Transcript

00:00:00Hey guys, welcome back to the channel.
00:00:01In this video, I'm gonna be sharing eight tips
00:00:03that I find helpful for reading more consistently.
00:00:05So these days I'm averaging about one or two books every week
00:00:09and this is alongside my full-time job of being a doctor
00:00:11and my part-time career of being a YouTuber
00:00:13and running a business on the site, all this stuff.
00:00:14But the point is that I find the time to read in my routine
00:00:18and I think over the last sort of eight years
00:00:20of reading a lot, that has added so much value to my life.
00:00:23As usual, timestamps to all of these
00:00:25are gonna be in the video description and in a pinned comment
00:00:27so you can skip around the video if you feel like it.
00:00:28For now, let's get started.
00:00:30So point number one is that you should get a Kindle.
00:00:33Like there is some evidence,
00:00:34I'll link it down below if I can find it,
00:00:35that says that people in America who use e-readers
00:00:38read about 40 or 50% more books per year
00:00:41than people who don't use e-readers.
00:00:42And the Kindle is amazing.
00:00:43I've been reading absolutely everything on Kindle
00:00:45since like 2008, so a very long time.
00:00:47Yeah, it just completely transforms the reading experience.
00:00:49That's all I'm gonna say on that front.
00:00:50I've made about three other videos
00:00:52where I talk about how amazing it is having a Kindle.
00:00:54So if you're not convinced so far,
00:00:56then please have a look at those videos.
00:00:57I'll link them down below.
00:00:57Yeah, Kindle is absolutely game-changing
00:01:00when it comes to reading more consistently.
00:01:01And everyone that I have hammered this recommendation
00:01:04down the throat of has bought a Kindle
00:01:06and has said to me later on that,
00:01:07oh, I'm really glad I got the Kindle
00:01:08because now I read so much more
00:01:10and it's just completely worth it.
00:01:12So yeah, 100%, get a Kindle.
00:01:14Point number two is kind of like a mindset shift.
00:01:16And I found that when I developed this mindset,
00:01:18it kind of changed the game for me,
00:01:19much like getting a Kindle.
00:01:20And that was the mindset
00:01:21that it's okay not to finish a book.
00:01:23Previously, I had this view of like books
00:01:25being this sacred, prestigious object
00:01:26that if I was kind of reading a book,
00:01:28I would have to finish it before I move on to the next one,
00:01:30even if I found it boring.
00:01:31And there are so many people I've spoken to
00:01:33over the last few months
00:01:34when we like talk about reading and consistency and stuff,
00:01:36'cause this is the sort of stuff I talk about,
00:01:37who say that, oh, you know,
00:01:38I've been reading "Sapiens" for the last 18 months
00:01:41and just haven't gotten around to finishing it.
00:01:43And yeah, every time I sit down to read,
00:01:44I feel guilty that I haven't finished "Sapiens."
00:01:46So then I tried reading it
00:01:47and then I get bored after half a page
00:01:48and then I close it and then go to sleep.
00:01:49You know, the obvious solution there
00:01:50is to just close "Sapiens," put it away,
00:01:52or delete it from your Kindle library
00:01:54and just read something else. In a way, we're sort of treating books more like blog posts.
00:01:57If you were reading a blog post or, you know, on someone's blog,
00:02:00you wouldn't feel the sense of shame
00:02:01if you didn't get to the end of it.
00:02:03It's kind of like a book.
00:02:03Like, you know, we should treat books
00:02:05much like we treat articles or blog posts on the internet,
00:02:07in my opinion.
00:02:08And when I internalized that mindset,
00:02:10I found it a lot easier to read more consistently.
00:02:12Thirdly, and on a kind of related note,
00:02:14it's also okay not to read classics.
00:02:16So this is, again, a thing that I used to have
00:02:18back in the day, this was ages ago,
00:02:19where I used to think, oh, you know, if I'm reading,
00:02:21I should read something good
00:02:22rather than just reread "Harry Potter."
00:02:24But then I realized that actually, you know,
00:02:25who defines good?
00:02:26Who cares if the classics are classics
00:02:28because English literature students study them?
00:02:30I don't really care.
00:02:31I wanna read for enjoyment and I wanna read for, you know,
00:02:33to help my life get better.
00:02:34And so the advice I often give to people is that
00:02:36when you're a beginner in reading,
00:02:38i.e. you don't read very consistently, you know,
00:02:40the thing to start with is not something like Charles Dickens,
