10 Rules to Read More Books
Most people blame lack of time for not reading, yet spend hours scrolling social media. The gap between wanting to read and actually reading isn't about willpower or intelligence — it's about design: how you arrange your physical space, digital environment, and daily habits. This video presents ten rules that challenge conventional wisdom about reading, from abandoning prestige books to listening at double speed. Can small environmental tweaks and identity shifts really transform non-readers into people who consume dozens of books a year?
Puntos clave
Physical and digital environment design eliminates the need for willpower: charging your phone outside the bedroom and placing the Kindle app first on your home screen makes reading the path of least resistance.
Reading multiple books simultaneously and abandoning books you don't enjoy removes the school-imposed guilt that kills the reading habit before it starts.
Audiobooks during menial tasks create 30–60 minutes of daily reading time from thin air, while faster playback speeds (1.5–2.5×) don't reduce comprehension and make slow sections more engaging.
Reading «trashy» page-turners builds the habit and skill of reading far more effectively than forcing yourself through prestige literature you find boring.
The identity shift from «I'm not a reader» to «I am a reader» fundamentally changes behavior in moments of downtime, making reading automatic rather than aspirational.
En resumen
Reading more isn't about finding time or forcing yourself through classics — it's about designing your environment to make reading the default, giving yourself permission to read what you love, and treating yourself as a reader from day one.
The Pillow Rule: Engineering Your Bedroom for Reading
Charge your phone outside the bedroom; keep only a Kindle by your bed.
The single most impactful habit change is what Ali calls the pillow rule: always have a Kindle or book on your bedside table, and always charge your phone outside your bedroom. When it's time for bed, the only device within reach is something to read. This eliminates the temptation to scroll Instagram, TikTok, or YouTube in those crucial minutes before sleep.
This rule is fundamentally about physical environment design. When you design your environment to nudge you toward desired habits and away from undesired ones, you remove the need for willpower. Ali personally prefers a Kindle because the built-in light eliminates the need for a reading lamp, and the device offers none of the distractions of a smartphone.
For Ali, this single rule has been the most meaningful change in terms of annual book count. It transforms the pre-sleep period from a time of infinite digital distraction into a focused reading window that compounds night after night.
Digital Environment Design
The Multitasking Rule: Turning Dead Time into Reading Time
Listen to audiobooks whenever your hands are busy but your mind is free.
Most people claim they don't have time to read because they imagine reading requires an hour of uninterrupted time in a leather armchair. The multitasking rule solves this: whenever your hands are busy with menial tasks — washing dishes, commuting, doing laundry, waiting in line — have AirPods in and listen to an audiobook.
Ali emphasizes this doesn't mean you should always fill your ears with content. There's value in mindfully washing dishes or taking a silent walk. But if your goal is to read more books, audiobooks during routine tasks create 30 to 60 minutes of daily reading time from thin air. When Ali commuted two hours daily to the hospital, he consumed dozens of books at 1.5 to 2.5× speed, including business books, personal development, and fantasy fiction by Brandon Sanderson.
This rule transforms time that was either silent or filled with background music into focused learning and entertainment. The return on investment is enormous: replacing YouTube background noise while doing chores with audiobooks compounds into dozens of additional books per year.
Key Numbers: The Reading Time Hidden in Your Day
Small pockets of time add up to massive reading volume.
The Freedom to Abandon and Diversify
Read multiple books at once and quit any book that bores you.
Naval's Wisdom on Building the Reading Habit
Read page-turners first, prestige books later.
“Read what you love until you love to read.”
The Trashy Book Strategy
Page-turners build the habit; classics can wait until you love reading.
The Trashy Book Strategy
Many readers struggle because they force themselves to read «smart» books or classics that feel like work. Naval's advice is revolutionary: read trashy holiday fiction, romantasy, murder mysteries — anything that pulls you through the pages. Ali has read over a thousand books but still hasn't finished a Charles Dickens novel. Building the habit with engaging books trains your focus and attention. Once you love reading, you can tackle the prestige literature. Trying to start with the classics is like trying to bench 100 kg on your first gym visit — you'll just injure yourself and quit.
Advanced Reading Techniques
Gamify progress, speed up consumption, and impulse-buy recommendations.
Gamify with Goodreads Track every book on Goodreads. Sync with Kindle for automatic logging. Rate and review books. Seeing your stats and ranking creates a gentle game that makes reading feel rewarding without obsessing over quantity.
Train Your Speed Listen to audiobooks at 1.5–2.5× speed. Read faster by eliminating sub-vocalization. Speed doesn't reduce comprehension with practice, and it makes slow sections more enjoyable. There's no nobility in reading slowly.
Impulse Buy Every Recommendation When someone recommends a book, buy it immediately on Kindle or Audible. Don't create friction at the point of acquisition. Ali discovered life-changing books two years after impulse-buying them. The ROI is enormous.
Shift Your Identity Stop saying «I'm not a reader» or «I'm trying to read more.» Start saying «I am a reader.» This identity shift, inspired by James Clear's Atomic Habits, changes behavior in moments of downtime: readers pick up books, not phones.
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Glosario
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