EVEN FOR the pressure-cooker world of advertising, it had been a
frustrating, tension-building day. I took home a briefcase full of troubles. A major contract was in danger of being lost at the last minute, two executives of a company with whom we hoped to clinch a deal were being elusive, and a strike threatened the opening of a business that held my money and my future.
As I sat down on that hot and humid evening, there seemed to
be no solutions to the problems thrashing around in my brain. So
I picked up a book, settled into a comfortable chair and applied my own special therapy--super-slow reading.
I spent three hours on two short chapters of Personal History by Vincent Sheean--savouring each paragraph, lingering over a
sentence, a phrase, or even a single word, building a detailed
mental picture of the scene. No longer was I in Sydney, Australia, on a sticky heatwave night. Relishing every word, I joined foreign correspondent Sheean on a mission to China and another to Russia.
I lost myself in the author's world, living his book. And when I
finally put it down, my mind was totally refreshed.
Next morning, four words from the book--"take the long
view"--were still in my mind. At my desk, I had a long-view look
at my problems. I concluded that the strike would end sooner or
later, so I made positive plans about what to do then. The two
executives would see me eventually; if not, I would find other
customers. That left me free to concentrate on the main thing,
saving the contract. Once more, super-slow reading had given me
not only pleasure but perspective, and helped me in my everyday
affairs.
I discovered its worth years ago, in the infamous Changi
prisoner-of-war camp in Singapore. I was 19, an artillery
sergeant, when the city fell to the Japanese on February 15, 1942.
Waiting with other Australian POWs to be marched off, I tried to
decide what I should take in the single pack permitted. The only
limit was what a weary man could carry the 17 miles to Changi. Our officer thoughtfully suggested, "Each man should find room for a book."
So I stuffed into my pack a copy of Lin Yutang's "The
Importance of Living"--a title of almost macabre appropriateness--and began a reading habit that was to keep me sane for the next three and a half years. Previously, if I had been really interested in a book, I would race from page to page, eager to know what came next. Now, I decided, I had to become a miser with words and stretch every sentence like a poor man spending his last dollar.
During the first few days at Changi, I took Lin Yutang out of
my pack three or four times, just gazing at the cover, the binding and the illustrated inside cover. Finally, as the sun went down one evening, I walked out into the prison yard, sat down on a pile of wood and, under the glare of prison lights, slowly opened the book to the title page and frontispiece. I spent three sessions on the preface, then two whole evenings on the contents pages--three and a half pages of chapter headings with fascinating subtitles--before I even reached page one. Night after night I sat there with my treasure. Fellow prisoners argued, played cards and walked about all around me. I was oblivious, I disappeared so completely into my book that sometimes my closest friends thought I had gone bonkers.
I had started with the practical object of making my book
last. But by the end of the second week, still only on page ten,
I began to realize how much I was getting from super-slow reading
itself. Sometimes just a particular phrase caught my attention,
sometimes a sentence. I would read it slowly, analyze it, read it again--perhaps changing down into an even lower gear--and then sit for 20 minutes thinking about it before moving on. I was like a pianist studying a piece of music, phrase by phrase, rehearsing it, trying to discover and recreate exactly what the composer was trying to convey.
It is difficult to do justice to the intensity of the
relationship. When Lin Yutang wrote of preparations for a tea
party, I could see the charcoal fire, hear the tinkle of tiny
teacups, almost taste the delicate flavour of the tea. I read
myself in so thoroughly that it became not a mass of words but a
living experience.
It took me something like two months to read Lin Yutang's
book. By then, his philosophy on tea-making had become my
philosophy on reading: You can do it fast, but it's a whole lot
better done slowly. I held to the method, even after we had
persuaded the Japanese to give us several hundred books from the
famous Raffles library in Singapore.
The realization dawned on me that, although my body was
captive, my mind was free to roam the world. From Changi, I sailed with William Albert Robinson, through his book Deep Water and Shoal. In my crowded cell at night, lying on a concrete floor, I felt myself dropping off to sleep in a warm cabin, the boat pitching under me. Next day, I'd be on deck again, in a storm, and after two or three graphic paragraphs I'd be gripping the helm myself, with the roar of the wind in my ears, my hair thick with salt. I wouldn't let go of the helm until we sailed into the calmer waters of a new chapter. If I had read with my old momentum, it would have been like viewing Sydney Harbour from a speedboat, instead of experiencing it from the deck of my own
yacht.
My voyage took me just short of eight weeks. Had I raced
through the book at my former speed, I could never have experienced the blessed release of Robinson's reality becoming so vividly mine.
