Shortly after I started riding my bike to work, it dawned on me that I should try to find something productive to do during the two hours a day I was spending commuting to and from work. When I drove to work, my options were limited basically to just listening to music or the radio. When I rode the Metro to work, I could play games on my iPod while listening to music or whatever, or I could read the newspaper or a book. Luckily for me I don’t get motion sick very easily so I could spend the entire time on the Metro reading, even while the train was underground. When I switched over to biking though – something that didn’t shorten or extend the amount of time I spent commuting, it just changed my commute from stressful to satisfying and rewarding – I basically just listened to music the whole time on my iPod. This was cool at first, but after a few weeks or maybe even a month, it just hit me: “I’m listening to the same songs on the same playlists everyday…what a waste of time!”
I had heard and seen countless ads on the Internet for Audible.com, a website that sells audiobooks, and I immediately knew that I should give this a try - and the rest is history. I started listening to audiobooks and haven't ever stopped. I got free audiobooks from lots of places: the Alexandria library, the Arlington library, both libraries' online selection of audiobooks which could be downloaded instantly, audible.com (almost always through free promotional offers), and I even bought a few. I've learned that just about any book is out there for free through one library system or another, or through Audible’s never ending promotions.
A few weeks ago, I hit the 100 book mark, but have already gone through another four or five since then. It’s amazing how many books I am able to listen to by just using the time I spend commuting listening to books instead of music. I find listening to books to be an extremely rewarding experience. I know not everyone would benefit from listening to books as much as I do – some people can’t focus on audiobooks as well as if they were reading the physical book. Fortunately I don’t have any issues listening to and following the books I listen to. In some ways, it is even better than reading the physical book. This is because there is no skimming or glossing over sections when you're listening to an unabridged audiobook, you have to hear and experience each and every word the author decided to include in the book. Furthermore, when it is the author himself reading the book (which is rare but not unheard of), you get to experience the book with all the emotion and intonation of voice that the author himself had in mind while writing the book. All in all, I truly love listening to audiobooks. Deciding to get into audiobooks was almost as good of an idea as starting to bike into work was.


