There was a time when I couldn’t imagine riding in silence in my car. My daily routine typically involves a nine mile round trip to a parking lot near the ferry terminal and most days I would have KUOW, the local NPR station, or KEXP, the greatest music station in the United States, as background for both ends of my drive. During baseball season I would catch parts of Mariners games if they were playing, because I still love picturing the game as described by radio announcers more than I like watching on television.
Back in February, in the wee hours leading up to the Verizon iPhone launch, someone smashed the driver’s side window of my Suzuki Grand Vitara. They neatly removed the AIWA car stereo I paid $99 for in 2003 and a Tom Bihn Aeronaut bag that’s been all over the world. I point out the neatness of the job, because aside from the broken glass, the thief was careful not to damage my dash at all and even took the time to remove the USB adapter from the 12-volt power outlet and place it in a tray in the console. The stero wasn’t particularly special and can’t have had any real resale value – I originally got it because it was the most affordable car stereo I could find with a jack for my MP3 player. A broken MacBook in the back would have garnered more money from parts, as would the Manfrotto monopod that had sat under the bag, but the thief left those items behind.
The next day I paid to replace my window and have driven without a car stereo ever since. The Suzuki is probably not going to last much longer and I didn’t see the point in buying a stereo when I didn’t really plan to keep the car. Most days I don’t even think about the missing stereo. I’m usually lost in thought on my way to and from the ferry. It didn’t occur to me until this morning how much I’ve come to value the quiet. I’m someone who solves problems by thinking them out while doing something else. Often I take a walk when I need to think. It didn’t hit me that my morning drive was also serving this same purpose, until I realized I’d resolved four lingering issues between my house and the last stop sign before I turn toward the ferry.
This largely unconscious processing is happening to me every day as I drive to catch the boat. When I open my laptop for my first focused effort of the morning, I’ve been quietly surprised by how much I seem to accomplish in the thirty four minutes of time between Bainbridge Island and Seattle. What I hadn’t realized, until this morning, is that much of my success in focusing on small tasks in that brief strecth is due to the quiet, distraction-free drive before I get there.
In a world where radio stations custom tailor morning programming to the drive from home to work, it’s hard to remember to take time for yourself. When I was doing audio podcasting on a regular basis, I used to love hearing from people who said they listened on their morning drive. Now I’m left wondering if maybe all that early morning ear candy isn’t just noise drowning out important thoughts and big ideas.
What would you hear if you turned the volume down?

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8 responses to “How Having My Car Stereo Stolen Boosted My Productivity”

  1. At one time, I too was an audiophile-only wanting the best in equipment!
    Then…it got really hard to find the right “sound”
    Finally, I  listened to music only on long drives.
    I have found local radio to be full of stations playing music I just plane don’t like with silly announcers that-as you say-are distracting. I get focused on the day ahead of me. I work as a supervisor in manufacturing where the noise level is often high. I welcome the sound of silence where I can regroup. I solve issues at work and plan my time. I sometimes work on leaning a foreign language or possibly listen to an audio book.
    Life is too short to be caught up in redundant trash.

  2. I discovered the reality of the old adage “silence is golden” a couple of years ago and have found my mental acuity sharpened significantly.   I have also become aware of just how much background noise is blared over sound systems in every store, gas station, etc.  About the only escape while in public places seems to be the library & church (when the ‘service’ is not going on).  
    I agree with Carole Inwv’s  comment: “Life is too short to be caught up in redundant trash.”

  3. Jesus said, “Peace I give to you.  Not as the world giveth, give I unto you.”  When I try to drown out everything this old world has to offer (often sitting on a porch swing, drinking my morning coffee,) I find that my thoughts are filled with the beauty and sounds of God’s creation.  Throw in a couple of deep breaths, and I am then completely relaxed and rejuvinated, in awe of His power and presence and love.  For me, like Jake, I am then truly at peace, capable of focusing on the real priorities in my life.  I’m really not able to “hear” that with the “volume” of this world “turned up.”  I challenge you to try it!
    Jeanette in South Texas

  4. Darcethamanning Avatar
    Darcethamanning

    I agree with you also Carole.  I don’t listen to the radio anymore when I’m in the car, because it is nothing but redundant trash.  I like peace and quiet, because it helps me to focus, regroup, relax and solve any issues that need to be solved.
    Also, being an older person (I’ll be 45 on July 13), who is now studying to become a certified pharmacy technician,  I have to concentrate harder than someone younger, in order to understand these drug dosage calculations and chemistry.  I need some serious quietness in order to do this.

  5. Tinnitus!  As much as I love silence, I just can’t get any.
    Getting through the day without radio would drive me insane.

  6. A white noise machine might offset the tinnitus and give you the equivalent of silence, though I’m not a doctor so I’m certainly not going to attempt medical advice here.

  7. I believe that’s called meditation, with or without religious connotations. I do that on occasion too.

  8. God’s work, Jake, God’s work.  God bless you. 

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