Audiobooks discussion
What do you do while listening to audiobooks?

My thoughts and prayers are with you.
I had a friend who listened to Under the Tuscan Sky on audio while receiving her chemo for breast cancer and developed an aversion to the author-narrator's voice through association!

I can imagine that is how our brains work!
I remember getting the flu while eating something I always loved. I was violently sick and go to bed with fever. It took my years to learn to love that kind of soup again...
And chemo is so much worse, I think/suppose.

You mean you read and listen to the same book? That's interesting..."
Yes, Usually at night. I catch up on new and stuff....look for more books while I listen....

I'm not reading the same thing I'm listening too...

We know listening can be powerful, and I have read some Audible reviewers of my novel who also read it say that while they enjoyed both forms, they preferred the audio.
But I myself, when I listen, like to huddle into a chair and lose myself in the book. So I wonder, for those of you here who do many other things while listening, do you think you are missing anything compared to listening only?

It depends on what I'm doing....if it's something that I've done for years like driving or cleaning, I can get totally immersed in the story. But if it's something that is slightly new to me, say a new recipe that I'm cooking and I have to think about, it takes me out temporarily. One thing I discovered I can do with no problem that surprised me is Suduko puzzles....it must engage a different part of the brain, not so with regular crosswords. I don't feel like I miss anything and if I do find that my mind has wandered I just go back to the last passage I remember.
I do know some people who annotate while they read so I don't think that type of intense study would work for me while listening to audio. If it was something I needed to annotate, I'd prefer a print book.

I think it depends - I could, for instance, write an email while listening to a book, but one as part of a series with which I'm familiar as 'background'. However, I feel I can connect with a story in general, even if I'm on say a bus or a train where I am very conscious of my surroundings and what's going on around me.

I agree with Janet, things like sudoku go really well, in fact I think it enhances my listening.
I can do basic cleaning stuff, cooking is more a challenge: I tend to vary and experiment with my recipes, so the focus isn't on the book.
I can't do other language things like emails. John is several masterclasses ahead of me I think!


I agree with Janet, things like sudoku go really well, in fact I think it enhances my listening.
I can do basic cleaning stuff, cooking is more a challenge: I..."
Interesting you say that, as I started a book in Spanish on the plane, an English announcement was made, so my brain made me stop reading immediately even though I tried not paying attention to the English.

For a really good book though, I actually prefer my comfy chair to snuggle in and just listen. In fact, it's almost necessary since I've found myself standing stock still in the middle of a task, immobile andjust listening when the book is sufficiently absorbing. Of course, not all books are quite that enthralling so multitasking is possible most of the time.
Oh, and I've found that it's dangerous to have a whole bag of nuts or M&Ms or chips too close at hand while listening... poof, and an hour of the book and all the snacks are gone! While I remember what happened in the book, for the life of me I don't remember eating all the goodies. :(

I am like you, Adrian. I think I am somewhere on the ADD spectrum and I rarely do only one thing at a time. I can focus on audiobooks while cleaning and while walking (it's the main way I motivate myself to walk, and now I associate certain spots in my neighborhood with scenes from the books I heard while walking there.) Most driving is fine too, but if it's an unfamiliar place or a lot of traffic, I might turn it off. When driving, if I don't have a book and don't make an effort to concentrate on the road, my mind goes to something else and I am even less focused.
I haven't had the snacking problem so much, but sometimes I remember what was happening in the book when I arrived at the grocery store or mall, but not where I parked my car! I guess I should associate my parking place with the story.
It's the sign of a terrific audiobook when I will just sit on the couch and listen without doing anything else. A couple like this were The Martian and Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe.

Another note, sometimes it is great to enhance the listening experience.
I was actually walking around on an estate (with beautifully old trees) while listening to The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate – Discoveries from a Secret World .

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Hi Monica, Like others above, it does depend on what I am doing. In fact, I like to listen while doing other things, most particularly driving, washing dishes, watering the garden, walking, gardening, waiting, doing certain things on the computer, having a couple of dim sims at the food court after doing the shopping and prior to picking up my wife from zumba (how specific is that!!). I think that listening to audiobooks requires a little practice, a book or two, and most people either love it a lot or don't like it at all. I love it a lot.



I listen while coloring also. I've gotten into dot-to-dot puzzles as well.