00:02:43even though it's a good book or like Jane Eyre or, you know,
00:02:45like these classics that people say are good,
00:02:48but that, you know, are from a bygone era.
00:02:50The trick is to start with something simple,
00:02:51like "Harry Potter" or, you know, some great fantasy
00:02:54or fiction book that's easy to read
00:02:55that makes you wanna turn the page.
00:02:56'Cause once you get into the habit of reading,
00:02:58then you can start exploring these avenues
00:03:01of these fancy-ass English literature sort of books,
00:03:03like Charles Dickens and Shakespeare and all that stuff.
00:03:05Recently, I've read the "Sci-Changeling" series,
00:03:08which is a series of 16 books
00:03:10on the paranormal romance genre.
00:03:12And I absolutely love these.
00:03:13These are absolute trash, but they're kind of fun.
00:03:15They're cool.
00:03:16They're different characters.
00:03:17They've got magical powers.
00:03:17They fall in love, all that sort of jazz.
00:03:19I'm not thinking that, you know,
00:03:20I'm not feeling guilty when I'm reading this,
00:03:22thinking that I'm reading trash.
00:03:23And I think because I've got this attitude
00:03:25of I don't care what I read,
00:03:26as long as I like it, as long as it's good,
00:03:28then that actually makes me read much more consistently
00:03:31because it means that there isn't any of this baggage
00:03:33associated with having to struggle through reading classics.
00:03:37Point number four is also semi-related to that,
00:03:39and that is that it's okay to skim through books.
00:03:42There was this thing I came across in a podcast,
00:03:43I'll link it down below,
00:03:44where the guy was talking about
00:03:46there being two modes of reading.
00:03:47Number one, where you're reading for enjoyment,
00:03:49and number two, where you're reading for information
00:03:51or inspiration or that sort of stuff.
00:03:53And reading for enjoyment is more like reading fiction.
00:03:55So if I'm reading for enjoyment,
00:03:57then I won't really care about highlighting passages
00:03:59or taking notes or whatever.
00:04:00Because I'm reading for enjoyment,
00:04:01I'm also okay with skipping long bits of description.
00:04:05Like if I get the idea,
00:04:06and if I'm really wrapped up in the story,
00:04:07I don't feel the need to read absolutely every word.
00:04:09And then when I'm reading nonfiction,
00:04:11I'm not really reading it for enjoyment,
00:04:12although some of them are quite good,
00:04:13but I'm more reading it for information
00:04:15or education or inspiration, stuff like that.
00:04:17And so my tactics for reading that is a lot different.
00:04:20Like A, I'm completely okay to skim stuff as well.
00:04:22B, I'll be looking for things to highlight on Kindle
00:04:24because the Kindle highlighting thing is amazing.
00:04:26C, I sometimes might even start
00:04:28by looking at the table of contents
00:04:29and just kind of scroll through
00:04:30and see which bits of the book catch my eye.
00:04:32If there are bits of the book that's boring,
00:04:34what I tend to do is I'm just gonna flick a few pages,
00:04:36eyeball some of the words on subsequent pages,
00:04:38see if it's gonna get more interesting.
00:04:40And if not, I'll just close the book and read something else.
00:04:42Like I'm treating these books
00:04:43exactly like I'm treating articles or blog posts.
00:04:46I'm not feeling guilty for skimming or for not finishing on.
00:04:49Point number five, and this is probably
00:04:50the most important thing after the getting a Kindle bit,
00:04:53is that I find it really helpful
00:04:54to build reading into my daily routine.
00:04:56So my nighttime routine consists of me brushing my teeth,
00:04:59getting changed, or going naked,
00:05:01depending on how I'm feeling on a particular day,
00:05:03getting into bed, telling Alexa to turn the lights to relax,
00:05:06which is like a nice yellowy sort of.
00:05:08In fact, Alexa, turn on Relax in the living room.
00:05:10You know, it gives this sort of setup.
00:05:14Let's go back.
00:05:15Turn on Ice and Fire in the living room.
00:05:17There we go, back to normal.
00:05:20So I put on Relax, which is like a nice warm.
00:05:22I dim the lights to about 10%.
00:05:24I just lie in bed, pick up my Kindle,
00:05:26and I put my phone all the way across the room.
00:05:27I set the alarm for half past six in the morning,
00:05:29and I put the phone across the room,
00:05:30which means the only thing I can do when I'm in bed
00:05:32is either sleep or read on my Kindle.
00:05:34Through doing that for the last like five, six years,
