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If you don't like it after 100 pages, move on to something else, unless it's something that you feel like you have to read," Jenna says. Have a running list of books to read next.
Filmmaker Matt D'Avella is a self-avowed self-help addict, and has read over 100 books which purport to make readers happier, healthier and more successful, from The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle ...
“For instance, if you want to get more steps, start with a five-minute walk around the block every day. Be consistent with that for a week, then make it a 10-minute walk the next week, and so on.”
The application of his mantra-like conscious autosuggestion, "Every day, in every way, I'm getting better and better" (French: Tous les jours à tous points de vue je vais de mieux en mieux) is called Couéism or the Coué method. [14] Some American newspapers quoted it differently, "Day by day, in every way, I'm getting better and better."
The Design of Everyday Things is a best-selling [1] book by cognitive scientist and usability engineer Donald Norman. Originally published in 1988 with the title The Psychology of Everyday Things, it is often referred to by the initialisms POET and DOET. A new preface was added in 2002 and a revised and expanded edition was published in 2013. [2]
From reading Rudyard Kipling, Hemingway absorbed the practice of shortening prose as much as it could take. Of the concept of omission, Hemingway wrote in "The Art of the Short Story": "You could omit anything if you knew that you omitted and the omitted part would strengthen the story and make people feel something more than they understood."
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Extensive reading (ER) is the process of reading longer, easier texts for an extended period of time without a breakdown of comprehension, feeling overwhelmed, ...