@Edent what's so bad about <div> ... or: Why do you want to avoid them?
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@Edent stare out window
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@Edent I usually listen to audiobooks in the office, while doing repetitive and/or booooooring work.
Or in the car, but only when I'm driving on routes that I already know. So not in "new" cities.
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@neil I'll see if the cabin crew will let me break out my dustbuster 😁
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@Edent I have the exact same problem. Probably not practical for a flight, but I do simple tasks: listen in the car, while building Lego, doing a jigsaw/diamond art.
Perhaps in your case a small puzzle might help? Rubik's Cube, sudoku, mini Etch-a-Sketch?
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@Edent Usually doing something else anyway but I guess that's harder if on a plane. Draw?
@annehargreaves @Edent Good idea! Or a colouring book!
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@Edent If the book is important, listening to the audio while reading the printed version will increase the attention, understanding, recollection. If not, walking on my commute to work is the time for audiobooks/podcasts. And never while driving.
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@Edent when I listen to audio books on flights it's usually with the intent of drifting off to sleep (whilst heading East). Tony Benn's diaries are particularly soothing.
Much as I like them when walking or driving they're not part of the Westward flying repertoire.
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@Edent When I was young I always used to play with Lego. For a while as an adult I played Minecraft. Now when I listen I'm either going to sleep, cooking, or washing up so I dont need another activity.
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@Edent If the book is important, listening to the audio while reading the printed version will increase the attention, understanding, recollection. If not, walking on my commute to work is the time for audiobooks/podcasts. And never while driving.
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@Edent Embroidery 🙂
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@Edent i put on the random „Airshow“ maps and stats rotation on the entertainment screen
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@Edent
I don't listen to audiobooks, but sometimes I am in conference calls, where I have to listen carefully, while not speaking or presenting anything.There I do some diamonds block creations, mostly architecture like this one:
This is not too complicated and allows me to not drifting away from the call.
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@Edent yeah at first it’s pretty weird , depending on what kind of audio book it is. If it’s fiction like a novel and it’s got a lot of action I will just stare at one point in space and eventually I’ll start concentrating on the story more. If it’s non-fiction I’ll chew gum or chew on ice slowly or if you have like a stress ball or a “kneadDoh” and just focus on that. If you are falling asleep though just fall asleep and don’t fight it and then try the audio book again when you wake up.
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@Edent Good to see you’re in my home country. Are you going back home to my birth country?
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@Edent Good to see you’re in my home country. Are you going back home to my birth country?
@james in a roundabout way 😄
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@james in a roundabout way 😄
@Edent Excellent (there's no direct way from Melbourne in any case!). Have a good flight to wherever you're going next
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@Edent If my body wants to sleep I am always willing 😄
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@Edent I've been listening to books long enough that I don't think about it, but options that might work on a plane include hand stretches, applying hand lotion, filing nails, or organizing belongings in carry-on bag.
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@Edent I mostly listen to podcasts when running (which avoids the problem) but the one audiobook I listened to recently was a 32 hour unabridged reading of Joyce's Ulysses, which I listened to (@ 1.3x) while simultaneously reading the book. The combination of both at once kept my attention from wandering and helped me power thru endless lists and diversions and rambles and "what *is* this?"