Expert Advice on How to Develop a Reading Habit
Wendy Wood is the author of the new book Good Habits, Bad Habits: The Science of Making Positive Changes That Stick.
Wood also teaches psychology and business at the University of Southern California. We figured she would be the perfect person to answer a question that many of you have: How do I make more time to read?
Below Woods gives you a step-by-step guide to doing what we all want to do: Spend more time with a great book!
Below Woods gives you a step-by-step guide to doing what we all want to do: Spend more time with a great book!
You are on Goodreads right now, which means that you are someone who appreciates the pleasure of reading a good book. On the other hand, you are on Goodreads right now instead of with that book, so you may also be someone who doesn’t read as much as she would like to.
The data backs this up: “Read more” is on most top-10 lists of New Year’s resolutions. Meanwhile, the percentage of Americans who read each day is declining, as the internet takes up more and more of our attention.
Why don’t we just go with the flow? Why do we keep wanting to read more? Part of the answer is obvious: Reading is fun, entertaining, and often inspiring.
But there are other, less obvious, and less subjective benefits. We know that becoming engrossed in a novel improves brain function and enhances neural connectivity. If that sounds like “reading makes you smarter,” you’re not far off.
And even though reading is a solitary endeavor, there are social benefits as well: The experience of being transported into a fictional world increases your empathy and ability to imagine others’ experiences.
Stressed? Reading just for six minutes can slow your heart rate and ease muscle tension as you escape into a fictional world. So, it’s obvious that we all want to read more, not just because “it’s the right thing to do" but because it is truly good for us. That’s not even taking into account how good books are at giving you something to talk about at your next dinner party.
It’s settled, then. This is one New Year’s resolution worth committing to.
But how do you go about carving out time in your busy life to make it happen?
The best way to start reading more—and keep reading—is to form a habit. Don’t roll your eyes at how obvious this sounds. And forget what you know about habits. Forget about motivation, keeping records, and setting goals. Despite what you might have heard, habits don’t work that way.
Habits do not rely on your willpower or your innate character. Habits rely on repetition.
Essentially, behavior begets behavior. Your brain is set up to “decrease the cost” of each repeated behavior. Every time you do something that you’ve already done, you are on the way toward doing that thing more easily, more automatically, and therefore more stably.
Read a book once, and you’re making a decision. Do it twice, and you’re still learning. Read 100 times in a similar way, under similar circumstances? You don’t have to think twice about it. You’ve done all the thinking you need to do. The hard work is over. You will automatically pick up a book, your brain blissfully free to focus on whatever unfolding story awaits.
The simplicity of this is undergirded by an elegant mental apparatus that we are only just now really understanding. When you do something that feels good (like reading, for the reasons I shared above), your brain reacts by releasing a neurochemical, dopamine, which forms connections in your mind between the context you are in (your comfy reading couch after work) and what you did (read a chapter of the latest pulse-pounding thriller everyone is talking about) to get rewarded. As that connection is reinforced by repetition, it becomes independent from the reward.
In your consciousness, this is what happens when you stop doing something “because it feels good” and you start to do it simply “because that’s what I do.” Ultimately, you only have to see your couch when you walk in the door, and you reach for the book.
In that way, habits are literally mental shortcuts. They connect context and behavior (and do away with reward). They simplify things to the point that we don’t have to really think about them anymore.
So, putting this all together. This is how I, a scientist who studies habits, would get you to read more. First, borrow a tip from the chefs, and prepare your mise en place. Put everything in its place. “Prep” things by placing your book right where you’ll be reading it, whether it’s next to the couch or next to your bed.
Second, make other things more difficult. Add friction to other behaviors (like browsing Twitter). This could be as simple as removing your phone from your pocket and leaving it in the kitchen or putting the TV remote in a drawer.
Next, stack habits. Habits form faster when they seem to “hitch” on other habits. If you already habitually look at your phone when you’re bored, download an ebook and make that the first app that pops up.
Lastly, evaluate. Don’t force yourself to finish a book you don’t like. My own house rule is to stick with a book for 50 pages and quit if I’m not captivated by then. An audit like this is good to have in place, especially if you’re trying to form the reading habit. Eventually your habit will diminish the impact of rewards, but you don’t need to make it so hard from the get-go. Go with what gives you pleasure!
These simple strategies should help you cultivate a better and more consistent reading habit, one that persistently delivers the pleasure of reading a good book.
