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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/profile/blog/beholden/day/6-20-2020
Rated: 13+ · Book · Experience · #2223922
A tentative blog to test the temperature.
Ten years ago I was writing several blogs on various subjects - F1 motor racing, Music, Classic Cars, Great Romances and, most crushingly, a personal journal that included my thoughts on America, memories of England and Africa, opinion, humour, writing and anything else that occurred. It all became too much (I was attempting to update the journal every day) and I collapsed, exhausted and thoroughly disillusioned in the end.

So this blog is indeed a Toe in the Water, a place to document my thoughts in and on WdC but with a determination not to get sucked into the blog whirlpool ever again. Here's hoping.


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June 20, 2020 at 10:49am
June 20, 2020 at 10:49am
#986068
Jethro Tull and the Great God Literacy

Suddenly everyone wants to know what I have been reading, am reading and am going to read. I dodged the question yesterday by pointing at a book that I re-read to assist in completing a WdC Challenge and another that I am going to re-read for an upcoming Challenge. But the truth is really that I read everything.

Every day we are presented with myriads of short exhortations, advertisements and snippets of writing on the things around us. Can you resist reading them? I certainly can’t. The reading urge seizes on the most mundane piece of text, even when we know what it’s going to say, and begins to read. It is a compulsion that accompanies the ability to read. As soon as we can read with a little fluency, our eyes know what to do with text and our minds take the controls to make us read, like it or not.

I was going to wax lyrical on the stolen hours sat on the great white throne, reading anything we can reach, but I’ll spare you that. Just the mention of it should make you realise that I’m right. We read and read and read, even if we’ve never read a book in our lives. It is like oxygen to the ability to read and very few of us retain the ability to breathe in the vacuum of illiteracy.

And that is a heck of a thought (no, I don’t swear when it’s not necessary - I told you I’m a dinosaur). If I may mangle Ian Anderson a little, “Our wise men don’t know how it feels to be illiterate.” That’s the thing about literacy, you see. Once we’ve got it, we can’t imagine not having it. And it would take quite a clout on the head to get rid of it. Even that would only work in one case in a hundred, I’d guess.

It’s a question that exposes the infinite gamble that is life - “What are you reading this weekend?”



Word Count: 333



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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/profile/blog/beholden/day/6-20-2020