Struggling to get through that book on your shelf? Forget "just starting" and try these simple, guilt-free tricks—like the five-minute bet and habit stacking—to build a reading routine that actually sticks.
That book isn't going to read itself. We both know it. And yet, there it sits.
Maybe it's a classic you feel you should have read by now. Maybe it's a dense non-fiction book that promises to make you smarter. Or maybe it's a fantasy novel a friend swore would change your life. The cover gathers dust. You feel a little guilty every time you see it.
The usual advice is useless. "Just start!" they say. Thanks.
Let's try something that actually works.
Forget the whole book. Forget the chapter. Just read for five minutes.
Set a timer. Open the book. Start reading.
When the timer goes off, you can stop. For real. Put it down and go back to scrolling if you want.
But starting is the hardest part. Once you're five minutes in, the story has its hooks in you or the argument starts to click. You'll probably keep going.
The trick is giving yourself a real, guilt-free out. You're not signing up for a three-hour marathon, just a five-minute bet with yourself.
Your phone is your book's biggest enemy. It's designed to be more interesting than a dusty copy of War and Peace.
So don't make them compete.
When you read, put your phone in another room. Not on silent. Not face down. In. Another. Room. The effort of having to get up and walk across the house to check a notification is usually enough to keep you from doing it.
I once tried to read Dune with my phone on the kitchen counter. I got up to "get a glass of water" but was really just going to check my email. I saw the keys to my old 2011 Honda Civic sitting there and seriously thought about just driving somewhere—anywhere—instead of finishing the chapter. The pull is that strong. Create some distance.
Starting a new habit from scratch is hard. It has no foundation.
Instead, attach it to something you already do every day. This is called habit stacking.
The old habit becomes the trigger for the new one. Coffee maker starts gurgling? Time to read. The decision is already made.
You don't have to read "important" books.
Seriously. The goal isn't to impress anyone, it's to build a reading habit. If that means starting with a cheesy thriller or a graphic novel, do it.
Reading for fun rewires your brain to see books as a reward, not a chore. Once you have a solid streak going with books you love, you can mix in the denser stuff. But if you start with the literary equivalent of eating your vegetables, you'll never stick around for dessert.
Track the daily act, not just the books you finish. Seeing a streak build up creates its own momentum. An app like Trider can help visualize that consistency, and seeing an unbroken chain of checkmarks is a powerful motivator. Don't break the chain.
Studying is a skill, not a talent you're born with. Learn to ditch the all-nighters and find a study rhythm that actually works for you.
The study habits that got you through middle school won't work in ninth grade. It's time to ditch cramming and learn smarter techniques like spaced repetition and active recall to handle the workload without burning out.
Stop looking for the perfect study schedule and build one that actually works. This system prioritizes your hardest subjects during your peak brain time and uses active recall to train your memory, not just recognize words.
Stop studying harder and start studying smarter. Ditch the all-night cram sessions for proven techniques that help you learn more in less time and actually retain information.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
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