avatarVijay S Paul

Free AI web copilot to create summaries, insights and extended knowledge, download it at here

2229

Abstract

e details</h1><p id="daeb">Considering all timings as tentative, here is a detailed list of the different time bunches:</p><h2 id="95e4">1. After waking up (7:30 am-8:15 am)</h2><p id="db8b">This is how I start my day.</p><p id="c172">After waking up, I still spend quite some time on the bed, reading.</p><p id="e515">The <b>very first app I open on my phone is <a href="https://medium.com/@vijayspaul">Medium</a></b>. I read some of the top articles and bookmark a few others. When (and if) I have had enough, I move to <a href="https://twitter.com/VijaySPaul">Twitter</a> where I mostly find 2–3 good reads every morning.</p><h2 id="9115">2. Nature’s call (8:15 am-8:45 am)</h2><blockquote id="8236"><p><i>Oh come on! Don’t give me that look. We are all with our phones during this time. Might as well put it to good use.</i></p></blockquote><p id="14d6">I either read the articles I have bookmarked on Medium or find more articles to read on Twitter.</p><p id="33d9">If not, I usually read some news on Google News.</p><figure id="fa93"><img src="https://cdn-images-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/1*4rz0-q9BgZmifsN1kqGQ3w.jpeg"><figcaption><a href="https://www.freepik.com/vectors/people">People vector created by pikisuperstar — www.freepik.com</a></figcaption></figure><h2 id="a5fe">3. In between work (9:00 am-5:00 pm)</h2><p id="2b58">The number of articles I read during this time period depends on my workload.</p><p id="72e5">I usually read an article or two, when I take a breather from work. Most of my reads during this time are from my curated <a href="https://feedly.com/">Feedly</a> feed.</p><p id="fe81">At times, I also go through <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/vijayspaul/">my LinkedIn feed</a> to see if I can find something interesting to read.</p><h2 id="1d40">4. After work (5:00 pm-5:45 pm)</h2><p id="b90b">I finish work at about 5 pm.</p><p id="74bb">And before I go for my evening walk/jog, I spend some time reading again. These are usually articles I have bookmarked throughout the day but didn’t have time to read during my working hours.</p><h2 id="54fb">5. After exercise (7:00 pm-11:00 pm)</h2><p id="8cc5">I mostly return from my walk by about 7 pm. In between that, other household ch

Options

ores, and retiring to bed, I do my largest bunch of reading for the day.</p><p id="8332">Even while cooking, I mostly have my phone with me.</p><p id="4636"><b>The good side</b>: I still read.</p><p id="75a7"><b>The bad side</b>: At times I tend to lose track of time and overcook whatever’s on the stove.</p><p id="2c2e"><i>Collateral damage. But yeah, I am getting better at it.</i></p><h2 id="cf47">6. Before sleep (11:00 pm — 12:00 am)</h2><p id="759f">I retire to bed by about 11 pm. But that doesn’t mean I go to sleep directly.</p><figure id="c145"><img src="https://cdn-images-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/1*-CEiOXHl3H-VKr8WliaRTA.jpeg"><figcaption><a href="https://stories.freepik.com/work">Illustration by Freepik Stories</a></figcaption></figure><p id="2797">The next one hour or so, I either spend on my Kindle or the rabbit hole down the Medium app.</p><p id="b26f">I used to spend a lot of time on LinkedIn, but the ROK (Return-On-Knowledge) was less. <b>Hence I deleted the app</b> and now mostly stick to the two options mentioned above.</p><h1 id="1bf7">What I learnt from this</h1><p id="4c24">I started off this tracking as a means to share my experience of how much I read daily.</p><p id="ebbd">But <b>it actually turned out to be more of a journey of discovery for me</b>. It helped me understand how I was using my time, and where I was wasting it (mostly on LinkedIn).</p><p id="1c9b">It also helped me realize that I tend to read faster when I am stressed or in a bad mood.</p><h1 id="289f">Lastly, my advice</h1><p id="10e6">Not so much an advice as it is a suggestion.</p><p id="2811"><b>If you do not have a reading habit yet, don’t start off with aiming to read 10 articles daily.</b></p><p id="adc7">Read a few paragraphs a day. Then maybe an article a day. Then two, and so on. But ensure you read daily.</p><p id="45bc">Enjoy the process of building a reading habit. Because unless you enjoy the journey, the destination never makes sense.</p><p id="2eaf">Happy reading.</p><p id="c6e6"><i>P.S. This is where I shamelessly include the CTA asking you to <a href="http://bit.ly/Subscribe2TM">subscribe to my weekly newsletter</a> on Communications and Content Strategy.</i></p></article></body>

Here’s How I Always Make Time to Read 40+ Articles Daily

It’s all about intent and time management.

