This past Wednesday I titled the post “Mister, are you tall?”
This was about one of the songs that I used to listen to at Creighton and my first nursing program. Dr. Demento’s songs made me smile and I found them easy to listen to while learning.
When I was writing the post (which was about height differences in the operating room), I vaguely remembered that there was a height reference in one of the Dr. Demento songs. I was pretty sure the song was “Existential Blues” by Tom “T-Bone” Stankus but I had to relisten to make sure.
This led me down memory lane. So many silly songs. So many not very politically correct songs. It was a great afternoon and I listen to a lot of songs while I was folding laundry. What a great afternoon. I finished folding the laundry and cleaned the kitchen while tripping down memory lane. I remembered some of the songs that I listened to while writing a presentation on 1993 Rawanda or learning anatomy.
The point of this post is to encourage all adult learners to find what inspires them to focus and learn.
There has been interest in recent years about listening. I am writing, of course, of ASMR. Which is defined as autonomous sensory meridian response. If you Google the term lots of information pops up. Some people find it relaxing and stress relieving to listen to.
Those people aren’t me. I find most ASMR content mildly infuriating. Kind of like how I find all stress balls infuriating. So ASMR is not for me.
It might be for you, which is okay.
As an adult I confess I don’t listen to music when I write or study. I am not sure when it got away from me.
On Thursday as I was preparing for a presentation I had to give Friday, I decided to listen to Dvorak. Specifically Symphony No. 9 “From the New World”. I wanted to see if it would work as presentatin preparing music. It is one of my favorites after all.
I found it distracting. I wanted to conduct.
I tried a different classical music, one that was recommended by a writing group member.
No go. My brain kept picking out the repeating parts and it would be jarring when the music didn’t follow pattern.
More evidence that working through a global pandemic and working in ORs for 23 years with its music has changed my brain.
The overall point of this post is to find something that calms your brain and lets you think and learn and write.
This might be silence.
This might be ASMR.
This might be classical.
This might be old TV shows on repeat.
Listen to whatever speaks to you in that moment.
As with so much of being an adult learner you get to choose what works best for you.
I’ll be over here in the office, writing in silence, listening to the taps on the keyboard.
I guess that might be a form of ASMR. And I found a playlist that was entirely cats’ purring. I bet that might work for some people too.
Keep exploring until you find what works for you. It might be dusty CDs from your own high school years.