All bookish, writerish types will attest, there’s nothing more we love to do than cram down your throat the fact that we LOVE TO READ. Love it. Reading is like oxygen to us. I mean, whilst I’m not entirely convinced that a writer’s love of reading isn’t some kind of self-flagellation/ competitive comparison to our peers; the fact remains.
We. Love. To. Read.
And yet, in a schedule that still allows for a bath every Sunday and at least an hour wandering aimlessly around a Westfield wondering how they make Lush soap look so edible, I do not actively carve out any time to read.
I mean, I read Facebook. I read Instagram captions. I read emails, I read the news pieces for work, and I read fixer listicles like How To Reduce Your Blackheads Using Coconut Oil, but I don’t read books. And, as someone who is a life-long reader and literary lover, this really sucks.
My childhood was spent in the world of books.
Yes, I mean that my mind was skipping gleefully around the fictional worlds of Judy Blume and Enid Blyton; but I also mean quite literally in that I would sit among piles of books. I was a hungry and voracious reader who thundered through book after book, my wild imagination always craving more. As I grew older and begun writing myself, the craftsmanship of writers like Nick Cave and Murakami would have me grinning wryly as I marvelled at their talent.
And then, at a point I cannot quite remember, but know without question must exist, I stopped.
Why?
Well for starters, I have forgotten how to relax.