00:05:36I'm just gonna read every single night before bed.
00:05:39And I read until I feel tired,
00:05:41I feel my eyes beginning to close,
00:05:42and then I'm like, great, I'm falling asleep.
00:05:43I'm gonna close the Kindle, put it on the bedside table,
00:05:46and I will fall asleep.
00:05:47That is just the way I've built reading
00:05:49into my nighttime routine.
00:05:50And so it's pretty easy for me to finish one book a week
00:05:53because I'm reading for at least sort of 20 minutes,
00:05:55half an hour each day.
00:05:56And if it's particularly gripping book,
00:05:59it'll keep me up until like two, three in the morning.
00:06:01And I'll be super glad that I did.
00:06:02And recently I've read lots of books,
00:06:04Bad Blood, Shoe Dog, and Third Door in particular,
00:06:07that have kept me up way into the night
00:06:09because I've just enjoyed them so much.
00:06:11Point number six is that there are loads of other occasions
00:06:13in which you can read even when you're not reading.
00:06:15And here I'm gonna give a plug to Audible
00:06:17'cause Audible is amazing.
00:06:18It's like the best audiobook platform ever.
00:06:20They are actually sponsoring this video.
00:06:21I just didn't know that when I filmed the video
00:06:23a few weeks ago.
00:06:24And I've been using them for the last like two years.
00:06:26And it's just more like one of the best 7.99 a month
00:06:29that I spend on anything, period.
00:06:31Because when I'm in the car or when I'm at the gym,
00:06:33I can be listening to audiobooks.
00:06:34And when it comes to audiobooks,
00:06:35I tend more to listen to fiction rather than nonfiction.
00:06:38I think nonfiction, it's better to read on Kindle
00:06:40because then you can highlight stuff,
00:06:42you can skim a lot easier.
00:06:43Whereas fiction, you know, just kind of going
00:06:44and the narrators are usually very good.
00:06:46At the moment, I'm listening to the "Wheel of Time" series
00:06:49by I don't even know who it's by, but it's really good.
00:06:51And I'm about halfway through the first book.
00:06:53And I just kind of put that on when I'm at the gym.
00:06:54If you don't have an Audible subscription,
00:06:55highly recommend.
00:06:56Follow the link audible.com/aliabdaal.
00:06:58And I think it'll give you like a 30-day free trial
00:07:01and a free audiobook and two free Audible originals,
00:07:03something like that.
00:07:04You should have a look.
00:07:05Yes, that is correct.
00:07:06You can go to audible.com/aliabdaal
00:07:08or you can text Ali Abdaal to 500 500.
00:07:11And with that code, you will get a free 30-day trial
00:07:13and you'll get one free audiobook of your choice,
00:07:15along with two free Audible originals.
00:07:17So you really might as well give it a shot.
00:07:19It is genuinely amazing.
00:07:20As you hopefully saw from my unadulterated opinion
00:07:23when I didn't know this was a sponsored video.
00:07:24But yeah, audible.com/aliabdaal
00:07:26or text Ali Abdaal to 500 500.
00:07:28Yeah, sign up to Audible.
00:07:30It's the best 7.99 a month that I spend, hands down.
00:07:33Point number seven is that I think it's really helpful
00:07:35to have an account on Goodreads,
00:07:36which is also incidentally owned by Amazon,
00:07:38who are again not sponsoring this video, unfortunately.
00:07:40But Goodreads is really good
00:07:41because it's like the ultimate social network for books,
00:07:44kind of in that they've got a library
00:07:45of every single book ever published.
00:07:47For example, if you're reading a book on Kindle,
00:07:49it automatically can add it
00:07:50to your currently reading section on Goodreads.
00:07:53And then when you finish the book,
00:07:54it'll ask you to give a rating
00:07:55and that automatically goes to your Goodreads account.
00:07:57And so over time, you develop this library
00:07:59where you track every book you've ever read.
00:08:01And if you want, you can write a book review,
00:08:03you can read other people's book reviews,
00:08:04you can follow recommendations that other people have.
00:08:06And so when I first got a Goodreads account,
00:08:08I think it was like four or five years ago now,
00:08:10I spent a day just racking my brain
00:08:13and thinking back to every book I'd ever read
00:08:15and just adding it to my Goodreads sort of,
00:08:17I've read this book library and giving it a rating
00:08:19if I could remember what the book was about.
00:08:20And now I've got like 300 and something books in this library
00:08:23and it kind of becomes a game.
00:08:24Like when I start a new book, I get excited that yes,
00:08:27I'm adding it to my Goodreads library.