Abstract vector created by macrovector — www.freepik.com

And no, it’s not a clickbait title. I actually do read daily.

It is a habit. While some days I only read blog posts and articles, a lot of the other days I also make time to read at least a few pages of a book.

But either way, I ensure that I do read quite a lot daily.

A few of my friends and a couple of my mentees have asked me about how do I make time for this. Well, there’s a magic formula for that:

Time can neither be created nor be destroyed. It can only be managed efficiently or inefficiently.

There you go. That’s my secret.

How I actually tracked this

Over a period of 10 working days, I kept a track of how many articles/blog posts I was reading daily. I kept a separate tab on weekends when I usually read less and write more. Haven’t included that in this ‘calculation’.

I identified the different time bunches in which I was doing most of my reading. And then made a note of them on a Google Sheet.

While some days I was reading in the mid-40s range, some other days I was in the low-30s. But on average I was definitely reading close to 40 articles a day.

Not too bad if I may say so myself.

Also, this has been tracked while I have been working from home, owing to the pandemic. In a normal pandemic-less world, I would still read more or less the same.

The extra time during nature’s call and reading after work, I make up in the ~2.5 hours of the daily commute.

Digging into the details

Considering all timings as tentative, here is a detailed list of the different time bunches:

1. After waking up (7:30 am-8:15 am)

This is how I start my day.

After waking up, I still spend quite some time on the bed, reading.

The very first app I open on my phone is Medium. I read some of the top articles and bookmark a few others. When (and if) I have had enough, I move to Twitter where I mostly find 2–3 good reads every morning.

2. Nature’s call (8:15 am-8:45 am)

Oh come on! Don’t give me that look. We are all with our phones during this time. Might as well put it to good use.

I either read the articles I have bookmarked on Medium or find more articles to read on Twitter.

If not, I usually read some news on Google News.

People vector created by pikisuperstar — www.freepik.com

3. In between work (9:00 am-5:00 pm)

The number of articles I read during this time period depends on my workload.

I usually read an article or two, when I take a breather from work. Most of my reads during this time are from my curated Feedly feed.

At times, I also go through my LinkedIn feed to see if I can find something interesting to read.

4. After work (5:00 pm-5:45 pm)

I finish work at about 5 pm.

And before I go for my evening walk/jog, I spend some time reading again. These are usually articles I have bookmarked throughout the day but didn’t have time to read during my working hours.

5. After exercise (7:00 pm-11:00 pm)

I mostly return from my walk by about 7 pm. In between that, other household chores, and retiring to bed, I do my largest bunch of reading for the day.

Even while cooking, I mostly have my phone with me.

The good side: I still read.

The bad side: At times I tend to lose track of time and overcook whatever’s on the stove.

Collateral damage. But yeah, I am getting better at it.

6. Before sleep (11:00 pm — 12:00 am)

I retire to bed by about 11 pm. But that doesn’t mean I go to sleep directly.

Illustration by Freepik Stories

The next one hour or so, I either spend on my Kindle or the rabbit hole down the Medium app.

I used to spend a lot of time on LinkedIn, but the ROK (Return-On-Knowledge) was less. Hence I deleted the app and now mostly stick to the two options mentioned above.

What I learnt from this

I started off this tracking as a means to share my experience of how much I read daily.

But it actually turned out to be more of a journey of discovery for me. It helped me understand how I was using my time, and where I was wasting it (mostly on LinkedIn).

It also helped me realize that I tend to read faster when I am stressed or in a bad mood.

Lastly, my advice

Not so much an advice as it is a suggestion.

If you do not have a reading habit yet, don’t start off with aiming to read 10 articles daily.

Read a few paragraphs a day. Then maybe an article a day. Then two, and so on. But ensure you read daily.

Enjoy the process of building a reading habit. Because unless you enjoy the journey, the destination never makes sense.

Happy reading.

P.S. This is where I shamelessly include the CTA asking you to subscribe to my weekly newsletter on Communications and Content Strategy.

Reading
Habit Building
Habits
Time Management
Illumination
Recommended from ReadMedium