Reading problems aren't a willpower issue – your brain got rewired
For the longest time, I blamed myself. Lack of discipline, poor time management, whatever. But then I started noticing the pattern wasn't just me - friends who used to devour books were struggling with the same thing. Smart people, curious people, people who wanted to read.
The turning point came when I realized I could binge-watch a 3-hour YouTube deep-dive on Byzantine history without losing focus, but couldn't get through two pages of a book on the same topic. That's when it clicked - this isn't about willpower or intelligence. Our brains literally got rewired.
Think about it: we've trained ourselves on TikTok, Twitter, Reddit - constant stimulation, instant feedback, bite-sized content. Then we try to sit down with a book that demands sustained attention for hours, and wonder why we're re-reading the same paragraph five times.
I tried everything to get back into reading: audiobooks (mind wanders after a minute), AI summaries (forgettable), author interviews on YouTube (actually pretty good, but limited). Nothing stuck until I stumbled on something that worked.
Six months ago, I started uploading books to ChatGPT and prompting it to teach me through conversation - asking questions, giving examples, making me explain concepts back. Instead of fighting my shortened attention span, I worked with it. Suddenly I was spending an hour a day learning from books that had been gathering digital dust for years.
The technique is simple: turn passive reading into active dialogue. Instead of trying to force yourself through dense text, have the AI break it down, quiz you, give you analogies. It matches how our brains want to consume information now.
You can set this up yourself with ChatGPT, or there are tools that automate it (I ended up building one at https://thinktotem.com for myself because I was doing this so much). The point isn't the specific method - it's accepting that our brains changed and adapting rather than fighting it.
I'm back to learning from books I thought were impossible - Dante's Divine Comedy, The Art of War, dense philosophy texts. Not because I got more disciplined, but because I stopped trying to read like it's 1995.
Anyone else notice this shift in their reading ability? Curious what solutions others have found.
As for the implementation - how can you ensure that the AI sticks to the book rather than going off-track to tell you about unrelated stuff in its training set, let alone going into hallucinations?
One thing that I think could be nice is if you could have it always keep the book in view, and just scroll to the appropriate place it is referring to, and then somehow highlight the specific snippet it is currently referring to, so that I could visually verify that it's giving me "grounded" information. Does your system do something like that?
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It is harder to get back into reading, but think if you force yourself a little at first your brain gets "rewired" back to it just fine.
Rewire it back! You're acting like this is basically a one-way door when it's not.
Just read a book without picking up your phone for 30 minutes a day. It's not that complicated.
> Smart people, curious people, people who wanted to read.
If they wanted to read they'd be doing it.
There are concentration exercises that can be done, but they are demanding...
Well you get to decide what you dislike more, having a terrible attention span or doing demanding concentration exercises.