00:08:28And if I managed to finish the book,
00:08:29I feel excited that yes, that's another book down.
00:08:31And it's just like a personal game we play with ourselves.
00:08:33But I found that that is another thing
00:08:35that's helped me read a lot more consistently.
00:08:37And if you guys are interested,
00:08:38I'll link my own Goodreads profile in the video description.
00:08:40You can follow my profile.
00:08:41You can add me as a friend, whatever that means.
00:08:43And you can see all the books that I've rated five star,
00:08:45four star, three star, whatever.
00:08:46And maybe that might help you get some book recommendations
00:08:48if you're into that sort of thing.
00:08:50And finally point number eight is a service called Readwise.
00:08:53That's absolutely incredible.
00:08:54Readwise is a fantastic service because what they do
00:08:56is that they sync to your Amazon account.
00:08:59And if you know, like me, you read everything on Kindle
00:09:01and if you have a lot of highlights,
00:09:03what it does is that it sends you an email every day
00:09:05with five random highlights from random books that you've read
00:09:08and so I find this to be an absolutely amazing way
00:09:10to resurface content that I had read in the past
00:09:13and I thought was legit enough to be highlighted.
00:09:15But before discovering Readwise,
00:09:16I didn't really have a way
00:09:18of actively going through my highlights.
00:09:20Like occasionally I'd browse the Kindle app
00:09:22and go through my highlights for a particular book
00:09:24if I was researching a blog post or an email newsletter.
00:09:26But now every single day,
00:09:27I just get an email from Readwise and I read stuff
00:09:29and I'm like, oh, that quote from "Happy" by Darren Brown
00:09:32or that quote from "Tools of Titans" by Tim Ferriss
00:09:34actually applies to the thing I'm thinking about
00:09:36at the moment.
00:09:37So that's a fantastic way of resurfacing the stuff
00:09:39that you've highlighted
00:09:40and reminding yourself of these life lessons
00:09:42that if you're like me and you read everything on Kindle
00:09:44and you highlight everything on Kindle,
00:09:46it's immensely valuable.
00:09:47Another cool thing about Readwise
00:09:48is that you can sync all your highlights to Evernote.
00:09:50So I've started doing that recently
00:09:51and so if I'm making a video about productivity,
00:09:54I can just control F productivity on Evernote
00:09:56and that will include, within that search,
00:09:58it would find me any quotes about productivity
00:10:00that I've highlighted in various books.
00:10:01And I think at the moment I have like 2,000 highlights
00:10:04across hundreds of books on Kindle
00:10:07and therefore they're all synced to Readwise.
00:10:08And another great thing about Readwise
00:10:09is that if you read articles online via Instapaper,
00:10:11which is what I use, and you highlight stuff there,
00:10:13that also syncs to Evernote.
00:10:15So it's just kind of the ultimate way
00:10:16of building a second brain
00:10:17whereby anything that you think is good enough
00:10:20to be highlighted is then searchable
00:10:22whenever you wanna find something.
00:10:24And that is another thing
00:10:24that's helped me read more consistently
00:10:26because now I feel excited to highlight stuff
00:10:28and whenever I come across a new password, I think,
00:10:29yes, this goes straight into my Readwise library,
00:10:32it's gonna go into Evernote
00:10:33and I'll be able to have this as a piece of wisdom
00:10:36that I can then call upon whenever I need it.
00:10:37Those were my eight points
00:10:38on how to read more consistently.
00:10:40Main thing, get a Kindle
00:10:42and build it into your nighttime routine.
00:10:43As you know, that's what I do, that's what I'd recommend.
00:10:45But also recognize that it's okay not to finish a book.
00:10:47It's okay to skim and it's okay to not read the classics.
00:10:50You can just kind of read whatever you want
00:10:51'cause reading is supposed to be fun.
00:10:52It's not supposed to be this chore,
00:10:54this thing that we only had to do in our English lessons.
00:10:56So yeah, thanks for watching.
00:10:57I hope you found this video useful.
00:10:58If you did, I'll put a video over there
00:10:59or over there somewhere.
00:11:00That'll be a playlist of some of my recommended reading.
00:11:03So I've got a video called "Three Books That Changed My Life"
00:11:05and another video about three recommended fantasy books
00:11:07that I listened to on Audible so you can check those out.
00:11:09Thanks for watching and I'll see you in the next video.
00:11:11Bye-bye.

