Start by reading aloud at normal speed, but try to sound like a moron. Enunciate as badly as possible and drool if you can. The more lazy and incomprehensible your speech is the better. Then slowly start to speed up your new "moron" speech. Once you've learned to read really really fast like a moron, slowly stop making sounds. Start with just a word here and there, where you just stop your breeding so no sound escapes your throat. Gradually keep doing that until all that remains is the drooling. Good luck.
Subvocalisation is the aural imprint of your memory. Memories are stored in sensory imprints. Memereaders will convince you that it's "bad" but it's your brain absorbing what it reads.
Subvocalizing is better even if it is slower. You are finding more nuances in the words and by extension more depth from the text. Without it you are just a machine transmitting cold heartless information.
I've tried a few times and most of the time I had to read again because I was missing something. I accept my destiny as brainlet and slow reader. Would love to have the same enjoyment as reading slow but consuming books faster though.
Subvocalizing doesn’t make you slower. I can read 550 wpm and with that speed reading software I can read over 900 wpm while still hearing every word in my head. The logic is that subvocalizing forces you to read at talking speed but that is way above talking speed.
If your concern is that you will read less efficiently and therefore read fewer books in your lifetime because you subvocalise, my advice would be to stop posting about it and just read.
You will end up reading much more from the time saved by not posting/lurking in subvocalisation threads than you will from eliminiating subvocalisation.
I used to not subvocalise when I was a teenager and in my early 20s. After hardly reading anything for half a decade, I subvocalise entirely now for some reason. I cannot change it, and it doesn't greatly affect my reading speed so I wouldn't worry about it too much
lots of cope in here. in my experience, people who read as children don't subvocalize, and those who watched a lot of tv did. simple as.
I'm not talking about 'muh real reading' like some morons are undoubtedly going to try and force on their kids. I know one guy raised like that and you can see his lips move along with the words. percy jackson and shit, just mindless page turners that you can race through to get used to moving quickly.
maybe you can train this as an adult? pick up some brandon sanderson or something and just try to tear through it as fast as possible. skim the pages if you have to, just force yourself to read faster than you can vocalize. eventually you'll be able to do it with harder books.
A .45 auto to the right temple.
i mean to make someone read faster
hum
Start by reading aloud at normal speed, but try to sound like a moron. Enunciate as badly as possible and drool if you can. The more lazy and incomprehensible your speech is the better. Then slowly start to speed up your new "moron" speech. Once you've learned to read really really fast like a moron, slowly stop making sounds. Start with just a word here and there, where you just stop your breeding so no sound escapes your throat. Gradually keep doing that until all that remains is the drooling. Good luck.
through temple rather angled up through the mouth towards the middle/back of the skull
It's like you WANT to be a pant shitting vegetable for the rest of your days
rope boys wwa?
Subvocalisation is the aural imprint of your memory. Memories are stored in sensory imprints. Memereaders will convince you that it's "bad" but it's your brain absorbing what it reads.
Ok so I just did it. Instead of "hearing" the words in your mind, imagine an air horn instead.
Remove your throat.
Subvocalizing is better even if it is slower. You are finding more nuances in the words and by extension more depth from the text. Without it you are just a machine transmitting cold heartless information.
Wrong question. The right question:
"Do I eliminate subvocalization?"
And the answer:
No, because it's a good thing.
>subvocalization is good actually
Is this another one of your meme fad ?
I've tried a few times and most of the time I had to read again because I was missing something. I accept my destiny as brainlet and slow reader. Would love to have the same enjoyment as reading slow but consuming books faster though.
Subvocalizing doesn’t make you slower. I can read 550 wpm and with that speed reading software I can read over 900 wpm while still hearing every word in my head. The logic is that subvocalizing forces you to read at talking speed but that is way above talking speed.
Only npcs without a consciousness cannot subvocalize
If your concern is that you will read less efficiently and therefore read fewer books in your lifetime because you subvocalise, my advice would be to stop posting about it and just read.
You will end up reading much more from the time saved by not posting/lurking in subvocalisation threads than you will from eliminiating subvocalisation.
I used to not subvocalise when I was a teenager and in my early 20s. After hardly reading anything for half a decade, I subvocalise entirely now for some reason. I cannot change it, and it doesn't greatly affect my reading speed so I wouldn't worry about it too much
You don't have to get rid of it, but you do need to pay attention to visualization if you really want to understand and retain.
Speed reading is bullshit, don't waste your time on trying to learn it.
lots of cope in here. in my experience, people who read as children don't subvocalize, and those who watched a lot of tv did. simple as.
I'm not talking about 'muh real reading' like some morons are undoubtedly going to try and force on their kids. I know one guy raised like that and you can see his lips move along with the words. percy jackson and shit, just mindless page turners that you can race through to get used to moving quickly.
maybe you can train this as an adult? pick up some brandon sanderson or something and just try to tear through it as fast as possible. skim the pages if you have to, just force yourself to read faster than you can vocalize. eventually you'll be able to do it with harder books.