28.
Always Carry a Book with You
According to
U.S. News & World Report
, over the course of your lifetime, you
will spend eight months opening junk mail, two years
unsuccessfully returning
phone calls and five years standing in line. Given this startling fact, one of the
simplest yet smartest time management strategies you can follow is to never go
anywhere without a book under your arm. While others waiting in line are
complaining, you will be growing and feeding your
mind a rich diet of ideas
found in great books.
“So long as you live, keep learning how to live,” noted the Roman
philosopher Seneca. Yet most people never read
more than a handful of books
after they complete their formal schooling. In these times of rapid change, ideas
are the commodity of success. All it takes is one idea from the right book to
reshape your character or to transform your relationships or to revolutionize your
life. A good book can change the way you live as the philosopher Henry David
Thoreau observed in
Walden
, “There are probably words addressed to our
condition exactly, which, if we could really hear and understand, would be more
salutary than the morning
or the spring to our lives, and possibly put a new
aspect on the face of things for us. How many a man has dated a new era of his
life from the reading of a book. The book exists for us perchance which will
explain our miracles and reveal new ones.”
How high you will rise in your life will be determined not by how hard you
work but by how well you think. As I say in my leadership speeches, “The
greatest leaders in this new economy will be the greatest thinkers.” And the
person you will be five years from now will
come down to two primary
influences: the people you associate with and the books you read. I often joke
with my seminar audiences that I play “Cinderella Tennis”: I try hard but I never
quite make it to the ball. Yet when I play tennis with someone better than I am,
something almost magical happens to my game. I make shots that I have never
made before, gracefully floating through the air with an ease that would make
even the best player blush. Reading good books creates much the same
phenomenon. When you expose your mind to the thoughts of the greatest people
who have walked this planet before you, your game improves, the depth of your
thinking expands and you rise to a whole new level of wisdom.
Deep reading allows you to connect with the world’s
most creative,
intelligent and inspiring people, twenty-four hours a day. Aristotle, Emerson,
Seneca, Gandhi, Thoreau, Dorothea Brande, and many of the wisest women and
men who grace our planet today are just waiting to share their knowledge with
you through their books. Why wouldn’t you seize such an opportunity as often
as you could? If you have not read today, you have not really lived today. And
knowing how to read but failing to do so puts you in exactly the same position as
the person who cannot read but wants to.