The data backs this up: “Read more” is on most top-10 lists of New Year’s resolutions. Meanwhile, the percentage of Americans who read each day is declining, as the internet takes up more and more of our attention.
Why don’t we just go with the flow? Why do we keep wanting to read more? Part of the answer is obvious: Reading is fun, entertaining, and often inspiring.
But there are other, less obvious, and less subjective benefits. We know that becoming engrossed in a novel improves brain function and enhances neural connectivity. If that sounds like “reading makes you smarter,” you’re not far off.
And even though reading is a solitary endeavor, there are social benefits as well: The experience of being transported into a fictional world increases your empathy and ability to imagine others’ experiences.
Stressed? Reading just for six minutes can slow your heart rate and ease muscle tension as you escape into a fictional world. So, it’s obvious that we all want to read more, not just because “it’s the right thing to do" but because it is truly good for us. That’s not even taking into account how good books are at giving you something to talk about at your next dinner party.
It’s settled, then. This is one New Year’s resolution worth committing to.
But how do you go about carving out time in your busy life to make it happen?
The best way to start reading more—and keep reading—is to form a habit. Don’t roll your eyes at how obvious this sounds. And forget what you know about habits. Forget about motivation, keeping records, and setting goals. Despite what you might have heard, habits don’t work that way.
Habits do not rely on your willpower or your innate character. Habits rely on repetition.
Essentially, behavior begets behavior. Your brain is set up to “decrease the cost” of each repeated behavior. Every time you do something that you’ve already done, you are on the way toward doing that thing more easily, more automatically, and therefore more stably.
Read a book once, and you’re making a decision. Do it twice, and you’re still learning. Read 100 times in a similar way, under similar circumstances? You don’t have to think twice about it. You’ve done all the thinking you need to do. The hard work is over. You will automatically pick up a book, your brain blissfully free to focus on whatever unfolding story awaits.
The simplicity of this is undergirded by an elegant mental apparatus that we are only just now really understanding. When you do something that feels good (like reading, for the reasons I shared above), your brain reacts by releasing a neurochemical, dopamine, which forms connections in your mind between the context you are in (your comfy reading couch after work) and what you did (read a chapter of the latest pulse-pounding thriller everyone is talking about) to get rewarded. As that connection is reinforced by repetition, it becomes independent from the reward.
In your consciousness, this is what happens when you stop doing something “because it feels good” and you start to do it simply “because that’s what I do.” Ultimately, you only have to see your couch when you walk in the door, and you reach for the book.
In that way, habits are literally mental shortcuts. They connect context and behavior (and do away with reward). They simplify things to the point that we don’t have to really think about them anymore.
So, putting this all together. This is how I, a scientist who studies habits, would get you to read more. First, borrow a tip from the chefs, and prepare your mise en place. Put everything in its place. “Prep” things by placing your book right where you’ll be reading it, whether it’s next to the couch or next to your bed.
Second, make other things more difficult. Add friction to other behaviors (like browsing Twitter). This could be as simple as removing your phone from your pocket and leaving it in the kitchen or putting the TV remote in a drawer.
Next, stack habits. Habits form faster when they seem to “hitch” on other habits. If you already habitually look at your phone when you’re bored, download an ebook and make that the first app that pops up.
Lastly, evaluate. Don’t force yourself to finish a book you don’t like. My own house rule is to stick with a book for 50 pages and quit if I’m not captivated by then. An audit like this is good to have in place, especially if you’re trying to form the reading habit. Eventually your habit will diminish the impact of rewards, but you don’t need to make it so hard from the get-go. Go with what gives you pleasure!
These simple strategies should help you cultivate a better and more consistent reading habit, one that persistently delivers the pleasure of reading a good book.
Wendy Wood's Good Habits, Bad Habits: The Science of Making Positive Changes That Stick is available in U.S. stores on October 1. Be sure to add it to your Want to Read shelf.
Do you have advice for your fellow readers about how to develop a reading habit? Please share your tips in the comments!
Check out more recent articles, including:
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October's Most Anticipated New Books
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Heather Morris Recommends Books Set During World War II
October's Most Anticipated New Books
7 Great Books Hitting Shelves This Week
Comments Showing 1-50 of 55 (55 new)
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Oct 11, 2019 09:24AM

