Why you should NOT raise a reader

Author
Paul Banas
6 comments

Everyone tells you to raise a reader. Read to them when they are babies, read them stories every night, model reading behavior.  A great, or even good dad, will devote hours in slavish devotion to this idea.  Well, here’s one dad who will tell you what the evil publishing scientists and lobbyists won’t:  reading isn’t fundamental; it’s fundamentally mental. Teach your child to read and you’re in for fifteen years of hardship and maybe even more.  Here’s why:

Lost (TV series)
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1. Reading with your kid eats up precious time.  “Lost” is on at 8PM where I live. Enough said.

2. Nightly reading isn’t a good habit. It’s an expensive addiction that will only lead to more books and larger books. Books that will bleed a family’s budget dry and consume short-in-supply storage space faster than a collection of restaurant napkins.  If they must read, start them early at the public library, which was invented to help the addicted and afflicted.

3. Teach a child to read and you lose them forever.  If I have to say, “Put that book down and watch this football game with me,” one more time, I will scream. Books interfere with things you could be doing together.  Don’t get me started on how hard it is to clean off books soaked in mashed potatoes when read at dinner time.

4. Book-reading kids are sassy know-it-alls. At ten, my child should know exactly ZERO more than I do. It does no one any good if she can name the capitol of California, when I know it’s Los Angeles.  Book reading children extract every advantage they can get and will trick you out of ice cream cones and cookies if you bet with them.

a small plate with a serving of mashed potatoes
Image via Wikipedia

5. Book readers don’t listen and they hide behind the immersion in a book to avoid household chores like cleaning the furnace or hosing down the cats.  “Let them read,” is society’s way of giving up on the problem and allowing book-reading to expand unchecked.

6. Book reading leads to writing.  Writing can lead to poetry, short stories, and even fiction.  These are not healthy pursuits for young bodies and minds.

7.  Reading leads to higher education. It has been proven that higher education leads to penury.  And if not penury, a career waiting tables “while waiting for that big break.”   Education is just a big hole. Not since the 19th century has anyone even hoped they could learn it all and dominate the subject.

So, there you have it: as cogent an argument against reading as I can muster.  Let them read if you must, but monitor the practice more carefully than if you saw them reaching for a pack of Salems.  This stuff is dangerous, it grows like bamboo, and it lasts a lifetime.

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101ddd, it's sarcasm, right? I do appreciate your well-thought-out analysis though. Now, back to reading with the kids!

You forgot to mention you can avoid paying college tuition if they never attend! By Grabthar's Hammer, what a savings!

I think we should classify what you're really trying to say:
1. I have other stuff I want to do rather than parent, namely watch LOST. You know that thing is available ANYTIME online, right?
2. Your budget does not account for buying books. But I'm sure that budget has your car payment, credit card, eating out nightly, etc.
3. You want your child to do what YOU want to do (watch football). Ever thought of coming in to their world for a bit?
4. You don't want your kids to know more than you. So why don't you pick up a book?
5. You can't get your kids to do chores. Don't blame books, that's a parenting issue. There could be a million things you could pin their lack of interest in chores on. Remember, no one likes chores, especially kids.
6. Writing is expression, and expression is essential to human growth. You really want them bottling all that in?
7. Again, you don't want your kids to be smarter than you. Good luck with that.

Overall, we should make opportunities for our children to be better off than us. Back this blog up with some statistics that show children that were read to have some measurable issue. Otherwise, don't be giving new Dads the wrong idea. The only good part is that if parents really did follow your advice, no one would read your blog.

And without teaching them to read, they will never have to worry about satire, humor, or other shades of meaning.

that last comment is tooooooooo funny.

It's a slippery slope indeed. Once you start reading the kids expect you to keep doing it. I'm not sure what you said in the rest of the post since I just stopped reading early on but I bet it was brillant
.-= SAHD PDX´s last blog ..For every problem there is an expert =-.

Dont want to go to the cinema? Watch Movies.