Yes. In fact, I have to be doing something else as I listen or my mind will wander, no matter how interesting the book is. I’m always doing things like household chores, playing a word game, or assembling a jigsaw puzzle (usually on my iPad). I usually listen to a book as I cook, but I sometimes have to pause the book when following a recipe.

I can sometimes listen when I’m driving in an urban area, but only if I really know where I’m going and how to get there! If I have to rely on my SatNav for directions, then I can still listen to the book, but I won’t have heard a thing!


Susan, I completely agree about ear bods. It seems which ever size I try just keep falling out. The only time I use them is in bed. I love my alexa the most.

I've listened to books while doing most of those things and more. It's great to be able to accomplish a task and enjoy a book at the same time.



I'm a little late to answering this one, but I usually listen while doing housework and feeding the dogs. I can 100% connect to the characters and get lost in their world. Unloading the dishwasher requires almost no brain power so I'm not in the kitchen, I'm in Middle Earth.


I guess "be in the moment" is a philosophy that works for some. When it comes to real life I'd rather be cooking than fighting a mad scientist and minions. When it comes to entertainment chopping vegetables, stirring soup, checking pasta... not that entertaining. It's great that audio books allow me to do both at the same time.

Being 'in the moment' is far more than enjoying washing the dishes. It is realizing that you are alive in this moment, and that's all you have. This moment. The past is gone, and the future is probable, but not guaranteed. Humans plan, fate laughs.
If you have a book that you're engrossed in, you are in that moment. You have had the pleasure of choice, of using your body and mind to its capacity, of not being forced to do something other. You chose how to use the moment.
If you're in the front seat on a roller coaster, you're in the moment. If you're in an earthquake, you're in the moment. If a loved one dies, you're in the moment, if you choose to be. It's good to have practice with something simpler.
If all you have is the peace and quiet to wash dishes, isn't it better to enjoy that moment, knowing that it could end in a flash? Sometimes, you just don't get to choose the peace around you, but you can always choose to appreciate what you have.
Being present in your life is the point.
As my time grows shorter, I am more aware, and more grateful.
I don't mean to be preachy. I'm just working on my own stuff, and sharing what I've found helpful living my life fully, with no GSR: No guilt, no shame, no regret. YMMV

The CDs were great, but...getting to the library was difficult. Downloading audiobooks from Overdrive saved my sanity while I set up and underwent 4 eye surgeries to restore my vision. Months of forced isolation and motion restriction, to keep me from getting sick and ruining my transplants, allowed me to do little else but listen and lie still. I live alone, and books, GR, and the library site were my constant companions. It was like playing hooky from the world, to curl up and read and read, and do nothing else. Who knew that going blind for a year could be so much fun? And educational? I've learned a lot about libraries, and what has happened to them since Amazon.
Oh, can I say that here?

Being 'in the moment' is far more than enjoying washing..."
Your observations are very thoughtful. I hate to admit it, but for me the biggest regret I have about dying some day is not that I will be separated from my family, but that I won't be able to read more books!

Your not alone in that thought. There's even a book tote bag.


Jolie wrote: "I swear that if not for audiobooks, my housework would never get done. I also love crafting (creating dollhouse minis) while listening to a good book!"
Jolie I agree, I don't know how I ever got through housework before audiobooks!! I also enjoy crafting, audios just makes life so much more pleasant. :D
Jolie I agree, I don't know how I ever got through housework before audiobooks!! I also enjoy crafting, audios just makes life so much more pleasant. :D


Diamond painting! I think that's a first in this topic!

Diamond painting! I think that's a first in this topic!"
I just recently found it and I love it! Keeps my mind from wandering to other stuff while I am listening and it's super relaxing!


Ooh, that's really annoying Rick! Maybe there are jigsaws from artists like Escher (although they may be really difficult!) or something else in black and white?
Google jigsaw and colourblind! I found this;
https://www.zazzle.com/colorblind+puz...
Hope there is more of this kind of thing.
Or do a Sudoku while listening!
Books mentioned in this topic
The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate: Discoveries from a Secret World (other topics)The Martian (other topics)
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe (other topics)
The Hero With a Thousand Faces (other topics)
A Dance with Dragons (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Max Barry (other topics)Max Barry (other topics)
Amy Silver (other topics)
Max Barry (other topics)
I found it difficult to keep up with an audiobook in German even though I can read the book itself pretty comfortably. It felt like the narrator was going way to fast, lol. Just shows that I need more practice.
For English audiobooks, I cross stitch, crochet, and do jigsaw puzzles online. Same for podcasts.