If you have ever stayed up at night to finish a book, or read a book that kept you thinking for weeks or that made you feel like a better person at the end, then you know exactly what Walt Disney means by the quote above.
If you haven’t, then there are numerous reasons why you should pick up a book right now. Books are splendid places that you can visit to find the greatest and most ancient riches of the world, and the newest and most fantastical ideas that exist today. Books are the friends who will stay with you quietly and give you advice without judging you. Books are the experiences that will mould you as much as your real life does.
Reading is a habit that has more benefits than you know. Let’s have a look at some of them.
One of the most significant riches that reading provides is improved language skills. Whether you are writing an email to your friend or giving a speech in front of your class, language is the key to conveying your ideas successfully to other people. So if you want to be a better communicator, start reading now: it not only increases your vocabulary but also makes you aware of how writing is structured and how ideas are expressed articulately and effectively.
Apart from improving language skills, reading books, especially fictional ones, is the key to enhancing empathy, which is defined as the ability to understand other people’s emotional state and feel their emotions. Over the last few years, researchers have found that reading fiction results in improved empathy and Theory of Mind (the ability to attribute mental states to yourself and others and to understand that other people may have beliefs that are different from yours).
It is a fact that we are influenced by the company that we keep, but we are also influenced as much by the books that we read.
Books have power. As Helen Exley once remarked, “Books can be dangerous. The best ones should be labelled ‘This could change your life’.”
“There is more treasure in books than in all the pirates’ loot on Treasure Island.” —Walt Disney
While we are reading, we often tend to lose ourselves in the characters’ situations: when they are sad, we are sad for them; when they are happy, we feel satisfied; when they face danger, we worry about them because we too can feel it.
Thus, reading is the best way to increase our awareness of others’ feelings and broaden our minds. In fact, a recent study found that reading the Harry Potter books could actually help lessen negative attitudes and prejudice toward minorities in real life. So if you aren’t already reading something, pick up a book right now and learn to be more tolerant and flexible in your thinking.
In addition, by reading widely you can get to experience things and situations that you haven’t experienced in real life. Writers are experienced people and their books are filled with the wisdom they have acquired through years of experience and observations.
Jack Canfield, an American author and motivational speaker, sums it up thus, “There are essentially two things that will make you wise — the books you read and the people you meet.” By reading books, you actually acquire as much wisdom as you do by meeting new people.
Reading is also the best way to release stress. It is a quiet, but involving activity that absorbs your mind and distracts you from your worries. Psychologists have found that it reduces your heart rate and allows your muscles to relax. Although there are other means of relaxation as well, such as watching TV or playing video games, reading reduces your stress levels more than any other relaxing activity.