Being Wrong

Shane Parrish’s highlights from this gem of a Ted Talk by Kahthryn Schulz. … The first thing we usually do when someone disagrees with us is that we just assume they are ignorant. You know, they don’t have access to the same information we do and when we generously share that information with them, they are going to see the light and come on over to our team. When that doesn’t work. When it turns out those people have all the same information and they still don’t agree with us we move onto a second assumption. They’re idiots. They have all the right pieces of the puzzle and they are too moronic to put them together. ...

May 13, 2019 · Mario Jason Braganza

Writing as the Most Important Thing You Could Do Every Morning

From a Ryan Holiday post on journalling, “I don’t journal to “be productive.” I don’t do it to find great ideas, or to put down prose I can later publish. The pages aren’t intended for anyone but me. Morning pages are, as author Julia Cameron puts it, “spiritual windshield wipers.” It’s the most cost-effective therapy I’ve ever found. To quote her further…: ‘Once we get those muddy, maddening, confusing thoughts [nebulous worries, jitters, and preoccupations] on the page, we face our day with clearer eyes.’” ...

May 6, 2019 · Mario Jason Braganza

What Does Reading a Book Do to Your Brain?

From What Does Immersing Yourself in a Book Do to Your Brain? … Reading allows us to try on, for a few moments, what it truly means to be another person, with all the similar and sometimes vastly different emotions and struggles that govern others’ lives. The reading circuitry is elaborated by such simulations; so also our daily lives, and so also the lives of those who would lead others. The novelist Jane Smiley worries that it is just this dimension in fiction that is most threatened by our culture: “My guess is that mere technology will not kill the novel. . . . But novels can be sidelined. . . . When that happens, our society will be brutalized and coarsened by people . . . who have no way of understanding us or each other.” It is a chilling reminder of how important the life of reading is for human beings if we are to form an ever more realized democratic society for everyone. ...

April 29, 2019 · Mario Jason Braganza

Taking Notes While Reading

Riffing off last weeks mail on reading, Scott H Young has a really thorough, helpful post on how to take notes, while reading. Starting with the why, and then onto various strategies on how to take notes, the post is well worth your time. P.S. If you like my emails, forward it to your friends and ask them to subscribe too!

April 22, 2019 · Mario Jason Braganza

Want to Write Better? Become a Better Reader!

Busy with exams this month, so leaving you with this Austin Kleon post with tonnes of quotes on reading. Here’s a few of my favourite ones … “You can’t be a good writer without being a devoted reader.” —J.K. Rowling “Read, read, read everything — trash, classics, good and bad, and see how they do it. Just like a carpenter who works as an apprentice and studies the master. Read!” —William Faulkner ...

April 15, 2019 · Mario Jason Braganza

Why You Need a Reading Plan

Jeremy Andenberg, on the importance of Reading Plans: Creates room for mastery of a subject. This is perhaps my favorite part of having a reading plan. We’ve made the case multiple times here on Art of Manliness that everyone should strive to be “T-shaped”; that is, you should have a breadth of general knowledge, but also mastery in a single topic or subject or skill. Such mastery provides satisfaction and self-confidence in spades. ...

March 11, 2019 · Mario Jason Braganza