Sitting on a woodpile in the prison yard or crouched on my
haunches in any unoccupied corner, I slow-read biographies,
philosophy, encyclopedias, even the Concise Oxford Dictionary. One favourite was W. Somerset Maugham's The Summing Up. I was no
longer on a rough prison woodpile, wasting away from hunger; I was in an elegant drawing room on the French Riviera, a decanter of old port at hand, listening to a great writer talking just to me about his journey through life, passing on the wisdom he had gained.
An average speed reader might dispose of The Summing Up in 50
minutes. But he wouldn't be living that book with the writer, as
I did during the nine weeks I took to read its 379 pages. (A slow
reader himself, Maugham wrote scathingly of those who "read with
their eyes and not with their sensibility. It is a mechanical
exercise like the Tibetans' turning of a prayer wheel.") I handled The Summing Up so much that it fell to pieces in the tropical heat.
Then I carefully rebound it with dried banana leaves and rubber
gum. I still have it, the most treasured volume in my bookcase.
I developed the habit in Changi of copying passages that
especially appealed to me. One of these, from Aldous Huxley's Ends and Means, told how training is needed before one can fully savour anything--even alcohol and tobacco:
"First whiskies seem revolting, first pipes turn even the
strongest of boyish stomachs....First Shakespeare sonnets seem
meaningless; first Bach fugues a bore, first differential equations sheer torture. But in due course, contact with an obscurely beautiful poem, an elaborate piece of counterpoint, or of mathematical reasoning, causes us to feel direct intuitions of
beauty and significance."
I defy anyone to pick anything really significant out of a
book like that by speed reading. It would be like playing a
Beethoven record at the wrong speed!
Once, something I copied proved useful in camp. Our own
commander had ordered us to give any spare clothing to our officers so they could appear immaculately dressed before the Japanese. The order incensed everybody. I pinned over my bunk some words from T.E.Lawrence's Seven Pillars of Wisdom:
"Among the Arabs there were no distinctions, traditional or
natural, except the unconscious power given a famous sheik by
virtue of his accomplishment, and they taught me that no man could be their leader except that he ate the ranks' food, wore their clothes, lived level with them, and yet appeared better in
himself."
That night hundreds of slips of paper bearing these words were
pinned up all over Changi. The affair was over, a possible nasty
conflict averted.
Beyond giving me the will to survive in Changi, slow reading
helps me today. Of course, super-slow reading is not for the man
clearing out his briefcase or dealing with the Niagara of paper
flowing across his desk. I can skim an inter-office memo as fast
as the next person. But when faced with a real problem, to clear
my mind of everyday clutter I will sit down quietly at home and
slowly read myself into another world.
As Lin Yutang wrote: "There are two kinds of reading, reading
out of business necessity, and reading as a luxury. The second
kind partakes of the nature of a secret delight. It is like a walk in the woods, instead of a trip to the market. One brings home, not packages of canned tomatoes, but a brightened face and lungs filled with good clear air."
That is what super-slow reading is all about. Try it. As I
read somewhere, a man is only poor when he doesn't know where his
next book is coming from. And if he can get out of a book
everything the author put into it, he is rich indeed.(#)
SIMPLIFY! SIMPLIFY! by Thoreau
GOING HOME by Hamill
THE ART OF PAYING A COMPLIMENT by Adams
PUT YOUR BEST VOICE FORWARD by Price
THAT VITAL SPARK--HOPE by Whitman
BUT WHAT USE IS IT? by Asimov
NO WONDER by Sangster
MAKE AN APPOINTMENT WITH YOURSELF by Finkel
HEARING IS A WAY OF TOUCHING by Lagemann
YOU'RE SMARTER THAN YOU THINK by Lynch
HOW TO SELL AN IDEA by Wheeler
I'M A COMPULSIVE LIST-MAKER by Bluestone
HOW TO RELAX by Kennedy
THE ONE SURE WAY TO HAPPINESS by Callwood
TOO MUCH SEX, TOO LITTLE JOY by May
HOW TO BE A BETTER PARENT by Homan
FIVE WAYS TO IMPROVE YOUR LUCK by Gunther
THERE IS SAFE WAY TO DRINK by Chafetz
TAKE MUSIC INSTEAD OF A MILTOWN by Marek
ASCEND TO THIRD FLOOR
Heavy stuff that were lifted by several decades to its present location, ZDS' third floor.
You can't find writers who can still keep their distance from their topics like these two.
(Highly recommended for the philosophical. Not too easy to digest in one sitting. Anyway, it's better than tons of history and anthropology books.)