linchpin in training
One of my goals in 2010 is to read a lot more. I bought so many books in 2009 and I bet I only read about 20% of them. 
If you have seen my last post, you’ll know that I recently read the expanded and updated version of “The 4-Hour Work Week.” by Tim Ferriss. One interesting section was a little exercise in Chapter 5 called “How to Read 200% Faster in 10 Minutes.” A quick Google search led me to a similar post on Tim’s blog only this time it was called “Scientific Speed Reading: How to Read 300% Faster in 20 Minutes”
I’m not going to talk about the exercises here because you can read it in much more detail over on Tim’s blog but I want to share with you my results and findings.
In the article, Tim provided a quick synopsis on how we read using a sequence of saccadic movements. Interesting. I never knew this and Tim provided us with a way to understand how it works: “To demonstrate this, close one eye, place a fingertip on top of that eyelid, and then slowly scan a straight horizontal line with your other eye-you will feel distinct and separate movements and periods of fixation.”
To make a long story short, in less than a week and a half, I’ve become a much faster reader. Here are my results from following Tim’s exercises.
Day 1
My results were not exactly 200 or 300% higher as Tim suggested but they weren’t bad either.
Day 2 – The very next day I decided to complete the exercises again. Using the same formula, I began the test by assessing my initial reading speed.
Day 3 – Here’s where things started to get interesting.
Just to be sure I wasn’t going berserk, I went home and went on a reading frenzy. Over the next 5 days, I read a ton of books, flying through them at a speed I’d never been able to even come close to before. Maybe that’s the reason I very rarely finished a book – I was reading too slow.
Over the next 5 days I read:
The Catcher In The Rye
The Four-Hour Work Week (again)
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Vagabonding: An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel
Bad Monkeys
I also limited myself to the following rules:
Day 4 – Five days later it was time to test myself again.
The last test I did was three days ago. Since that time I’ve read a few other books and will continue to do so. My conclusion is that with daily training and practice anyone could easily double or perhaps triple their reading speed. I made a comment on Tim’s blog that I was having trouble finding any consistency in my results which you can see through my results. But I think it’s important to recognize that I’m getting faster, and with more practice and repetition I might find that consistent level.
Tim did mention that if your goal is to read at 900 wpm then you actually have to train at 1800 wpm, which is the equivalent of 10 seconds per page or 6 pages per minute. Could you imagine? 6 pages per minute!
If you decide to try the exercises, let me know your results and findings.
UPDATE
January 19th, 2009 update
I decided to re-test today as I felt I was slowing down with some books over the weekend but the tests said I was wrong.