NYT Magazine - March 22 2020

(WallPaper) #1
Illustration by Radio 17

Tip By Malia Wollan

it wrong, and you are punished. Trump?
Here? It was like discovering a slug in
my oatmeal.
The gym I now belong to has codi-
fied this clarity. It describes itself as a
‘‘Judgement Free Zone,’’ and there are
not only signs everywhere dissuading
boorishness but also an actual ‘‘Lunk
Alarm’’ that goes off like an air-raid
siren if the level of testosterone rises
too high. I’ve heard it only once, and the
poor Samson who set it off (by dropping
his weights with a roar) seemed close
to tears when he realized why all eyes
were on him. (I have no idea who sets
it off, probably God.)
Every gym has its own elaborate tax-
onomy, and there was a time when this
fascinated and enlivened me. The queens
and the drones, the whippets and the pea-
cocks. Nothing like decline to erode one’s
belief in distinctions. It’s no wonder I’ve
ended up in a gym that’s mostly a lumpen
mass of humanity, a gym that does not
simply tolerate debacle and decrepitude
but actively celebrates it. We are encour-
aged to enjoy a free piece of candy as we
leave, and once a month a large table is
piled high with bagels and pizza.
For a brief time, though, a god dwelt
among us. Tall, provocatively bald (you
suspected a mane, I mean), chiseled as a
cliff , he performed only two exercises. The
fi rst involved a pull-up bar and is beyond
my powers of description. He alternated
this with standing leaps onto an adjust-
able platform. That is to say, one minute
he stood with an air of intense concen-
tration, and then, with just a ripple in his
skin like a breeze passing over still water,
he materialized some fi ve feet higher
in the air. Without a wobble. I’ve never
seen anything like it, and judging from
the way he disrupted others, no one else
had, either. How I loved watching him; he
made a whole diff erent relation to exercise
— and, somehow, to life — seem possible.
And how glad I was when he was gone, for
the same reason. Predictability, anonymi-
ty, oblivion — again, these are the elements
of a good gym. No epiphanies, please.
Which brings me face to face, as it
were, with my fi nal point: mirrors. These
are, of course, ubiquitous in gyms, and
for years I used them as everyone does,
pretending to check out my form while
checking out other unattainable things.
Only lately have I realized the true focus
and genius of this décor choice — as well


as how much money it has saved me. ‘‘If
a man stands before a mirror,’’ the nov-
elist Flann O’Brien writes, ‘‘and sees in it
his refl ections, what he sees is not a true
reproduction of himself but a picture of
himself when he was a younger man.’’
This is, in my experience, correct. (And
I suspect the specifi city of the gender
is damningly accurate.) But of late, the
self that has been ghosting the glass in
front of me is not a man with pecs and
purpose, nor even a man with, say, a bit
of hair and decent knees.
He’s not a man at all, in fact, but a little
boy of 10, back in 1976 when my daily

exercise regimen began. I am certain of
the date because ‘‘Rocky’’ came out that
year, and one morning I downed (like
Rocky) and later upped (unlike Rocky) a
tall glass full of raw eggs as part of my
‘‘training.’’ I have forgotten the house we
lived in at the time, can’t recall a meal or
a holiday or even one word we said. Yet
I remember every scent and sight of the
predawn runs I began taking around the
neighborhood, and the exact heft of my
fi rst plastic- coated dumbbells. A thera-
pist would make much of this, no doubt,
but obviously I don’t need a therapist. I
have a gym.

How to Read
Faster

‘‘There are no shortcuts,’’ says Elizabeth
Schotter, an assistant professor of psy-
chology at the University of South Flor-
ida, where she runs the Eye Movements
and Cognition Lab. College- educated
adults usually read between 200 and
400 words per minute (a comfortable
listening rate is around 150 words per
minute). The speediest speed readers
claim as many as 30,000 words per
minute, at which point research would
suggest a signifi cant loss of comprehen-
sion. It might be fi ne to skim through
a user manual for an offi ce printer, but
don’t skim ‘‘Anna Karenina’’ and expect
to understand it. ‘‘In this modern age,
we always want to do everything fast-
er,’’ says Schotter, whose lab uses high-
speed video to analyze readers’ eyes as
they dart across text. America’s speed-
reading obsession confounds Schotter;
on average, people read twice as fast as

they can comfortably listen. Reading is
visually and cognitively complicated; it’s
OK to reread a line because it’s confusing
or, better yet, to linger on a phrase so
beautiful that it makes you want to close
your eyes.
You tend to read faster by reading
more. One of the biggest infl uences on
your pace is what psycho linguists call the
word- frequency eff ect; the more times
you’ve encountered a word, the faster
you’ll recognize it. Your eyes will fi xate
longer on less- familiar words, making
you more likely to stall on ‘‘abode,’’
for example, than the more common
‘‘house.’’ Skilled readers start to predict
words and meaning even in their blurry
peripheral vision, which allows them to
skip more words, especially short ones.
Readers skip the word ‘‘the,’’ for exam-
ple, around 50 percent of the time. ‘‘If
you spend all your time reading ‘Harry
Potter,’ you’re going to get really good
at reading ‘Harry Potter,’ ’’ says Schotter,
who suggests taking in a wide variety of
texts to expand your vocabulary.
Sometimes you’ll fi nd yourself need-
ing to reread a word, a sentence or even
a paragraph to understand its meaning.
Researchers call these regressions, and
faster readers generally make fewer
of them than slower readers do. Some
writing is harder to decode and predict
and is more likely to trigger regressions.
Among the hardest are what psycho-
linguists call garden- path sentences,
like ‘‘The cotton clothes are made up of
grows in Mississippi.’’ If speed is your
aim, the clearer the prose, the faster
you’ll read. ‘‘Part of the burden,’’ Schot-
ter says, ‘‘is on the writer.’’

A good gym, like
a good bar, fuses
two things:
oblivion and
anonymity.

Christian Wiman
is the author, editor or
translator of 12 books
of poetry and prose,
including ‘‘Survival Is
a Style,’’ a poetry
collection published last
month by Farrar,
Straus & Giroux.
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