A love of reading can protect your brain from Alzheimer’s disease, slash stress levels, encourage positive thinking, and fortify friendships.
Here’s how your brain and body benefit when you crack open a book.
1. Reading gives muscle to your memory
Reading gives your brain a different kind of workout than watching TV or listening to the radio.
Whether you’re absorbed in a page-turner or simply scanning an instruction manual for your coffee maker, “parts of the brain that have evolved for other functions—such as vision, language, and associative learning—connect in a specific neural circuit for reading, which is very challenging.” Ken Pugh, PhD, president and director of research of Haskins Laboratories, told Oprah magazine.
The habit spurs your brain to think and concentrate.
2. Reading gives your workout more staying power
Like the latest single from Lady Gaga or Real Housewives episode, books are also good company during a workout.
A suck-you-in plot may keep you on an exercise machine longer to finish a captivating chapter, according to Weight Watchers magazine.
Michele Olson, Ph.D., professor of exercise physiology at Auburn University, told the magazine that in order to avoid neck or shoulder pain, readers should use the machine’s book ledge and try not to round their shoulders while working out.
3. Reading keeps your brain young
Digging into a good book can literally take years off your mind, according to a recent study from Rush University Medical Center as reported by Prevention.
4. Reading can melt away stress
5. Reading boosts your vocabulary
Even if it’s been decades since you had to worry about the SATs, You can still use books to expand your mental dictionary. According to a Scholastic report, researchers estimate that we learn five to fifteen percent of all the words we know through reading.
6. Reading improves empathy
Stories provide life-changing perspective, say York University researchers.
Getting wrapped up in the lives of characters strengthens your ability to understand others’ feelings. Seeing the world through the eyes of Jane Eyre, for example, may make it easier for you to relate to your sister-in-law’s viewpoint.
Also published on Medium.