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Can I ask why you dread reading so much? Is it because it seems like a chore? You cant really find a genre that sparks your interests? Or maybe you're a audio person? I also know a person who prefers to read in groups, makes reading more tolerable because he has people to actually discuss that particular book with.



I think my mom teaching me to read at age 3, before I started school,
and reading with me every night, really instilled my habit. It's an addiction for me. I read. That's what I do (between the activities of daily living)!!!

I can sympathize. I used to be extremely slow, and today still am beneath average speed. What made things worse is my parents teased me about it, "are you counting characters?" was one of the phrases, and when in my childhood I saw a book with an interesting cover they said "You won't finish it anyway".
This might be very different from your background. But most of my live I admired books from a distance and wanted to read them, but was horribly discouraged.
When I discovered good reads, things changed, because I got a reading challange. I told myself "this is stupid, reading is not a race", but still I got into it. Why? Because it's an effective way to make reading feel a little bit more like a game, and thereby a little less like a chore.
So I dug through my place and collected all the books I started, prints and e-books, even pdfs, and chose one I wanted to finish first. I think I allowed myself to have a little competition there, a little test of endurance, because that's something I assossiate with fun. So I just managed five pages per session, or only one if it gives me something to be puzlled about. Maybe that one page is all I read this week, so what? I read! My goal wasn't to get faster, my goal was just to finish the book, however long it takes.
So beeing a very slow reader, I began to cherrish evey single paragraph I progressed. I was happy with myself and learned to accept when I was exhausted after a session. And the next day, I took the next little step. And so on, until after more than a year and about 60 books, I stopped comparing myself to others and just enjoy my time with my books. It takes several hours, but today I can easily read up to 100 pages per day.
Whether or not this offers some help to your situation, I really wish you to accomplish that step and learn, as I have, to enjoy reading.
(Also, consider this: Slow readers tend to induldge their reading more, meaning they process more of the input, meaning they get more out of reading. ;) It's a skill of it's own to read slowly and attentively.)

I can sympathiz..."
Beautifully written and very inspiring! You go, Philip!!


I can sympathiz..."
Oh, am I a slow reader too! But, I am not critical of myself anymore. Everyone has their own pace. I deliberately read slowly to absorb what a writer has put on paper. Really absorb. Some books like pulp are a quicker read obviously, but many classics are mind challenging - which I love.

Whenever I read a book I don't want to read (aka school books) I usually focus on paragraphs rather than looking at the page as a whole. It not only helps me get through the book faster but it helps me remember the information more.

Professional work pressure may be one of the reasons.
Is meditation likely to help? And regular exercise/morning walk?


You should check out this video on YouTube by Max Joseph, he wants to get into reading, so the expert says that he should just dedicate himself to reading just 20-30 minutes a day. And then you don’t need to feel guilty about it for the rest of the day.

Have you considered or tried comics/graphic novels? The part of the brain that recognizes and interprets written language is the same part of the brain that recognizes and interprets line drawings, so when you read comics, the one skill sort of piggybacks on the other, training both at the same time. And even if you take the time to really savor the art (which I highly recommend, of course), graphic novels are generally shorter and quicker to read than prose novels, so you get the sense of accomplishment of finishing a book a lot sooner.
Or if you're not interested in comics for whatever reason, there's always short stories. Why not try the original Sherlock Holmes stories? They're online for free (like on Wikisource) and written in a relatively modern style.

I feel you. I have written a quick article about how I got back into it. The main point being that just read about something that really interests you (whatever that may be and of whatever "literary value") and "from reading what you like you will end up liking to read"
https://medium.com/@adam.markakis/the...


I use the Libby app. It's very user friendly and if you have multiple library cards (different cities, etc.) it's easy to go back and forth between the libraries.

I would say find books you enjoy, which I know takes a long time to do. Maybe you like poetry, or graphic novels, or magazines! Start out by reading widely, and within 20 pages or so if you don't want to continue with whatever book, stop reading it. Reading is for everbody, it just takes time to get the hang of. Don't pressure yourself! also watching book tube videos always gets me motivated to read! trust yourself!


Exercise, especially walking outdoors, is great for the brain and will certainly not be a bad thing! As for meditation, if you are already having trouble with concentration, I recommend staying away from traditional thought-watching meditations, and focusing instead on attention-training, sensory-based ones. These are short and designed to help you place your attention on something you can experience with your senses (a touch, a taste, a smell etc) and off your thoughts, and are better suited for overactive brains, people who are active relaxers, people who are trying to improve their concentration etc. Google "sensory mindfulness" or "five senses meditation" for some specific ideas and scripts.


