books and more fiction.
Tune in next year, same place. I’ll report on my 6 year average which, hopefully, will be >1.0.
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