thoughts, productivity, Reading John Hayes thoughts, productivity, Reading John Hayes

How I Actively Read

Reading is an active sport! 

I always have two books going, one print and one Kindle. I have recently read and follow along with How to Take Smart Notes by Sönke Ahrens and Adler’s How to Read a Book. I follow their guidelines in how I actively read.

For me, the key to reading is turning it into a habit. Here is my post on how I use Tiny Habits to successfully achieve this.

To make reading a habit, I have set a low daily goal of reading one page. I describe my aim low to overachieve thoughts in this post (LINK). 

This has helped me build a daily reading habit.

 My Workflow

 My workflow is a combined digital and analog system. I use the Kindle, print books, the Readwise, and Evernote apps, along with a notebook and 4x6 cards.

I engage with my books by taking notes, documenting my criticisms, agreements, and disagreements with the authors, along with highlights. Thus, I am constantly engaging with the author.

 My workflow is slightly different based on the book type.

 Kindle book 

I read on both my Kindle Paperwhite (link) and the Kindle app on my iPhone. They seamlessly sync, so I am always at the exact location on all my devices. I ready and actively highlight and enter notes on what I read. As I read, my highlights are automatically synced to Readwise and are served up to me daily based on the algorithms I set. I have set Readwise to automatically sync my highlights to Evernote. 

I have a separate Readwise notebook with all my highlights in Evernote.

 Print Books 

Print Library Book 

If the book is available from the library, and I have not done my pre-book review, I will get the library book to see if the book is worth purchasing. If the book is a book I will read, I’ll eventually buy my own copy.

 I use a notebook for library books to capture my notes, highlights, and thoughts as I read. I capture my ideas about the author’s points and then note the book’s page number.

 After completing the book, I prepare a 1-page summary of the book and my three actions or takeaways. 

This is all done in my Book notebook – currently, a Minimalism Art B5 Dotted softcover notebook. 

I review my physical notes and distill the best ones down and add them to Evernote. Along with my book summary, I add my three Take-Aways to Evernote and my Book Actions Pages document.

 Print book – Owned 

For these books, I am highlighting and writing notes in the book during reading. I am folding pages for critical sections; I highlight words I want to look up. I am physically interacting with the book in the book.

 After I completed the book, I set the book down for a few weeks.

 It’s been two to three weeks, so now I go back and review my highlights and transfer the key thoughts, ideas, and quotes to Evernote. I also write out the summary of the book and identify three takeaways/actions from the book for me.  

 All Reading Notes

 After I have everything distilled down in Evernote, I take one more pass, identify the key, foundational notes, and physically write them out on 4 x 6 index cards.  

 I write the highlighted note out in my own words; I add 3 – 4 theme words on the top line on the back of each card. Next, I note the author and book or article. I then note the page from the book on the front of the note. 

I then transfer the themes to a Numbers database with the book noted. I then note any other notes related to (manual backlinking) and finally add the note to my box. Filed alphabetically by the first or key theme.  

How do you capture and process what you read? Share it below in the comments.

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Why I am reading physical Magazines again

Are you chasing your dreams or just coasting along?  Are you striving for personal gold or settling for silver?
The Champion's Mind
 
 

I am going back to reading physical magazines and books. 

A few benefits with the physical version:

  • Having a physical magazine around lets me pick up and read in sprints rather than feeling like I need to read the entire magazine in one sitting.  
  • The physical magazine is a great visual queue for me to read it.  
  • I can quickly tear out pages or jot down notes for items I want to keep. (I actually scan in the torn out pages and get them into Dropbox or Evernote.)
  • I can actually get through the materials faster in physical form than electronic.
  • I know when I have finished the material as the magazine goes right into recycling.
  • I find reading the physical magazine makes it easier to get through the material.  

 

So how am I reading now?

I subscribe to both the physical and electronic versions when they are both available.    Most magazines offer deals on this 2 for 1 option so it is not that costly.  More on the electronic version later. 

I read with my Leuchtturm 1917 notebook by my side along with my favorite fountain pen, or my trusty Space Pen for taking notes.  I capture notes and thoughts as I read.  If there is a page that I want to save I just tear it out and scan it for further use.  I find this works well for me with ads and full page items that I need to evaluate later.

When I am done I recycle the physical magazine.  

Electronic Version

I use the electronic version for archive in case I want to go back and re-read or research something.  Having the material around electronically in a single app essentially takes up no space and doesn't create any noticeable clutter.

For magazines that don't offer a physical version, or if I am traveling, I read the electronic version on my iPad.  I still have my Leuchtturm 1917 by my side for notes.

I hope this is helpful and let me know in the comments below how you are consuming content.

 

 

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