I recently wrote an essay about my children’s desire to take a break from their regularly scheduled reading and pick up a picture book. In the middle of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, my 8-yr-old will read Bedtime for Bear or a Step Into Reading book. My 10-yr-old will put down his 600-page The Lost Hero and read The Adventures of Captain Underpants or an early chapter book.
I asked them why they do this. “It’s fun,” they said. But they read for fun every day. They love reading. And they certainly can read at a much higher level than these books.
My 8-yr-old explained that it was a different kind of fun.
“A brain break.”
He didn’t have to concentrate on the unfolding plot and could simply giggle at the antics of Mo Willems’ Elephant and Piggie.
Then I looked at the in-the-middle-of-reading / to-be-read pile next to my bed. Huh. I have Amy Tan and Gregory Maguire alongside a stack of YA novels and Patricia Wrede’s Dealing with Dragons (that would be a children’s book in case you were wondering). Also, Sense and Sensibility is hanging out right underneath Lauren Oliver’s Before I Fall.
Sometimes you need a break from thought-provoking literature, heart-wrenching memoirs, historical fiction, and textbooks. Sometimes you just want to grab a book, curl up with a cup of tea and let your mind wander into magical worlds filled with wonderful stories. And, when that happens, don’t let anything (or anyone) stop you from putting the kettle on and picking up Peter Pan, Dr. Seuss, or Winnie the Pooh.
Happy Reading!
Great idea the brain break. Not that I’m very good at these. I want a time swap, too. That’s where people who say, ‘I’m bored I don’t know what to do’ can let me have the time they can’t fill so I can use it on stuff I’m missing out on because I want to do too much.
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Oh, yes. Wasting time and/or “I’m bored”…fork over all that extra time to me. I need it.
Brain breaks are great. I need to take them more often — not just with reading. 😉
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How wonderful that your boys have the freedom to choose their own reading material, that they have the self awareness to assess their reasons for different choices, the ability to express their choices, and a Mum who provides them with opportunities to read material of their choosing. Sounds like a winning/reading situation for all! 🙂
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It’s nice. I wish adults had the same freedom. We YA/MG readers are often judged. I used to care. Then I grew up. 😉
It certainly is a winning/reading situation. And that is always a good thing!
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It’s interesting you say that you used to care, and then you grew up! Sometimes I find it’s the other way – you care more as an adult, the inner child cares less about impressions that one gives! I guess it depends how you look at it! 🙂
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I’m being my sarcastic little self. Sort of. I was referring to the fact that I used to care (as a grown-up) then I got older and didn’t care so much. Agreed that, as a child, you don’t care as much. Until, of course, you reach that age. Whatever that is for each kid. Usually 10-13. Yikes.
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I so totally follow that!!!!! 🙂
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Love it! Makes me think of flash fiction as a brain break from writing longer prose or the daily grind of blogging/freelancing/work. 😀
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Never even thought of this. Yes! That is so true. I absolutely love writing flash — never thought of it as a brain break. Well, it’s not a brain break for me (I put WAY too much thought into every single word) but it’s a fun break from boring admin. stuff and freelance research, submissions, etc.
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I do that from time to time. I like to try new authors, especially bloggers I follow. But sometimes, I just need a little bit of Jim Butcher or Christopher Moore to bring that excitement back. Not that the other books are bad, it’s just nice to pick up something with characters you’re familiar with.
Happy reading!
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Exactly. I read whatever I’m in the mood to read. If I haven’t slept well for three nights, I can’t read Jane Austen. I just can’t.
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