7 Ways to Make Commuting Suck Less

Commutting

Commuting between work and home can be a frustrating and inefficient experience. But it does not have to be. There are many productive (and safe!) ways to make the most of your time while you’re behind the wheel. For example:

Learn a new language

Burn some CDs with language lessons (you can easily find them on the Internet, even for free!) and listen to them again and again. Repeat the phrases out loud. Burn some more when you feel the level has become too easy for you. You will be amazed at how quick you progress in a week of commuting.

After doing this for several months, I filled out an online Italian language test and found out I already had an intermediary level… Without taking any formal lessons!

Listen to podcasts

Subscribe to podcasts dealing with the subjects that interest you and listen while driving. This is a surefire way to always be up to date. Another hint: If you podcasts are spoken in the language you are trying to learn, you will advance much faster!

“Read” books

Reading while driving is surely lethal. But try audio books. If the book is interesting, chances are you won’t be bothered by traffic jams, you will even beg for some!

One example: I never could finish reading Don Quixote. Its old-fashioned Spanish made me fell asleep after a couple of pages. I felt so guilty. After all, that is THE book every Spanish speaker should have read! Then I tried the audio book. Not only was it easy to follow, it was even compelling! I listened to it during a round trip between Brussels and Paris I did one summer. The blue sky and the wheat fields made me feel it was ME who was riding thru La Mancha!

“Take” courses

Going to Harvard or Stanford may be expensive, but listening to their professors lecture while you drive is…free! Nowadays, most universities offer a number of free courses, from sciences to liberal arts. I have particularly appreciated a course about European history I downloaded from the Stanford website. And another funny coincidence: I was driving by Waterloo when the teacher spoke about Napoleon’s defeat!

Listen to news

This is an obvious one, but worth mentioning. If you listen to the news 10 minutes a day while driving, you won’t need to browse the news websites while at home or work.

Listen to music

This is another obvious one. But I include it after I heard -  in an Italian podcast, of course – about a study conducted by researchers from the University of Florence that found that listening to classical and other soft music for 30 minutes a day during one month can significantly reduce mild high blood pressure. Very convenient for those suffering from work or traffic-jam-related stress!

Be Zen

Ok. You are too upset/tired/worried to listen to anything. Then just be Zen. Don’t worry, you don’t have to do the lotus position or close your eyes. That is not very wise on a highway. Just breathe in and out slowly. Don’t think about anything, just see around you. Feel the vibration of your car. Forget yesterday and tomorrow. Just live in the moment, even if the moment isn’t very exciting.

I commute by car, but all these suggestions can be practiced on the train or on the metro. If someone else is controlling the driving, you can use your iPod, your laptop, or your tablet PC so you can add a visual component to any of the ideas above.

  • http://twitter.com/Trilostick トリロスティック

    I commute by bicycle, so i suppose i should do something that involves listening to stuff. I already listen to music but i could surely listen to some podcast. Great post.

  • http://twitter.com/Trilostick トリロスティック

    I commute by bicycle, so i suppose i should do something that involves listening to stuff. I already listen to music but i could surely listen to some podcast. Great post.

  • Lew Sauder

    As one who has endured 2+ hour commutes, I can attest to the benefits of listening to audio books.  I get them regularly from the library.  You can listen to the CDs in the car, or load them on your phone or iPod and listen on it.  I’ve alternated fiction and non-fiction to keep it interesting.

  • http://twitter.com/GoalsOnTrack Harry Che

    Listening to news for a long commute is probably going to be bad for your mood. Wouldn’t recommend. ;-)

  • http://profiles.google.com/mcclanahoochie Chris McClanahan

    I catch up on my RSS news with the Android app  FeedSpeak  ( http://feedspeak.tk ) – it reads your Google Reader feeds to you via text-to-speech !

  • http://www.DarkMatterConsulting.com David Kaiser

    I like to practice my gratitude when commuting. I think, out loud because I am alone, of all the things large and small I am grateful for. It lifts my mood. I also like to imagine a positive future for the day. What will the big meeting be like? How could I bring my best to a project I’m on? Etc. It makes the time fly and I arrive at work or at home refreshed.

    David Kaiser, PhD
    Time Management Coach to Authentic Leaders
    http://www.DarkMatterConsulting.com

     
     

  • http://twitter.com/richardstowey Richard Stowey

    You forgot the big one – get on a motorcycle and enjoy it!

  • Guest

    You can also try singing :)

  • Mike Solinas

    I “read” ebooks on my Amazon Kindle.  Most books support “text to speech”, and the Kindle does a great job of playing them.

    No need to burn CDs, or buy expensive audio books and copy them to a player.  Just download the books  (Project Gutenberg has a TON!), and have the Kindle read to you.

  • http://www.clintcora.com Clint Cora

    I most certainly agree that commuting time is perfect for learning and catching up on audio.  Although I don’t commute anymore, I still do long two hour drives up and back to the ski slopes a few times each week all winter long.  I’ve used this time to listen to audio but also for something else.  Since I’m a professional speaker by trade, I use these long drives as rehearsal time.  As the round trip is four hours, I can easily fit in an entire hour long keynote or even two of them during my ski commute.  This is something of course I can’t do if I’m commuting by public transit :)

  • http://daviddunn.co.uk David Dunn

    I’m definitely going to give learning a new language a go when commuting, sounds like a really good idea and something I thought about trying a while ago but never got round to it! :)

  • Jb91219

    This is a great post.  If anybody wants to set some goals for
    themselves, you should visit ICanAndWill.com  It’s a cool website that
    helps people define their goals and receive encouragement from other
    people…. 

  • Asdir

    Commuting by train for a  year now. My (additional) ways to deal:
     - try open-eye-meditating
     - watch movie/tv-show/previously downloaded you-tube videos (from bbc-docus to replays of yesterdays game)
     - do menial tasks on the computer while listening to music (data shifting, private finances, answering less important e-mails, trying out that new program)
     - Fiend a friend among commuters (Better: Find a commuter among friends :-P)
     - Don’t have an appointment at home every day. It will feel like you do not have time for yourself except on the train.