Are you even sure the average is to read as fast as you talk? I think it’s much faster, so I don’t know what to vote, because I usually subvocalize, so my reading speed is pegged to my talking one, but I believe this is actually very slow.
I was surprised to learn, a few years ago, that most people do not subvocalize. This probably means I never quite learned to read. On the other hand, I’ve always paid a lot of attention both to the pronunciation and the spelling of every word, and to every punctuation mark, and I do recognize words and phrases graphically, but generally feel the urge to subvocalize them. I have to make a great mental effort not to, and then I read significantly faster, but I’m not confident I won’t miss a lot of crucial information this way, so I never made it a habit.
What I’ve observed in most neurotypicals I’ve interacted with through a written medium is that they seldom bother to process more than a tiny fraction of the words I write, so they completely misinterpret my point. This annoys me a lot, because it seems one of those everyday status issues I naturally ignore. No matter who writes something for me, if I read it at all, I read it with my full attention, processing every word and trying seriously to make sense of it; doing otherwise strikes me as very disrespectful, and I don’t see myself in a position to treat anyone like that. I wonder if they do the same to their boss, for example.
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The red lake has been forgotten. A dust devil stuns you long enough to shroud forever those last shards of wisdom. The breeze rocking this forlorn wasteland whispers in your ears, “Não resta mais que uma sombra”.