Retirement Talk

WHAT to do with the rest of your life?

logo

Episode 530 Reading for Pleasure Alone

 

This is retirement Talk. I'm Del Lowery.

 

 

The Hardy Boys were some of the first books that I remember reading. Frank and Joe would get into one dilemma or another and then through bravery, action and luck would solve  the mystery. Then came the Zane Gray westerns, the Tarzan adventure series, and the sports books of unlikely heroes fighting through seemingly impossible circumstances to excelling in the field of competition. Book with names like, The Gray Ghost, the Jim Thorpe Story or Phantom of the Foul Line. Memories of these books come easily to mind. They took me out of small town USA. They brought the exotic and adventurous into being. They transported me into the mysteries of crime, the ruggedness of the wild west, the wildness of the jungle and the world of competitive athletics. They were read for pleasure alone.

 

Retirement introduces a special element to our reading life. We can feast over the entire reading realm. There are no limitations; sort of like our earliest experiences. We can read for pleasure alone.

 

When we approached  school age we had to read to learn. We had to read this book and write a report. We must read this poem or this essay because we will be tested on it. We must read our math and science problems. We must read these books for they are the classics.  We read to learn how the world works. We learned to read for information or knowledge. The open book brought opportunity and possibilities.

 

How many books do we read in a lifetime? I suppose someone has done a study and the statistics could be found. The range must be enormous. I recall interviewing a librarian one time and mentioned bedtime reading that is so enjoyable for parents and their young children. She informed me that such readings were the exception and that most homes are book free. I expressed obvious disbelieve but she assured me it was true. The wide-eyed child sitting on a lap in a big easy chair listening to a tale being told is not the norm. It is a Norman Rockwell vision of America. What a sad mistake. For being read to or doing the reading to a child has to be one of the most pleasant experiences in life.

 

The number for books read by retirement age must number in the thousands for most of us. Many of those were probably in quest of information that might help us lead a better life. We wanted to learn. We wanted to pass the class. We wanted to learn the subject. We wanted to know how to do something. We wanted ... There was a goal involved.

 

Retirement brings an opportunity to truly read for pleasure alone. We no longer need to learn this or that. We no longer need to satisfy the requirements of a class, teacher or profession. We can kick back and read for nothing more than pure enjoyment. What a treat.

 

One big difficulty is choosing which book to read. I stopped going in book stores years ago. I always felt as if I was drowning in one. Overwhelmed. Oh, I still go in book stores but it is a rarity. If I do go in I won't stay long. I will get whatever book I came for and flee. We have great independent bookstores within walking distance of my house; new and used. I know that they are a treasure and I use to spend time browsing the ails.  But it became time spent in frustration since I couldn't read them all but I wanted to. I would find another hour had slipped by with me just looking at titles.

 

Electronic books have come to my rescue of late. I can see the title of a book or read a review and then order and have it delivered instantly. My book shelf today is invisible. I have systematically been giving away paper books and clearing the shelves. We still keep some around for our guest or children and our grandchildren. The leather bound that we accrued over many years remain shelved waiting for us to die and our children to divide them up. They are treated as antiques with double value.

 

Reading for pleasure is not an easy transformation for some of us. My wife is a pro at pulling up one series after another of well written escape, adventurous or intriguing mysteries. Luckily for me I can then lift one occasionally and send it directly to my reader at no cost.

 

Retirement brought a change to my use of books. I began to wondered if I actually knew anything or if I just knew whatever I found in a book. I decided to put these podcast together without any research or reading for the purpose of production. I wanted to think. I certainly kept reading but not with intent of using them in these podcasts. I wanted to pry into my own mind rather than sort through the thoughts of others. Emerson's statement about reading being for a scholar's idol time has taken up permanent residence in my memory. I wanted to think rather than read.

 

There was a winter in Alaska when I tried to read a book every day. Then a few years ago I found myself limiting my reading to ten pages a day. Since page numbers have disappeared on my Kindle I find myself trying to read a book 15 to 20 minutes a day. Some days I over extend but that is the usual. Then, of course, there is all the incidental reading of newspapers, magazines and internet type stuff. I don’t count that but it is considerable.

 

Retirement and reading seem like a match made in heaven. We are free to explore and enjoy. Heavy emphasis on enjoy. I just don't want reading to get in the way of thinking.

 

 

 

This is Retirement Talk.

 

If you have questions, comments or suggestions please contact: del@retirementtalk.org                            

 

 

 


 

 

Follow Retirement Talk on Facebook: http://retirementtalk.org/ on Facebook

rss