Wednesday, January 24, 2018

The Well-Laid Plans of a Mood Reader

I talked last month about how being a mood reader sometimes gets in the way of my overall intentions for my reading. So in 2018 I'm starting my reading year with a plan! 

First I've identified the things that are important to me in my reading life:

Reading diversely
Supporting the library
Disrupting choice paralysis
Abandoning fewer books

In support of these things I value, I've laid out a few goals:

Read with intent.
I will always be a mood reader, and it will never work to try to force myself not to be. So I will still allow myself to choose a good deal of my reads by snatching up the thing that feels right for the moment. But I've set myself several goals of intent that should help me read more diversely: 

*Read at least ten books by authors of color
*Read at least ten books by LGBTQIA authors
*Read at least three poetry collections
*Read at least three books in translation
*Read at least four nonfiction books that are not memoirs

Read from my shelves.
I have so many books I haven't read. (So many.) And literally hundreds  of them are books I really, really want to read. Thing is, there will always be more books being published that I also really, really want to read. I will never get to read them all. So I'm aiming to ignore FOMO this year and concentrate on the books already in my possession. To that end, my goal is to:

*Read at least ten books I've been meaning to read (from my TBR)

For both of these first goals, I have made a list of possibilities from my own shelves to fit the goals. The lists are diverse in genre, so hopefully having something to turn to with lots of choices for lots of moods will help me choose a book to fill a goal based on my mood. (Geniuuuus.)


Buy Fewer Books
The best way to get myself to read the books I already have is to make that my only choice. However, I know from experience that  nothing short of true financial disaster or a complete denial of access to bookstores could keep me on a true book-buying-ban. So I'm shooting for a modified one:

*1-3 books purchased per month, the majority of which should not be impulse buys (that is, they should be books I know about, have read about, have been anticipating, maybe even that I've read a sample of online)
*1-2 books from Book of the Month club per month, with judicious use of the ability to skip months
*Purchase up to two sequels per month, provided that I am ready to read them  
*Whatever the distribution of books through allowances above, total number of books bought in any month from all sources may not exceed five
*Exceptions can be made for special occasions (e.g. a vacation which features a trip to a special bookstore) 
*Autobuys will not count, up to five autobuys for the year 

That works out to up to five books a month, or up to 60 books for the year (with the possibility of a handful of "extras"). That may not seem like much of a ban, but compared to recent years, it would be a massive improvement. Unfortunately, so far this modified ban is going... poorly. I gave myself permission to hold off on the ban until after I had spent some of my Christmas gift money. And, well, oops? Ban starts *now*. You! Yes, you. In the bathrobe reading this from behind a cup of tea an hour after you should have gone to bed. Hold me to it, okay? TY.

In support of buying fewer books, I plan to:

*Use the library as a treat rather than the bookstore

I often treat myself to half an hour in the bookstore after a hard day or after accomplishing something that was a challenge. I won't completely deny myself this pleasure, but I'm planning on using the library for this purpose more. When I inevitably walk out of the library with a stack of books, I can take them back again no harm done instead of desperately trying to find shelf space for them and kicking myself for bringing even more reading choices into the house.

Choose Reads from Small Piles
I get paralyzed by too much choice super easily. I look at my bookshelves and find so many things I would like to read that suddenly I don't want to read any of them. Buying fewer books should help stem this problem for me, but I'm also implementing a new plan to choose my next reads from a small group. For example, if I'm in the mood for a romance, I will pick five romances from my shelf and choose from those alone. Or if I'm not in any particular kind of mood, I'll just grab five books at random from which to choose. Or choose from among the ten books I purchased most recently. Or choose any one book from any one shelf. Or make use of my LibraryThing catalogue where I have things extensively tagged. (Dataaaa).

If I can pull off all these individual goals, I think abandoning fewer books will just happen on its own, as I'm quite sure that is primarily a function of reading aimlesssly and choice paralysis.

So there it is. The Plan. May it survive longer than any of the other reading plans I have ever devised. *pets plan*

How about you? Do you have a reading plan for 2018?

4 comments:

  1. I keep waffling on setting a "Number of Books to Read" goal for the year. I mean, challenge is good, but I do not need another thing that feels like work. For such a big part of my life, reading and work--and joy, of course--have been one giant inextricable knot, and I have no idea if a big numerical goal will help or hurt. Mostly, I just need to ditch the auto-scrolling of social media and pick up books in my stray minutes. There's a plan I can work with.

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  2. YES to reading instead of aimlessly scrolling. This is a big piece of my plan for 2018 generally (it's really more about not spending so much time on social media than getting in more reading. the more reading will be the cake. icing. whatever).

    I try not to set number goals (except sometimes if we're rolling into the last quarter of the year and I'm trying to motivate myself to read more) except that I have a standing goal of 60 books per year of books that are mostly words (that is, not graphic novels etc) and which I read with my eyeballs (that is, not on audio). This is a less a *goal* and more the number I know from long experience represents "enough" reading to equal sufficient self-care of the sort I get from the act of reading. Less than that means I will start getting out of sorts.

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  3. And so you padded your January numbers with illustrated kiddo books WHY? *snickers at you*

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