Does 20 Minutes of Deep Reading Worth More Than 2 Hours of Scrolling

@aljif7 · 2025-11-03 12:56 · Ecency

Aljif7's Blog Sunday 2 November, 2025 AREA: Creativity

Reflecting about the process of reading

Screenshot%202025-11-03%20at%208.16.03%E2%80%AFPM.png (Image generated with AI)

A while ago, I read an interesting article about the recommended minimum reading time and the benefits of improving concentration and focus.

Many people may think they’re “achieving” this requirement simply because they spend two or three hours “connected.” After all: "If I spend hours reading on my phone, am I not ‘reading’ just as much as if I opened a book?"
Well, the short answer is: An emphatic NO.
It’s not the same to read as it is to consume fragments.
And pay close attention to this distinction:
The difference lies in how you pay attention, not in how long your eyes remain over words.

Sustained attention: that’s the mental muscle social media does not train.

Think about what happens when you read a book or an article.
When you read structured text—whether it's a novel or a well-developed piece on personal finance—your brain enters a state of sustained attention.
Among the cognitive skills you develop are:

  • Following a logical or narrative thread.
  • Connecting ideas across paragraphs.
  • Pausing (even mentally) to reflect, question, or imagine consequences.

This active effort is what strengthens your concentration, memory, and ability to think clearly.

Fragmented attention:
This is what we experience when swiping through our screens—a kind of reading that ultimately leaves a void, reading… without retention. The mind gets used to rapid topic shifts, which reduces its capacity for deep focus and comprehension. Therefore, if we're more critical, social media is weakening our brain's mental muscles.

Imagine right now how you interact with your devices:
You swipe your thumb and see a mini-post: "5 Investing Mistakes."

Two minutes later: "How to Get Out of Debt in 30 Days."

Then: "This Millionaire Spends Only $5 a Day."

Each one seems useful… but they’re disconnected, designed to make an impact in seconds—not to build understanding.

Your attention jumps from headline to headline, never deepening, never questioning sources, never integrating knowledge.

The result? You feel like you’ve learned something, but you remember almost nothing and apply even less.

📚 Does It Matter If It’s Fiction or Finance?

It’s not so much about the topic, but rather the format.
- A well-written essay on budgeting requires you to follow reasoning, evaluate arguments, and apply concepts to your life.
- On the other hand, a novel asks you to hold characters, emotions, and plots in your mind across pages.

Both train deep attention.
In contrast, even if the topic is identical (e.g., "investing"), an Instagram carousel or a tweet gives you no space to think—it hands you a ready-made conclusion, without process.

💡 The key difference between reading a book or article lies in how you read it.

Reading 20 minutes a day of a single text—literary, financial, philosophical—is not a luxury. It’s daily mental training in a world that rewards distraction.

If you truly want to understand your finances (or any subject), you actually need more than quick tips. You need time, attention, and depth.
And that isn’t achieved by scrolling through screens… it’s achieved by stopping.

And that's all for now my friends! Thank you for Stopping!

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