read over and over.

read over and over.


Reading is sweet. And reading over and over is sometimes even sweeter.


Reading over and over can only be immersed in those who have little to immerse themselves in.


"At my age, I don't read anymore. I just read it again."


As can be seen from the words of Roay Collar, in fact, reading over and over is a pleasure for adults. However, it is necessary to convince them that it is not only allowed to certain people, but also to provide pleasure and benefit to all ages.



There are many reasons to re-read, but I want to mention three.



To understand better, we read again. I especially reread philosophers, moralists, and thinkers for this reason, and there is nothing wrong with that. Rather, there are writers who need to read it again with this intention, and there are writers who need to read it again because it deserves to be read for that purpose. To be sure, there are some passages that you cannot understand until you read them over and over again. It is only after reading it twenty times that we find the passages as if they should have been, and only then can we grasp the passages for the first time. Finding such a discovery is a pleasure, so we are grateful and at the same time complaining that we didn't do it sooner. This is shameful if it's shameful, but it's a very healthy practice. I understand the author better when I read it again than when I read it for the first time. If you get into the habit of being a little skeptical and try not to read only what you want to project from a book, you can understand it better enough.


Rereading is not an unattractive read. Rather than that, it is a time when we can devote some time to correcting old misunderstandings. Also, the joy that comes from broadening the scope of understanding ignites a certain kind of fire deep in the mind, a certain heat that stimulates the imagination.



Reading over and over allows you to enjoy a style that reveals subtle differences. For the reader, the first reading is like an impromptu speech by the speaker. There is always a certain amount of passion, so no matter how good we are or how good we are at reading, we cannot suppress our impatience. He is impatient to find out what his universal ideas are for the philosopher and what the conclusion is for the novelist. Even if that impatience is very bad, no one can get rid of it completely.


Rereading allows us to judge the author we read the first time better, more clearly, and more precisely. Reading over and over teaches you how to read.



Finally, we reread to compare ourselves with some degree of conscious awareness. When we reach a certain age, we very often ask ourselves, 'How did the book that I fell in love with affect me?' Revisiting places you've been before, friends you've made before, books you've read a long time ago is the so-called passion of downfall. But this is nothing other than comparing yourself to yourself. It checks to see if we can still feel as we used to, and whether it is the same as before.


Among the novels that I read so deeply at the age of twenty, there are not many books that I will enjoy in my forties. To some extent, those books should be read again for that reason. We have to reread ourselves to reread ourselves, to realize ourselves, to analyze ourselves and to know ourselves by comparison, and to know what we have lost.



Through re-reading, we draw a picture of life's ups and downs on an intellectual and spiritual level.


Everything is part of the events that happen in our lives, and the causes are also in our lives. So, to read again means to live again.

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