Key Takeaway

Reading 100+ books annually is achievable by using a Kindle, building reading into your nighttime routine, abandoning guilt about not finishing books or reading classics, and leveraging audiobooks and tools like Goodreads and Readwise to make reading more consistent and enjoyable.

Highlights

Using a Kindle can increase annual reading by 40-50% compared to physical books, with evidence showing e-reader users consistently read more

Building reading into a daily nighttime routine (20-30 minutes before bed) makes it easier to finish one book per week consistently

It's okay to not finish books, skim through content, or avoid classics - treat books like blog posts rather than sacred objects

Audible audiobooks enable reading during commuting, gym time, and other activities where physical reading isn't possible

Readwise automatically resurfaces Kindle highlights through daily emails and syncs them to Evernote for building a searchable second brain

Reading nonfiction for information requires different tactics than reading fiction for enjoyment - skimming and highlighting are acceptable for nonfiction

Goodreads helps gamify reading by tracking every book read, providing recommendations, and creating a personal library with ratings

Timeline

Introduction and Reading Habits Overview

Ali introduces the video topic of sharing eight tips for reading more consistently. He mentions averaging one to two books per week while maintaining a full-time job as a doctor and running a YouTube channel and business. He emphasizes that he has found time to integrate reading into his routine over the past eight years, which has added significant value to his life. The video includes timestamps in the description and pinned comments for easy navigation.

Tip 1: Get a Kindle E-Reader

The first major recommendation is purchasing a Kindle, supported by evidence showing Americans who use e-readers read 40-50% more books annually than non-users. Ali has been reading exclusively on Kindle since 2008 and describes it as completely transforming the reading experience. He references three other videos where he discusses the benefits of Kindle in detail. Everyone he has recommended Kindle to has later confirmed they read significantly more and found the purchase worthwhile.

Tip 2: It's Okay Not to Finish Books

Ali discusses a critical mindset shift about not treating books as sacred objects that must be completed. He previously felt obligated to finish every book before moving to the next one, even when bored. He shares the common example of people struggling with 'Sapiens' for 18 months, feeling guilty every time they try to read. The solution is simply closing or deleting the book and reading something else instead. Ali advocates treating books more like blog posts - if you don't finish a blog post, there's no shame, and the same should apply to books.

