Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Daily Reading Can Reduced Risk of AZD


A daily reading habit may do far more than sharpen the mind; it could actually protect it. Recent research shows that reading a book for as little as six minutes a day can reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, enhance memory, and improve communication skills by keeping the brain active and resilient.
Scientists explain that reading engages multiple areas of the brain simultaneously, language processing, memory recall, imagination, and emotional regulation, creating a kind of mental workout that strengthens neural connections. Over time, this activity builds what researchers call cognitive reserve, a buffer that helps the brain resist age-related decline and neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer’s.
Just six minutes of focused reading has also been shown to lower stress levels by up to 68%, calm heart rate, and reduce muscle tension. This mental relaxation enhances overall brain function, making it easier to retain information, express ideas clearly, and manage emotions effectively.
Unlike scrolling or passive media, reading demands deep focus, stimulating both hemispheres of the brain and promoting new neuron growth. The result is improved memory retention, stronger vocabulary, and better emotional intelligence, even in older adults.
The takeaway is simple: reading doesn’t just expand knowledge, it preserves it. A few quiet minutes with a good book can help strengthen memory, sharpen communication, and build long-term brain protection, one page at a time.

Meanwhile,  here's a more personal write-up on the topic. I titled it,  Six Minutes to Remember

Every morning, before the day gathers its noise, I sit quietly with a book or a newspaper. Sometimes it’s a few pages of poetry, sometimes an article that stirs the mind and specifically AI technology news. It rarely lasts more than a few minutes, six perhaps and yet those six minutes have become my daily act of renewal.

A recent study says that reading for just six minutes a day can sharpen memory and even lower the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. I smiled when I read that. Science is finally confirming what the soul has long known that attention, curiosity, and imagination keep us alive in ways no medicine can.

When I read, I feel my mind stretch and soften at the same time. Words reach into places I didn’t know needed light. They pull me out of the narrowness of self and into the wider landscape of human thought. Each sentence is a gentle electric current, keeping the circuits of the mind alive.

And when I write these small daily reflections, my blog entries born of quiet mornings, it feels like the return half of the same breath. Reading fills me; writing releases me. One feeds memory, the other meaning. Together, they weave the fabric of my inner life.

Perhaps that’s why I read and write every day not merely to remember facts, but to remember myself. To remember what it feels like to be awake, to be moved, to still care about beauty and truth in a world that hurries past them.

Six minutes a day, that’s all it takes, they say. But maybe it’s not about time at all. Maybe it’s about the willingness to pause, to listen, to let the mind wander and wonder. In those brief moments, memory becomes more than a function of the brain, it becomes a quiet hymn to being alive.

For as long as I can read, and as long as I can write, I will not forget who I am.

My Food For Thought For Today:

https://www.facebook.com/reel/3913322285638878

Lastly, Moral of the Story



Finally, Here are five of the biggest news stories today:

  1. Trump Hosts Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in DC — Donald Trump is welcoming MBS to the White House for a major two-day visit. Talks are expected around defense deals (including F-35 jets) and a large Saudi investment pledge. The Guardian+2AP News+2

  2. UN Endorses Trump’s Gaza Peace Plan — The U.N. Security Council has approved a resolution backing Trump’s proposal, which includes deploying an international stabilization force and a potential pathway toward a Palestinian state. The Guardian+1

  3. Global Markets Rocked by Tech Volatility — Tech stocks dropped, Bitcoin slid, and investor concern spiked over high valuations and leverage. Nvidia is in focus ahead of its earnings. Reuters

  4. $60B Wiped From Australia’s Stock Market — The ASX fell sharply, driven by weak investor sentiment, and the sell-off rippled through major sectors. The Guardian

  5. COP30 Launches Without U.S. Participation — The 30th UN Climate Change Conference begins in Brazil, notably missing the U.S., raising questions about global climate action. Financial Times

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