Books That Change Your Life

Born to Run – This book perhaps had the most profound change on my life in the sense that it literally re-shaped my body. In re-framing how I thought about humans being born to run, ergo I was born to run, I was able to run my first marathon and then countless half-marathons. Ultimately I thought of myself after a runner after starting the journey this books opened my eyes to.

Essentialism

Change Your Thoughts, Change Your Life

My Love Affair With Non-Fiction Books

I remember being in my twenties, and a colleague of mine said at lunch one day that she was in a “non-fiction book club” to which another co-worker responded, “What do you guys talk about–whether or not it’s true?”

Back then, I primarily read fiction, so I laughed. Now I look back at the last five years, and I probably consume something like 2 or 3 non-fiction books a month. Tonight at a local gathering, I met a member of my obscure tribe and he stated he reads 40 books a year, all non-fiction, all on audiobook. So I had to ask, “what speed?” because clearly you can’t get through all that material at just 1x. He said, “2x or 3x.”

My mind was blown. I listen at podcasts at 1.5x (unless they’re British or UK folks because they speak too fast for me to understand unless they are at 1x). But I always listen to audiobooks at 1.25x to preserve the sound quality of the narrator’s voices.

I have another friend who listens to books at 2x speed as well. Between her and this evening’s convo, they’ve got me wondering if I could get over my hangup about the narrator’s voice at 2x speed. Afterall, maybe since it is not like a fiction work where I am really getting into the voice actor’s delivery I will be able to tune out the Minnie Mouse quality of the voice at high speeds.

The next question would be whether not I could even comprehend enough of the material at 2x speed. Perhaps I will test out some material at 1.5x speed this week for the non-fiction books and see how it goes. Wish me luck!

Tools Matter

I love the Leuchtturm1917 notebooks. Better paper than moleskines.

— Neil Gaiman (Twitter).

I suspect that if you drew a Venn diagram with people who love to write and people who love writing tools (journals and fancy pens), it would be a virtual eclipse.

The photo above is my clicky keyboard. It drives some of my co-workers bonkers because it is quite clicky after all. Of course, that made me buy another one for my partner. The retro styling is beautiful and the responsiveness of actual switches makes it a pleasure to type.