Tip 3: Don't Feel Obligated to Read Classics

This section addresses the misconception that reading should focus on literary classics like Charles Dickens or Jane Eyre. Ali questions who defines what makes a book 'good' and why English literature students' curriculum should dictate personal reading choices. For beginners who don't read consistently, he recommends starting with accessible fiction like Harry Potter or fantasy books that make you want to turn the page, rather than difficult classics from bygone eras. Once the reading habit is established, readers can explore more challenging literature. Ali shares his recent enjoyment of the 'Psy-Changeling' series - 16 books in the paranormal romance genre he describes as 'absolute trash' but fun and engaging, reading without guilt because he genuinely enjoys them.

Tip 4: Skimming Books is Acceptable

Ali introduces the concept of two reading modes from a podcast: reading for enjoyment versus reading for information or inspiration. For fiction (enjoyment), he doesn't highlight passages or take notes, and he's comfortable skipping long descriptions if he understands the story. For nonfiction (information), he uses completely different tactics including actively looking for content to highlight on Kindle, reviewing the table of contents first, and jumping to sections that interest him. If sections are boring, he flicks through pages to see if content improves, and if not, he closes the book without guilt. This approach treats books exactly like articles or blog posts, with no shame in skimming or not finishing.

Tip 5: Build Reading into Daily Routine

This is described as the most important tip after getting a Kindle. Ali details his specific nighttime routine: brushing teeth, getting into bed, asking Alexa to set lights to 'Relax' mode at 10% brightness, and placing his phone across the room with an alarm set for 6:30 AM. This setup leaves only two options in bed - sleep or read on Kindle. He's maintained this routine for five to six years, reading every night until his eyes close from tiredness. This consistent habit makes finishing one book per week easy, as he reads at least 20-30 minutes daily. Particularly gripping books like 'Bad Blood,' 'Shoe Dog,' and 'The Third Door' have kept him reading until 2-3 AM without regret.

Tip 6: Use Audible for Additional Reading Time

Ali promotes Audible (which is sponsoring the video, though he didn't know when filming) as enabling reading during activities like driving or exercising. He's used Audible for two years and considers it one of the best monthly subscriptions at $7.99. For audiobooks, he prefers fiction over nonfiction, as nonfiction is better on Kindle for highlighting and skimming, while fiction narrators are typically excellent. He's currently listening to the 'Wheel of Time' series at the gym. The video includes a promotional offer: 30-day free trial with one free audiobook and two Audible originals via audible.com/aliabdaal or texting 'Ali Abdaal' to 500 500.

Tip 7: Track Reading with Goodreads

Goodreads is recommended as the ultimate social network for books, with a library of every published book. It automatically integrates with Kindle - books being read appear in the 'currently reading' section, and completion prompts for ratings that sync to Goodreads. This creates a comprehensive library tracking every book read over time, with options to write reviews, read others' reviews, and follow recommendations. When Ali created his account 4-5 years ago, he spent a day adding every book he'd ever read and rating those he remembered. He now has over 300 books in his library, which has become a personal game - getting excited to add new books and mark finished ones, making reading more consistent and enjoyable.

Tip 8: Resurface Highlights with Readwise

Readwise is described as an incredible service that syncs with Amazon accounts and sends daily emails containing five random highlights from previously read Kindle books. This provides an effective way to resurface valuable content that was highlighted but might otherwise be forgotten. Before Readwise, Ali only occasionally browsed Kindle highlights when researching blog posts. Now daily emails remind him of quotes from books like 'Happy' by Derren Brown or 'Tools of Titans' by Tim Ferriss that apply to current situations. Readwise also syncs all highlights to Evernote, making them searchable - for example, searching 'productivity' finds relevant quotes across hundreds of books. With approximately 2,000 highlights across hundreds of books, plus integration with Instapaper for article highlights, Readwise becomes the ultimate 'second brain' system where anything highlighted is searchable and accessible whenever needed.

Conclusion and Recap

Ali summarizes the eight key points, emphasizing the two most important: getting a Kindle and building reading into a nighttime routine. He reiterates that it's acceptable to not finish books, to skim content, and to avoid classics, reminding viewers that reading should be enjoyable rather than a chore like English lessons. The conclusion includes recommendations to watch related videos about books that changed his life and fantasy book recommendations available on Audible. He signs off by directing viewers to a playlist of recommended reading content on his channel.

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