JOHANNA READS
M: Daily reading practice
J: First thing in the morning: emails, fb, messages on my phone. During the day: things one the internet related to my practice; articles that I find intetresting; readings for seminar; readings for my practice- hard time-wise; I find it difficult to find good sources.
I also read my own writing, multiple books at the same time; non-fiction, theory books, about life balance; talking about buddism, spiritual things. I try not to work at home, then the things I read are mostly leasure books. But actually most of the books feed into my practise; a book about “flow” in general; what interests me in my practis is also what occupies me in life.
I also love biographies.
M: Why?
J: It’s inspiring and tranquilizes me. I get really inspired of human quality of people. I like to find the human, tangible qualities of big personalities in biographies; it brings them closer as humans, and not as figures. It creates relationship between me and characters.
M: relationship with characters?
J: I engage a lot with characters. They give me points of inspirations for my own life. Fiction gives you possibility of entering into a parallel reality. In everyday life we trnd to repeat ourselves. Other people do things differently, and reading fiction gives you access to this different approaches to life: to think about life in a different way. Fiction as a tool to reshaping and redefining the way you do your own thing.
M: Do you enjoy reading out laud?
J: No. The only thing is passages from my own writing.
M: Is reading a social activity?
J: yes. My mum used to read a lot. Sitting and reading in common space. Read together but not out laud. Being silent together, nice moment. A bonding quality.
M: Do you keep things for yourself or share?
J: I keep thing for myself.
M: What is the difference between reading things on screen and on paper?
J: Less concentrated; “short”; long passages also allow short thoughts. This is probably distructions. But also reading allows for thinking (alongside with reading)
M: In childhood
J: I wasn’t reading so much. I started when I was 15. I was interested in other stuff. How would you pick a book?
How do you pick books?
During lectures; mentioned by people; recommendations by amazon; exchange with people; I’d like to have access to online library: “social antrophology”, “plants” and then you have books linked to the subjects.
M: Do you think a reading practise is a must?
J: No. I don’t think it’s necessary. They can do their thing also without reading. Some people don’t want to engage, they are interested on their thing, it doesn’t have to be a text. Living somewhere can be as worth wile; based on expertise, living-experience. There are also loads of things that are not written down; you can learn them by doing them; reading is one of the formats of interaction between people.