Hey /lit/, I've been having an extremely difficult time finishing one book before starting another. I always discover a new topic I'm interested in, and books on other subjects that I've been reading become boring. Anyone else experience this issue? Any advice ?
Contrary to popular belief, we have ADD now because was are TOO intelligent, compared to people of the past. We understand and form concepts way quicker than previous generations. We get bored easily because we can piece concepts together with ease, whereas older writers needed pages and pages to say what we can articulate and understand in only a few sentences.
Bamp
>>9630832
exert will, faggot. just fucking do it. finish a book. aint gonna kill you.
I have ADD and find myself trying to read 5 books at once all the goddam time. Keep one nonfic on deck, an easy novel and a hard one, and read a chapter of each in one sitting. Its fucking great.
>>9630836
If this is what you actually believe, your problems go way beyond just ADD.
>>9630832
Does this book help?
>>9631466
>Keep one nonfic on deck, an easy novel and a hard one
I should probably try this. I'm used to having one nonfic and one fictional novel in the works at once but right now I'm in a situation where I'm enjoying both, but the novel is 1100 pages of small text and long sentences. Sometimes I just don't feel up to it so I watch a movie instead or something, having a lighter read would be great.
>>9630832
Why did you post that reddit ass image? That's even what ADD is like, you dumb fuck.
>>9631466
Some of my friends did this with massive note dropping but I simply can't, my reading time usually around 4 to 5 hours, break when I want to pick a new album to play until I found it's already midnight and deadlines are coming