I became an avid reader a few years ago and found i've gotten a little faster over time but I think I will always be a slow reader, and that's ok. What is important is to find joy in reading, not how fast you read.



It sounds to me that there are other things on your mind which distract you from reading. You can't focus, it seems, because your mind is busy with other things, subconsciously.
Meditation can be helpful for that. There are books and articles and videos on the subject, but in short: You'll want to assume a comfortable position, in a quiet environment, and breath in while counting to ten, relax, breath out while counting to ten, relax, repeat. Once your rhythm is steady, let your thoughts and problems come up as they go - acknowledge/accept them, let them pass.
That can help you sort your thoughts and tell your mind that now is the time for you to recover, and not the time to worry. Conclusively that might help you reach a state wherein you can enjoy reading.
But if something is bothering or pressuring you so much you can't enjoy your personal free time, I'd like very much to encourage you to change something about the source of that pressure. Because then it's not your skill in reading or focus, but that some unhealthy influence is harming you.
Good luck, and take care. :)

SUBRATA wrote: "I am a slow reader, too. And that troubles me. Because there are so many books that I want to read. But the problem that troubles me even more is that, lately, my concentration is flagging. I ma re..."
Well I have a different take for the both of you to consider and Your Mileage May Vary. If you learnt to read by sight as I did, using books like Fun with Dick and Jane then you may have a hard time period. When I encounter words like synecdoche for example or words that spell "phunie" as is often the case in genre Fantasy, I stop dead in my tracks. In fact, I refuse to read them.
I was not taught to read phonetically. And reading beyond a certain level is a chore for me. I remember working with my dad at the kitchen table trying to conquer my first grade reader together

So it could be how you were taught to read that is the problem. For that I have the corrective answer

When I became a father 6 years ago, I immediately sought out the Dick and Jane books I had fond memories of, wanting to pass them on to my daughter. I read these books when they arrived and was struck dumb at their nonsense. These are not simple readers but they are teaching to read English like Chinese, by sight. I had no idea there were two competing ways to learn to read. My wife and I went with it, reading to each other and encouraging our daughter to join us at the grown up table. But after a while none of us could keep up the charade. My daughter was first to abandon ship. Smart kid.
It was then I started what would become a mini-research project that took me to reputable and notable people like Charlotte Iserbyt. I highly recommend anyone look her up. Then I found Samuel L. Blumenfeld and the 11 flimsy readers that go along with his workbook and carefully reinforce each of the eleven sections of lessons. Now my daughter is reading with the goal on book 11 of reading poetry by writers like Robert Louis Stevenson.
She has a poor vocabulary, of course, but the success of reading encourages her to develop her vocabulary and I cannot imagine how else she would develop her love for reading or her vocabulary without first mastering the "magic" of reading.
And on a final note, Blumenfeld's Alpha-Phonics: Workbook: A Primer for Beginning Readers is intended for anyone regardless their age. It just so happens that in my story here my daughter is 6 years' old and not yet in school.



I have to agree with you there 100%. Once a reader understands the difference between good and bad writing, it does not make sense to wallow in the muck of poor writing. Garbage in , garbage out as we say.
I would never feel compelled to read garbage however.
If I meet someone and they let me know right away that they are not the type of person I want in my life, I do not feel responsible for them or that it is necessary to allow them into my life. I treat books the very same way. That is why the old writer's advice, to arrest the reader's attention in the first few lines, is one I live by. If a writer cannot do their job, then I do not feel self-compelled to do it for them.


Steven-John Tait


I like the article of this author.
Thank you

What is it about reading that you dread? Its difficult to give an answer when you don't fully understand the questions.

Along with that, I really want to work on reading more of the classics, but I'm often disappointed when I try to pick one up and I can't get very far without being uninterested. Maybe it's just because I'm too young? I'd like to figure out how to get more invested in classics, not just for the sake of expanding my own knowledge of books, but for the sake of my pursuit of a literary education and career. Please help!!

I can sympathiz..."
Thanks for sharing. Your experience has given me more interest and motivation. Last year I just read 4 out of 12. This year I hope to get farther. Reading your comment has given me tools: reading not for the race, but for the joy of reading! Thanks

A novel is an opportunity to experience the world through the eyes of another person. That's why no amount of morning paper and real life everyday conversation can give your E.Q. a boost like reading novels.

As for the comments here, I see some didn't like reading as much or had struggles with slower reading speeds - trust me, there are downsides on fast reading, too, so please don't let that deter you from the hobby if you enjoy it.

