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HOW READING CAN CHANGE THE WAY YOU THINK

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GlobalTechUpdate @GTU · Aug 17, 2022

I think reading is one of the best things you can do to gain knowledge and skills. It’s also a great way to develop your imagination and creativity, as well as learn about different cultures. If you want to be a more informed person, then reading books will help! In this article, we are exploring how reading can change the way you think.

Losing yourself in a good book is a wonderful way to stimulate your imagination, feel a variety of emotions, and even activate some of your senses. It sounds nice, but there is real, hard evidence that these things happen to your brain when you read books. 

Reading can actually alter the structure of our brains, increase our empathy, and even deceive our brains into believing we have actually experienced what we have just read about in books.

Let’s explore some reading habits that are beneficial to the mind.

 

Without prompting, the Mind creates Visual Imagery

Reading books and other materials with vivid images is not only fun, but it also lets us make up our own worlds in our heads. But did you know that this can happen even if you don’t mean it to? Researchers have determined that visual imagery is completely automated. 

Participants were able to identify photos of objects faster if they had simply read a statement that described the object visually, implying that when we read a sentence, our minds quickly conjure up images of objects.

 

Also Read: TOP 5 BOOKS THAT EVERYONE SHOULD READ TO GAIN KNOWLEDGE AND SKILL

 

Speaking sentences can activate your brain

Research shows that listening to a book can stimulate your brain, despite what experts say. When we hear a narrative, not only do we activate language processing regions of our brain, but also experience parts of our brain. 

Did you hear about food? Motion activates the peripheral nervous system while visual information lights up. And while you might think that this only happens when you listen to audiobooks or read, experts say that our brains are exposed to stories all day long. 

Personal stories and gossip comprise 65% of our conversations. So go ahead and listen to your coworker’s long and drawn-out story about their vacation, or listen to talk radio or an audiobook in the car: it’s good brain exercise.

 

Reading books will help you gain knowledge from other people’s experience

Reading books will help you gain knowledge from other people’s experiences. You can learn about a wide range of subjects without attending classes or needing a teacher. 

This makes reading books an excellent way to get information about how the world works, what people do in their lives, and why they think it’s important to do so.

Reading also gives you insight into other cultures as well as allowing you to see how they live their lives every day – this is particularly useful if there are differences between your own culture and another one. 

By reading non-fiction books on these topics, we learn much more than we could ever understand simply by watching TV shows or movies!

 

Different reading styles generate different neural patterns

Any kind of reading is good for your brain, but different kinds give you different experiences and give you various benefits. Focused literary reading improves various complex cognitive skills, while intensive reading increases blood flow to the brain. 

Reading a novel intently for literary study and thinking about its value is a good brain exercise, better than mere pleasure reading.

 

Also Read: BEST SELF-IMPROVEMENT BOOKS FOR SUCCESS IN LIFE

 

Books that everyone should read at least once in their lifetime

If you enjoy reading, here is a great reading list for you that includes novels that everyone should read. Even if you are not a great reader, you should at least attempt to read a few books

 

  1.  To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
  2. 1984, by George Orwell
  3. The Lord of the Rings, by J.R.R. Tolkien
  4. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, by J.K. Rowling
  5. The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  6. Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen
  7. The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien
  8. Gone with the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell
  9. The Big Sleep, Raymond Chandler
  10. Romeo and Juliet, by WilliaShakespeare