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Leonard Pitts Jr

Decent Essays

Take the Time to Read a Book
Leonard Pitts, Jr. says, "I am not alone.” He continues, “There are at least two of us who have forgotten how to read." He doesn't mean that people have forgotten how to read; rather people have forgotten how to become one with the text. There is more than one person who feels that concentration becomes blurred when the text in front of one requires full attention. Short ads and topics one finds interesting are usually easier to read than intellectual books that are imposed on one. It's a little funny, isn’t it?
I liked this article because I identify myself with it. I often begin reading a paragraph and my brain begins to move away from what my eyes are reading. The problem is that I don't realize it until I get to the end of the page. Like Pitts, I have found myself drifting away or unable to sit down to read material that my job requires me to study and discuss.
I agree with Nicholas Carr's theory, "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" Carr argues that search engines, blogs, hyperlinks, etc. dump more information that one can possibly read. I agree with that, and I think …show more content…

I remember that when I was a child I had to go to the library and spend countless hours searching for the right book. Nowadays, I usually Google for a narrowed list of books on the topic I need to find. I don't think I will stop using Google, at this point I think I’d be a fool not to use it. However, I want to achieve the same results Pitts did when he read a paper book titled "What happened," by Scott McClellan. Pitts says, "It wasn't until somewhere around the third hour that I began to unclench." He is referring to the time when he put himself on a chair that would keep him from distractions. He achieved, once again, submerging in the text. I shall find an uncomfortable chair, turn my phone off, get to that third hour and continue reading

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