Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Tips For Reading When Youre Laid Up

Tips For Reading When Youre Laid Up In her essay On Being Ill, Virginia Woolf writes about the ways   illness changes a persons perspective, and occasionally improves it. we cease to be soldiers in the army of the upright; we become deserters. They march to battle. We float with the sticks on the stream; helter skelter with the dead leaves on the lawn, irresponsible and disinterested and able, perhaps for the first time for years, to look round, to look upâ€"to look, for example, at the sky. Illness, or recovery from it, can do the same for a persons reading habits. If youre ill, you might read more or less. You might not want to be able to read the genres you normally read. You might be a normally-prolific reader who is unable to read at all. And all of that is fine. A few weeks ago, I went into the hospital for surgery. My recovery has been longer than I expected, and Ive found myself in bed, unable to do much of anything, for long periods of time. Im normally the sort of person who cant sit still, so being stuck in bed has changed my perspective quite a bit, and it has changed my reading habits. I read more, listen to audiobooks less, and there are certain stories I just cant read. If youre bedridden â€" if youre going into a hospital for surgery, or if youre sick with something thats keeping you in bed for a long time â€" here are five tips for managing your reading (and your expectations about your reading) that I wish someone had shared with me. 1.) It helps to be prepared. While you might not be able to prep for an illness, there are some things you can do if you suspect youre going to be sick for a while. Pile your books at the side of your bed, away from wherever your food, drink and meds are going to be. Have a few books there, because you never know what youre going to want to read, and make sure you have enough bookmarks as well. This goes for the hospital, too. Even if youre dont think youre going to be staying overnight, pack a little reading care package for yourself. Bring your books, or charge your device and bring it with you. Because nothing sucks harder than lying in a dark room all night with no reading material, and while the nurses station stocks those awesome slipper socks, as far as I know, they dont keep a pile of bookmarks. (Pro tip: if youre bringing a book to the hospital and you have a booklight, bring it. Turning on those hospital room lights is an epic quest when youre hooked up to an IV, and also, you dont want to irritate your roommate.) 2.) Accept it when you cant read. Some of us (myself included) get competitive about reading. Oh, Im going to be lying down for a week? Great. Ill read my whole TBR shelf. Yeah, no. My first night in the hospital, I tried to read The Martian. I got as far as the first line (Which is, upliftingly, Im pretty much fucked.) before I fell asleep. Sometimes you just cant read. Sometimes reading is a lot of effort, and all you can do is stare at the TV or the wall, and thats okay. Flowers are lovely but my husband knows what get well gift I really want. #books A post shared by A.J. OConnell (@annjoc) on Mar 24, 2016 at 12:19pm PDT 3.) Accept that your reading habits will change. You might be in pain. You might be on drugs. Youre not moving around.   Your ability to read print might be compromised and you might listen to audiobooks. Or, you might be one of those people who listens to audiobooks during activities, and while youre laid up you might abandon Audible in favor of print. 4.) You might change what youre reading. I decided my recovery would be the perfect time to finally read World War Z. You know what? It turns out that reading about a zombie virus while bedridden wasnt my best idea ever. I ended up propped up in bed, with all the curtains open, so I could monitor all approaches to our home. Whoops. Sometimes illness makes certain genres or topics less appealing. For example you might be under enough stress already, and not want to read a nail-biter of a thriller. You might want to read escapist novels. You might want to read more about illness, or avoid reading about it altogether. (Woolf, who liked poetry when she was sick, has a quote about that too: Illness makes us disinclined for the long campaigns that prose exacts.) 5.) Your health comes before your TBR pile. You do not have to read non-stop simply because youre lying in bed. You dont have to stay up all night to finish that book when youre recovering. Please dont judge yourself for choosing TV instead of a book when youre sick. Your health is your priority, and if reading more is a byproduct of that, excellent.