6. Track your Time Trial scores.
Go to your Personal Progress Chart and make sure you've recorded
your Words per Minute, comprehension percentage, and the date you did the exercise. It's also helpful
to document other details such as time of day, any preoccupations, strategies used, and so on.
A Guaranteed Solution for Becoming a Race Contender
One of the best ways to reduce mind wandering, regression, and subvocalization is — to read faster!
By increasing your speed, your brain has less time to daydream. You are filling it with more words —
remember the 150-words-per-minute talker vs. the 400-words-per-minute thinker? — leaving your
brain less time to wander off. Your tendency to regress is reduced. And reading faster naturally
reduces the mental whispering because you simply cannot read word-for-word when you are
increasing your reading speed.
Fast Tracks: The Process of Retooling the Engine
You will be happy to know that it is possible to take a poor reading engine and replace it with better
parts to make it purr like a kitten. That's what you're about to do. You are going to replace some
passive habits with active ones.
You might have tried to read faster on your own without any formal training. Perhaps because you had
a lot to read in a short period or just because you wanted to try. You probably discovered that though
you read faster, you missed a lot of the meaning. And at that time you probably said to your- self,
"What's the point? Why read faster if I don't understand it?"
You were actually coming to the part of retooling where people run into trouble. In the process of
trying to upgrade your skills, you begin working with a new set of strategies. Ironically, instead of
getting instantly better, you initially get worse. This is what I call "unlearning to relearn." However,
over time, with perseverance and repetition, your skills improve.
A perfect analogy is driving an automatic car as opposed to a stick shift. Let's say that you only drive
an automatic car. As sometimes happens, your car breaks down. It will take at least a week to repair.
You absolutely positively have to get to work for a big meeting. Your neighbor says, "You can use my
car," and it's a stick shift. Now, I know some of you are thinking, "I'd rather carpool or rent a car,
anything to avoid a stick shift," but just stay with me.
You take the keys, get behind the wheel of the car, put the key in the ignition, and all of a sudden
driving isn't the same anymore. For starters, when you turn the key, the car lurches forward and stalls.
You don't know that you have to put your foot on the clutch — a third pedal — in order to stop the car
from moving. To make matters worse you also have a stick shift with five numbers and the letter R
staring at you. Putting the car in reverse is now very tricky.
Let's stop here to answer a few questions. Are you a bad driver or just an unskilled operator? Are you
comfortable or uncomfortable? Are you confident or insecure? If you drive the stick shift for several
days, do you think you would feel more comfortable? Probably. Would you make better time on the
second day than the first day? Most likely. After a few days might you feel more confident in your
abilities? I can assure you that by the end of the week, you will feel more willing and confident to
drive while drinking a coffee or making a cell phone call. In the beginning, relearning a skill you
already know is frustrating and challenging. If you stick it out and continue to figure out what works
and what doesn't through trial and error, you will build the skills you are trying to improve.
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