The advice from the article applies to your situation, too. Associate it with positivity and repetition as the article writer was saying. Although the article said not to start habits with goal and list settings, maybe trying to set aside the same time period every day to read?
And a key to reading for those who don't enjoy a variety of authors is finding an author's style you enjoy. The writing style goes as far to reach a person who doesn't like reading as much as the plot does (at least in fiction)

A personal experience with relevance to your situation.
I am currently reading a 398 page academic book as research. I have no choice in the matter. I hate the book. It rubs me wrong, politically. It rubs me wrong grammatically. It's like Ice fishing in gym shorts with hunger pains and only catching minnows. I have not a choice in the matter. If it were for a course, I would drop the course. I am doing it for my writing.
Oh, yeah, I am a writer who hates to read to begin with.
So in my case I use Goodreads to track my reading. Right now, after one month, I have read 25% of the book. Every 1% is a hard fought win for me. And that's how I read.
In 2018 I read over 4,000 pages. Last year was a tough year for time. I managed just over 2,200. I set the number of books I intend to read for a challenge by upping the number by +1. In 2018 I read 16 books of a target of 8. Last year I read 11 of a target of 9. This year my target is 10. And if I cannot manage 10 this year, with a trans-continental move in the middle of 2020, then my goal for 2021 will remain at 10.
This is my strategy. Goodreads has told me that this sort of thing is not the raison d'etre for this website and, in fact, it is low priority. I've been told to use a spreadsheet program if that's all I want from this site. Nevertheless, the results I have been getting by using this website in the manner in which I do leads me to recommend my strategy to you.



As many people already told ya, a good way to establish a habit is to track your progress. Our brains are awful at defining the sensations that you will get once your good habit is established. Reading cannot give that "cocktail" of good sensations in a short span of time (unlike other activities like videogames, tv series, chocolate, etc.). But there is one thing that, on average, brains hates even more than losing all those short-term pleasures: leaving some strong desire unfinished. It means that if you keep tracking your journey in the same way (even a simple paper calendar does the job for ya), your brain will be incredibly pissed if you'll interrupt an uninterrupted streak of days where you were reading 10 pages a day (a goal anyone can set for themselves), particularly if you represent that streak in a graphical way (like a piece of coloured paper attached to the calendar every day, forming a line as the weeks passes).
On the term of "liking it or not", the answer can go in two ways:
- Any activities can be done without passion, because it's not passion that drives us to continue on something, it's a mix of mastery, accomplishments and control over the activity. This applies to your job career, sports, eating habits and, ofc, any other habits, including reading. It's a potent approach, but starting is hard, very hard, so it's not for everyone.
- Fixing your mind on the long-terms sensations, aka what you will get in the future if you start doing this. Be careful that I'm not referring to the objective advantages of a reading habit (like delaying the period of mental dementia that comes with old age), but more of how you will feel after the end of your journey. This can be achieved with two others habits, which are 1- Meditation (to learn how to focus your brain, free from the shackles that distractions will try to chain you with) 2- Visualization (to actually feel the sensations on your skin and trick your brain in believing they are real since it's unable to tell the difference).
Another way to keep your habit going on is to engage in social media (virtual or not) updating people with your progress (and delays). This builds accountability, inserting a social aspect to your habit that will usually be a good deterrent from following excuses (another thing the brain is a master).
I hope this helps.

What helped me get into the habit of reading every day (which I've been doing consistently for the past two years) was to set a goal of thirty minutes of reading per day. I started by rereading books I knew I liked (and would therefore finish without feeling pressured to).
I hope that helps, though I understand my method may not work for you if you hate rereading and/or don't have a backlog of favorites.




Daaamn, you are a 'specimen', gurl! (:
Bravos! for your initiative.

"My own house rule is to stick with a book for 50 pages and quit if I’m not captivated by then."
A more sophisticated method is to subtract your age from 100 and this is the # of pages you need to read before quitting. E.g., if you are age 60, read 40 pages, if age 90, read 10 pages. Of course, if you are age 100, you can tell a book by its cover! :-)

One of the few good things about the pandemic has been the flood of lectures and author events put on by schools, museums and bookstores. Most are even free. Best of all, you can go to places around the world. Consider an art lecture from the Louvre in Paris or the Frick Museum in NYC or the Getty in LA.
I've listened to authors I wouldn't have considered, genres I've never read & some of them I was right about. No way. Some sound pretty interesting.