Nov 11, 2022·edited Nov 11, 2022Liked by Daniel Svizeny
I'm reading a used non-fiction right now and the previous owner and I only seem to overlap about 40% of the time on what we find insightful. I'm making such slow progress because I end up tracking back, assuming I'm missing something, and re-read passages that just don't seem to be that important. It's like trying to reading with someone else tracing their finger along the words.
Though Donna's Sunday, no Saturday, no Sunday mind seems a far more daunting pool to jump into.
it's impossible not to get thrown off. I usually end up caring more about sentences that are underlined, even if I know that the intent has nothing to do with me.
Imagine writing "Sunday, no Saturday, no Sunday" out on paper.
I'm reading a used non-fiction right now and the previous owner and I only seem to overlap about 40% of the time on what we find insightful. I'm making such slow progress because I end up tracking back, assuming I'm missing something, and re-read passages that just don't seem to be that important. It's like trying to reading with someone else tracing their finger along the words.
Though Donna's Sunday, no Saturday, no Sunday mind seems a far more daunting pool to jump into.
it's impossible not to get thrown off. I usually end up caring more about sentences that are underlined, even if I know that the intent has nothing to do with me.
Imagine writing "Sunday, no Saturday, no Sunday" out on paper.