I often find myself reading something on the bus or subway, but then not understand anything I read. This seems to be because of the constant noises. Not even instrumental music helps, as that distracts me as well and also does not always match the theme of the book.

The best working one in noisy places seems to be white noise, with complete silence being the best overall. How do yall handle such situations?

  • The Snark Urge@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    It might be auditory processing disorder. The second more than one person is talking (and books count) I begin to crave death.

    • Pacrat173@lemmy.ml
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      6 days ago

      Same I can’t belive there’s people who don’t hear thoughts like that. I couldn’t see myself reading nearly as much as I do if I couldn’t “hear” it when I’m reading

  • Phantom_Engineer@lemmy.ml
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    5 days ago

    I don’t need it, strictly speaking, but I definitely prefer it. White noise is okay if I need to drown other sound out.

  • remon@ani.social
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    5 days ago

    I don’t really need silence to read, but I much prefer it.

    Getting really good noise cancelling headphones was one of my best qol improvement in the last years. I often wear them without even listing to anything.

  • maxalmonte14@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    I need complete silence for stuff that require precision and concentration, working and reading are the main ones. I could read manga or something in a not so quiet environment but that’s it.

  • venotic@kbin.melroy.org
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    5 days ago

    For me in a way, yes. When I used to read books on a regular basis, I found it more easier to digest if I had nobody or nothing around to make noise. I can deal with small noises like random cracks or a pop here and there. Long as it wasn’t amplified or anything. When I listen to things such as music or take in sound in general, my mind goes everywhere and it can’t focus on the pages of a book.

    I always hated it when people try talking to me when louder noise is present and expect me to hear them perfectly. My mind is not focusing on your words, it’s focusing on that obnoxious noise that’s disrupting things.

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    6 days ago

    This isn’t quite what you’ve asked, but I’ve found two things over the years:

    • Familiarity matters. I remember that as a kid, I didn’t listen to music when doing homework. I couldn’t understand how people could manage. Later, I used music on headphones in a work environment to drown out noise that was more-distracting, and it wasn’t an issue once I got used to it, could write software without problems with music. I remember reading that some people say that they can’t concentrate when it’s too quiet, if they’re accustomed to being in a noisy environment, because the silence becomes a distraction.

    • The type of noise matters. I don’t require white noise, but in terms of how-distracting something is, I’d say that my ranking is something like silence > white-noise-type stuff > “ambient” sounds like waves or wind > lyric-free music > music with lyrics > speech > half of a conversation.

      By “half of a conversation”, I mean a conversation in the background where I can only hear one end. This usually comes up when someone is talking on a cell phone in a public place in the background. I think that what’s going on here is something like that we’ve trained ourselves so that if someone says something and then there’s no response, it means that they’re talking to us, and so we’ll say “huh?” and look up. It’s good that that happens. Unfortunately, that’s also the effect one gets when one can only hear one side of a cell phone conversation. Just a constant series of attention-grabbing events for me. I’d rather have two people talking to each other near me than one person on a phone, even though it’s technically more speech.

      Generally, I prefer “lyric-free music or better” when doing something that requires concentration, but can live with music with lyrics.

    • asudox@lemmy.asudox.devOPM
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      5 days ago

      Good points. I actually prefer writing software with music, but not when reading books. It’s weird.

      I can definitely relate to your last point. When I hear people talking, I often find myself subconciously trying to piece together what they’re saying, which distracts me from focusing on my reading. More speech where I can’t comprehend what people are talking about seems to be less distracting than a few speaking.

  • grasshopper_mouse@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    No, but I can tune out some noises better than others. There are some noisy situations in which I simply cannot get through even a single sentence.

  • Semjaza@lemmynsfw.com
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    6 days ago

    I need not voices to read fiction.
    But loud non-speaking noises don’t interfere.

    Oddly, articles, Wikipedia, and websites, I can read much more easily while people are talking.

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    Nope, my hearing is waaaaay too selective. I can get engrossed in a book even in loud environments.

  • flubba86@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    I have industrial deafness, that is an audio processing disorder that is associated with background noise. This also affects my reading.

    If there is any form of background noise, I can’t understand speech. Eg, if I turn the air conditioner on in the living room, then I can’t understand what’s said on the TV, even at reasonable volume levels. Turing the volume up can help, but not a lot.

    If I’m standing next to the fridge and you walk up to talk to me, I can see your mouth moving, I can hear your words, but I can’t understand anything, the small noise of the fridge compressor completely wipes out my comprehension.

    If we are in a busy cafe with lots of people talking at once, I can’t understand the staff when they ask to take my order, even if they are right in front of me, speaking clearly directly at me. It’s like my brain can only concentrate on the background noise and it has no processing power left to interpret foreground words.

    This is the same with reading and writing. I am a software engineer, so I spend all day writing code. Many of my colleagues like to listen to music while they work. I cannot. If I put on music, then I can no longer write. Nothing comes out. My mind is blank, concentrating on listening to the music. Even instrumental background music affects me.

    So to answer your question, I can’t read with background noise. Perhaps you could check if you have a form of industrial deafness too.

    • blackn1ght@feddit.uk
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      5 days ago

      It sounds a bit like Auditory Processing Disorder - pretty sure I’ve got this. Something I really struggle with is are lyrics in songs, I can hear that there’s words but I can’t understand them unless I were to stop what I was doing and really focus. To me, the sounds and pitches of the voices are basically just another sound.

  • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeM
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    6 days ago

    I need silence to read, or at least consistent noise, like the sound of a vent. The same applies if I’m trying to sleep. My mind isn’t very vivid, so I guess speech overrides it easily.

  • Yardy Sardley@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    I love listening to solo piano or ambient music while reading. Any other type of music is too much for my brain to handle.

    It’s an adjustment I had to make when everyone started working from home in 2020, and I find it works well on transit too. Might just be that I’ve trained my brain to go into focus mode when I hear that type of music.