I’m pretty happy with where my career is at now, but for a long time a big guilty displeasure I had was math. I’m a smart guy; I’ve studied the sciences and used to really like physics; I enjoy puzzles and intellectually stimulating exercises; I work in software and artificial intelligence. It seems like someone like me should like math. I’m not even bad at it! But it bores me to death. If I liked math, I think I could have made more money or had more impact in the technical fields I picked for myself. I could have enjoyed biology research and its heavy reliance on statistics. I could have had a lot of fun doing linear algebra and become a star AI researcher or something. But no, I’m stuck working in software, constantly hoping that I won’t ever need to multiply matrices or interpret a p-value.
Last year, two in five Americans did not read a single book, and reading for pleasure has plummeted about 40% over the past two decades. Yet many of the world’s most successful people credit reading as central to their curiosity, critical thinking, and leadership. A JPMorgan survey released last year of more than 100 billionaires found that reading ranked as the top habit elite achieves have in common.
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Breakdown of U.S. retail packaging by weight. Adhesives, inks, and coatings are excluded from calculations.