Reading for half an hour or more before turning the light out helps you fall asleep more quickly, and books are a great form of entertainment and a way of learning something new. Although reading at night can provide us with some much-needed time alone, sharing a good book can also help us connect with family and friends.
Bedside reading in comfort
Eyestrain is a major cause of headaches and fatigue, and it's important to avoid it when reading in bed. Make sure you have regular eye tests and that the prescription for your spectacles (if you wear them) is up-to-date. You should also visit your optician for regular eye tests even if you're not aware of any problems. Even a small correction to your eyesight with reading glasses could improve the quality and length of your reading time.
Ensuring you have the right lighting in your bedroom will also help you to avoid straining your eyes. If you sleep with your partner, it's best to have bedside lights with individual switches. An adjustable or swing-arm reading lamp is ideal for you to avoid disturbing each other if you like to go to sleep at different times. Your bedside lamp should be bright enough to illuminate the page of your book adequately, but not too harsh. Even the colour of your lampshade can have an effect: a dark lampshade makes it difficult for enough light to shine through, a too-pale colour creates a glare on your page, and a patterned shade may cast a shadow over your book.
Sitting up in bed to read for long periods can put a strain on your back and neck. It's difficult to maintain a comfortable position while leaning against an ordinary pillow, so consider getting a pillow that's designed to give extra support to your back and neck. If you find holding a book up makes your arms ache and you'd prefer to be hands-free, a variety of moveable bedside reading stands is available. Some of these come with clip-on lamps, and even page holders so you'll never fall asleep and lose your place again!
If you like to have several books on the go, or to flick through a stack of magazines or comics, the area around your bed can easily become cluttered. Many bedside cabinets are designed with voracious readers in mind and contain shelves and magazine racks, so you can keep all your reading material to hand while your sleeping environment remains tidy and inviting.
As for what to read in bed: fiction or non-fiction, light or literary, it's really up to you. If you're stuck for ideas, take a look round the bestseller section in your bookshop, read reviews and swap recommendations online, subscribe to a new magazine, or join your local library or reading group. If you suffer from insomnia or bad dreams, avoid stories with disturbing content and don't bring work-related reading into your bedroom. If you have to work in the evenings, try to do it in another room and allow yourself time to switch off in bed with a good book.
Children and bedtime reading
Around two thirds of UK parents regularly read a bedtime story to their children. Not only can bedtime reading help develop a child's literacy skills and creativity, but it can also strengthen the bond between parent and child by allowing them to enter and explore an imaginary world together. Bedtime stories help children calm down and unwind, which aids restful sleep.
Reading to children encourages them to enjoy reading for themselves once they are older. Children who read for pleasure typically display higher reading attainment, better writing ability, broader vocabularies and better general knowledge than those who don't. Once your child is old enough to read in bed on their own make sure they have a good bedside lamp, and take them to get their eyes tested if they show any signs of eyestrain such as headaches.
Children's favourite books range from works by contemporary authors J. K Rowling and Philip Pullman to old classics like the Narnia Chronicles, Winnie-the-Pooh, or Alice in Wonderland. For advice on the most appropriate books for different age groups, visit the children's section of your bookshop or talk to your child's teachers. If your child is particularly sensitive, you may want to avoid anything too scary just before bedtime.
The Pleasure Of Reading
What's better than having it all? Getting away from it all. Escape and entertainment are a survival need for our psyche so it's no wonder some of our highest paid and most recognizable faces are entertainers. From the early days of vaudeville and circus acts to our current system of TV, movies, and books entertainment has captivated our culture. Learning about stars or the vehicles by which they entertain us is an enjoyable escape in itself. Entertainment magazines fill that gap with flair unique to the person who it's written to please.
Die-hard Fans
Some shows and movies strike such a chord in people they actually embrace them as a part of their lifestyle. How else can you explain people who tell you they are Jedi knights from Star Wars or who don't want to put change in someone else's meter because it may violate Star Fleet's prime directive as given in the Star Trek series of shows. For these fans there are specialty magazines to help them through summer re-run season or those dry times when a series isn't any more. Even though the show was cancelled in 2003 Buffy The Vampire Magazine is still going strong with fan fiction, interviews and hopes about future movies and spin-offs. Star Wars and Star Trek both have magazines as well as new shows Prison Break and Lost.
Critical Appeal
Entertainment magazines certainly cover more than the world of niche fanatics and sci-fi fans. For movie lovers who enjoy critiques of movies and theaters are publications like Entertainment Weekly which keeps fans up to date on the entertainment world from TV to DVD to the big screen. Reviews and interviews are the mainstay of this weekly magazine. Independent film lovers particularly enjoy Filmmaker a publication shining the spotlight on the small lights of independent film with essays, critical reviews and schedules. For readers there are a host of book magazines, since their audience likes to read anyway. Bookmarks and Books and Culture are two popular magazines that print author interviews, analysis and related faire.
For The Masses
We like entertainment so much that we don't just want to watch a movie or hear a song, we want to know what the artists does off the screen as well. For the voyeur in all of us there is People, which not only gives an overview of entertainment but also tries to tell us what the life of the stars is like on a daily basis; trying in vain to remind us that they are real people. Along with the success of that magazine a whole genre has arisen to include Us, Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, Harpers, Star and Vibe. No matter what genre of entertainment you enjoy there is a magazine to tell you about its pluses, minuses and what its stars look like by the pool on their days off.
All work and no play continue to plague a lot of us. Entertainment magazines exist to help us continue to get away from the work-a-day world and immerse ourselves in another kind of joy. After all, isn't it great to get away?
Both Leigh A. Matelas & are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Leigh A. Matelas has sinced written about articles on various topics from Home Management, Feng Shui and Van Insurance. Leigh A. Matelas is a freelance writer living in the UK. She regularly contributes articles for Taurus Beds, a leading supplier of
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