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1. spooky+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-04-26 14:00:49
I desperately want to do this type of walking, but I live in a major city. There’s always something to distract me, which is great for boredom perhaps, but ruins any sense of zen or reflection. I would say half of every walk involves people yelling, loud vehicles, and louder music. Noise-cancelling headphones are only useful for distraction through podcasts and music, not for decompressing. I’m starting to wonder if the solution, the sad solution, is to walk on a treadmill at a gym during off-peak hours.
replies(3): >>dayjah+Vd >>pegasu+qf >>beacon+vG7
2. dayjah+Vd[view] [source] 2025-04-26 15:41:52
>>spooky+(OP)
Have you considered earplugs? The firearms community have some pretty great ones which are readable and fit really well. Check out Axil x30i for example.
3. pegasu+qf[view] [source] 2025-04-26 15:53:13
>>spooky+(OP)
You could try white/pink/grey noise on the headphones, or a binaural beat generator (I use the brainwave app on iOS).
replies(1): >>ajb+iy
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4. ajb+iy[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-04-26 18:09:54
>>pegasu+qf
I find thunderstorm noises superior to white/coloured noise - because it's a natural sound the brain filters it out, and obtrustive noises are camouflaged within it, and filtered out too. So the loudness required is less than the loudness needed for white/coloured noise to be effective.
5. beacon+vG7[view] [source] 2025-04-29 14:33:51
>>spooky+(OP)
I am also not too satisfied by this problem. Newport says city walking increases decision fatigue instead of decreasing it. It seems like another point against urban environments. I still walk to and through city parks and I feel it helps me, but I take the same designed route every time to reduce decision fatigue. I think it still helps.
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