Frankly speaking, to answer such a question, you can only have a definite answer after practicing it yourself, so I plan to start a new reading plan in the next 365 days: every two days A book in the sky. Using simple mathematical knowledge, I extracted several key words of this reading plan: 365 days (2016.6.12~2017.6.11), 183 books (rounded), and one book every two days. The implementation of this reading plan will be updated and synchronized in real time in WeChat Moments and Douban. For each book read, reading notes and summaries will be made as much as possible and compiled and posted on Douban or Douban.
Why did you think of doing such a reading plan? (Or what is the significance of such a reading plan)
1. Find a project that challenges yourself and execute it for a long time. To be honest, before formulating this reading plan, I didn’t know how long I could stick to it, so I added a deadline to this plan: 1 year. At least, in the next year, every day in your life, in addition to your daily work life, there will be one thing that has always occupied your thinking point, something you look forward to and look forward to every day; just like playing Just like games, every time you pass a level, there will always be the next level waiting for you. The same is true for reading. After every book you read, there will be the next book waiting for you to read. Think about it, it should be a Quite interesting thing.
2. Expectation of unknown changes. I watched a movie "Julie and Julia" two days ago. The protagonist of the movie, Julie Powell, is thirty years old. She lives in a shabby apartment in Queens, New York, and works a boring job as an operator. Work. She needs to find something new to change her monotonous life. To this end, she started a food project called "Julie and Julia", in which she needs to make a recipe book that she unexpectedly received from her mother in the next 365 days--- - 524 dishes in "Mastering the Art of French Cuisine" by the famous American female chef Julia Child. In the next year, Julie successfully completed the original plan: making 524 dishes in 365 days. Her life was slowly changed because of this project.
Our daily lives are generally similar, going to work, getting off work, working and living. But those things that can truly make us feel happy and joyful are always hidden in our daily lives, and we need to create, experience, and discover by ourselves. As long as you look carefully, there will always be some differences in those seemingly repetitive daily lives. It is the little differences every day that slowly build our happiness. In life, there are many 365-day plans like Julie’s. For example, watch a movie every day for 365 days, write a thousand-word essay every day for 365 days, take a photo every day for 365 days... As long as you really do it and persist, you will always see some different changes, and Eventually these changes will slowly affect your life. I look forward to what changes this reading plan will bring in my future life.
3. Guarantee of high-density input within a specific time. Sister Xiaosha once said a bad saying: Either study or travel, body and soul must always be on the road. I have a running plan. It started on April 12th, and today is the 57th day. I have run 57 times, with a total of 403 kilometers, and an average of 7.07 kilometers per day. Among them, 99 kilometers were run in April, 233 kilometers in May, and 77.1 kilometers so far in June. In daily life, running every day ensures that you have a good body to face every day's work and life. From the beginning, I had a strong mental struggle every day whether to go running, but now slowly running has become a habit in my life, bringing a lot of happiness. In this era of rapid updating and iteration of knowledge, reading may be the lowest-cost way to grow yourself compared to participating in various courses and activities. And the many living examples I see in my daily life also make me have more expectations for doing one thing at a high density at a specific time. For example: Denny, the founder of Lechun Yogurt, once participated in a 10-day meditation course. During these ten days, all students were forced to completely disconnect from mobile phones, computers, signals, the Internet and modern society. For days, I got up at 4 a.m. every morning, did not eat after lunch, and prohibited any communication with words, gestures, or eyes for ten consecutive days. 10 hours of meditation every day make up the entire life. Another example is that I re-read Haruki Murakami's "What Do I Talk About When I Talk About Running" in the past two days. In the book, the author talked about his experience of participating in an ultramarathon: In eleven hours and forty-two minutes, Completed 100 kilometers. If you think about it, doing one thing in such a high-density concentration is itself an experience of special significance. It will leave a deep imprint on your life and be remembered for a long time.