Friday, June 5, 2009

Read Religiously

In my childhood days our recreation meant playing indoor or outdoor games, meeting friends and relatives, going to the park or beach, long walks, radio and reading. Reading became one of the important ways of knowing what was happening across the world (through newspapers) and getting exposed to stories, values, thoughts, cultures, history, fiction, philosophy etc. through books, comics, magazines etc.

I used to be a voracious reader and my language skills became stronger with each passing day. Perhaps I picked up my interest in reading through my father who used to religiously spend an hour each day reading. He, and subsequently I, used to love to read anything that came our way. Even the waste paper used to wrap up something could have something of interest. I remember being addicted to Readers Digest and I would have read each issue from cover to cover for over 30 years. I have benefited tremendously in shaping my own thinking mainly thanks to the time spent reading. I still remember fondly the stories from Indian Puranas and history, stories from Leo Tolstoy etc. which formed a deep impression in my mind.

One of my friends recently mentioned that reading autobiographies is great because we get exposed to a great persons thinking and outlook without necessarily having to spend a long time with that person. If we read one autobiography a week, it could be equivalent of meeting 52 great personalities within a year. What a fantastic thought.

Reading is no longer considered important by the most of the youth of today. A lot of their spare time is spent in front of the idiot box watching entertaining channels which have no real education value. There is also a huge interest in playing games on the computer and surfing / chatting. Even TV and the net can be useful, if the right kinds of channel or sites are visited. Most youngsters, however, prefer entertainment to education. By reading less and less, I fear our youth will rapidly lose language skills and will also not be engaging the mind in learning and developing.

Reading is one habit that we should all cultivate. And we should be choosy about what we read. The mind is capable of doing great things. It just needs a little bit of encouragement and reading provides just that. With this habit, you can travel across the universe while sitting in your chair and let the mind explore new frontiers. Reading can take you back centuries into the past or let your mind travel into the future. With the values that you learn by reading, you can shape your life and become achieve greatness.

"A man who does not read good books, has no advantage over one who can’t read them"
- Mark Twain

"Reading all the good books is like a conversation with the finest men of past centuries" – Rene Descartes

3 comments:

KParthasarathi said...

Reading maketh a man.There can be no two opnion on that.While I agree that youngsters these days do not spend much time in reading,I find many youngsters write very well.A look at the blogs themselves would have revealed you.I don't think they would have savoured the classics we have read in our times .But their skill in the language is no less admirable.But there is more to reading than mere acquistion of language skill.The values and lessons imbibed matter most.

Saby said...

Easier said than done. What values are you talking about? The stories that enchants us on not giving up hope and keep on trying and in the endeavour the hero finally emerges with flying colours? Or the values like hard work and honesty that ultimately pays off? Did it ever occur to you that in the endeavour, a hero in this era finally succumbs to the humongous pressure and fades off; no one pays him any heed; the draconian era only affiliates being who gets the work done no matter how; the earlier ‘values’ of love, humility, honesty and faith, that prevailed amongst the century old ‘vices’ finally had to call it a day. Myself being honest, hard-working and considerate doesn’t allow me to get the work done; it requires me to be diplomatic, trecherous, shrewd and inconsiderate, ‘cause the earlier philosophy of winning one’s heart through love is now non-existant. If I consider someone on humanitarian ground the same person in today’s world doesn’t retaliate whenever I need his service. The world has now become too selfish and too practical. What prevails now is the ‘Darwinian law of struggle for existence’.
It’s not that people in today’s world are not smart enough to grab the essence of the valuable philosophy that were set aside by the classical writers; it’s only that they have outgrown them; the morale which was once encripted in silver threads are no longer savour worthy; they are reckoned to primarily deal with some monotonous saga which leads to a highly predictable end and the so called smart genera deems worthy to leave them aside and instead deal with something which apparantly seems more practical, more fruitful and less time consuming.
Please do not misunderstand me. I’m in no way trying to dissuade you. What I’m trying to explain is the psychology that runs through the veins and capillaries of the modern youngsters. They cannot be held responsible for their deeds. It is the cult, the severity, the competition and the environment that has made them act that way. So if you belong to the generation that primarily belonged to the ‘classical genera’, my only humble question is what did you do collectively as our classical forefathers to prevent such mishappening?
The truth is whatever is happening in this world is inevitable. You may influence it but you cannot alter it. The repercussions may be fruitful or fruitless. But the world will continue to exist and evolve for the better or for the worse what-so-ever you may reckon it to be.

Saby said...

Easier said than done. What values are you talking about? The stories that enchants us on not giving up hope and keep on trying and in the endeavour the hero finally emerges with flying colours? Or the values like hard work and honesty that ultimately pays off? Did it ever occur to you that in the endeavour, a hero in this era finally succumbs to the humongous pressure and fades off; no one pays him any heed; the draconian era only affiliates being who gets the work done no matter how; the earlier ‘values’ of love, humility, honesty and faith, that prevailed amongst the century old ‘vices’ finally had to call it a day. Myself being honest, hard-working and considerate doesn’t allow me to get the work done; it requires me to be diplomatic, trecherous, shrewd and inconsiderate, ‘cause the earlier philosophy of winning one’s heart through love is now non-existant. If I consider someone on humanitarian ground the same person in today’s world doesn’t retaliate whenever I need his service. The world has now become too selfish and too practical. What prevails now is the ‘Darwinian law of struggle for existence’.
It’s not that people in today’s world are not smart enough to grab the essence of the valuable philosophy that were set aside by the classical writers; it’s only that they have outgrown them; the morale which was once encripted in silver threads are no longer savour worthy; they are reckoned to primarily deal with some monotonous saga which leads to a highly predictable end and the so called smart genera deems worthy to leave them aside and instead deal with something which apparantly seems more practical, more fruitful and less time consuming.
Please do not misunderstand me. I’m in no way trying to dissuade you. What I’m trying to explain is the psychology that runs through the veins and capillaries of the modern youngsters. They cannot be held responsible for their deeds. It is the cult, the severity, the competition and the environment that has made them act that way. So if you belong to the generation that primarily belonged to the ‘classical genera’, my only humble question is what did you do collectively as our classical forefathers to prevent such mishappening?
The truth is whatever is happening in this world is inevitable. You may influence it but you cannot alter it. The repercussions may be fruitful or fruitless. But the world will continue to exist and evolve for the better or for the worse what-so-ever you may reckon it to be.