Why listening to audiobooks is bad for you

Not that it really matters what we read and don't, but it's quite fun to consider whether audiobooks count as truly reading books.
Going beyond the obvious no - you're not reading onto the more nerdy details on what really counts as a book, what are the pros and cons of audiobooks, and why reading physical books is (in my opinion) often superior.
PS. If you prefer to read this video lol: www.elizabethfilips.com/post/...
WHO AM I: I'm Elizabeth, a medical student, artist, KZreadr and Podcaster in London. I love to think and talk about life, art, medicine, books and meaning. And also how to find the time to do those things. If you'd like to watch me paint and talk about life, I do that on my podcast ( / @feelosophywithelizabe... ) and if you'd like to read my thoughts and book notes, I have a newsletter you can join (newsletter.elizabethfilips.com​​).
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To save you some time:
0:00 Intro
0:46 Arguments against: audiobooks are inferior to reading
4:47 Arguments for: audiobooks count as reading
7:50 How I balance physical and audiobooks

Пікірлер: 284

  • @elizabethfilips
    @elizabethfilips2 жыл бұрын

    👩‍🦰If you fancy getting my book summaries of what I read for free, you can join my book club here: www.getrevue.co/profile/the-pensieve 🪄

  • @yashpatil3914

    @yashpatil3914

    2 жыл бұрын

    Why don't you add subtitles 😅

  • @hakimabro7095

    @hakimabro7095

    2 жыл бұрын

    Is it your make up or you are a natural beauty ??

  • @shafiaden5664

    @shafiaden5664

    2 жыл бұрын

    sister why don't you read quran?

  • @teggyegg

    @teggyegg

    2 жыл бұрын

    I can't successfully read books or listen to audiobooks so this might be useful! There is a youtube channel called "Productivity Game" which is great at summarising books.

  • @lactobacillusbulgaricus6058

    @lactobacillusbulgaricus6058

    24 күн бұрын

    I have a strong argument in favor of audiobooks: they avoid MYOPIA

  • @sebasargent
    @sebasargent2 жыл бұрын

    I do long walks that take 2-3 hours, and I often listen audiobooks on the journey. It's a fantastic way to consume the book faster than by reading. If I don't understand or pay attention while I'm on the street, I would replay the chapter and often the entire book. For a reader/learner, I think it would be unwise not no consider the advantages of audiobooks.

  • @Ssaidak

    @Ssaidak

    Жыл бұрын

    They are culture too, but they are different things, reading and listening. When you read, you are learning to spell better, always. Listening has advantages as listening in different cultures. You can listen an opera without seeing it, but you are listening to opera, no watching opera. For me, if you are interested in a book, I recommend always reading it. And if you are interested in oral narrative, listening it. When you read it, you have to tell yourself the story when your own voice, that is an exercise than is made for you when you listening to it. For that is better read books and listening radio and oral narrative. It would be unwise not consider doing it.

  • @TLBainter
    @TLBainter2 жыл бұрын

    I tend to do both audio and physical for the same book at the same time, it really helps with my retention! Otherwise, I just listen to the audio version while I'm driving, especially on long road trips!

  • @auroreduroy1957

    @auroreduroy1957

    2 жыл бұрын

    I do the same when I'm reading in a foreign language! It really helps to learn the correct prononciation. It also helps the understanding, because the reader will make you understand the feelings, so you can know that the characters are arguing with the tone of the voices etc.

  • @irismendonca

    @irismendonca

    2 жыл бұрын

    Me too! For everyone with ADHD, this is an incredible experience, because it's easier to pay attention to the book when more than one of the senses is envolved

  • @irismendonca

    @irismendonca

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@auroreduroy1957 awesome tip, I'm going to try with spanish

  • @devilsolution9781

    @devilsolution9781

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@auroreduroy1957 paul noble?

  • @auroreduroy1957

    @auroreduroy1957

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Devil solution No I didn't know him, but I went to check and he seems interesting, thanks! Did he said something similar to what I said?

  • @mba09nr
    @mba09nr2 жыл бұрын

    Storytelling and listening to stories existed way before humans ever started reading books. I also think it may be a bit ableist to say reading physical books is somehow superior to an audiobook. Both allow people to consume books and it is always great that as many people have access to books. I personally don’t think there is any value in putting one form against another!

  • @devilsolution9781

    @devilsolution9781

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nein, i disagree, reading a book activates a part of the mind that listening will not. Its like the difference between passive cognitive activation and conscious activation. Skim reading doesnt really count. If im reading a physical book my mind will flash images like a theatrical reel, if im listening its a lot more subconscious, like i consume the information, who, what, when, where, why, but without enacting the imagination

  • @saqlain_altaf

    @saqlain_altaf

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@devilsolution9781 yesss!!!

  • @thestraycat69

    @thestraycat69

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@devilsolution9781 disagree I actually have and do have the same mental effect that a book would. It has also been shown the adiouble can spark the imagination just as much as physically reading even common sense states that.

  • @devilsolution9781

    @devilsolution9781

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thestraycat69 "it has been shown" is a somewhat ambigious statement.

  • @thestraycat69

    @thestraycat69

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@devilsolution9781 Audiobooks help to sustain attention which keeps the focus on a single task for a longer period. Audiobooks help stimulate the auditory process in the brain that keeps the information that comes from your ear to those specific areas of the brain. This active listening process helps analyze the information and store it in our memory. Some of the documented benefits of audiobooks may include: Help improve ComprehensionImprove the imaginationSpark a more emotional response than readingHelp reduce negative thoughtsImprove time management abilityHelp build literacy skillsBuild your VocabularyHelp prevent age-related related cognitive deficit

  • @aima1356
    @aima13562 жыл бұрын

    Elizabeth you are the big sister I never had. Thank you for everything. Your smile and happy personality makes my day. And your advice makes me better than yesterday.

  • @elizabethfilips

    @elizabethfilips

    2 жыл бұрын

  • @Courtney6
    @Courtney62 жыл бұрын

    I think a more appropriate title is “how reading books and audiobooks are different”. They are different but in the end you’ve still consumed the book. Your personal preference doesn’t mean audiobooks aren’t “reading”. They both have their pros and cons. I think it’s important not to imply audiobook listeners aren’t really reading, especially if that’s their only able method. All reading is good 👍🏻

  • @saiashwin26

    @saiashwin26

    2 жыл бұрын

    Listening isn't reading. It's like saying you watched a movie when you just read the plot summary on wikipedia.

  • @irismendonca

    @irismendonca

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@saiashwin26 That would be a great comparison between reading a book and reading it's summary. But books are written words and audiobooks are the SAME words but spoken.

  • @humanfirst11

    @humanfirst11

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@irismendonca no

  • @monylove6462

    @monylove6462

    2 жыл бұрын

    For busy mamas audio books are very convenient

  • @devilsolution9781

    @devilsolution9781

    2 жыл бұрын

    But youre not reading and theres a distinctive difference between the two. Do you taste your food or do you hear it? The method of consuption is not equal. Audiobooks may even be beneificial to the type of learner that learns with audio, but most common people take more from visualisation

  • @DavidCarloz
    @DavidCarloz2 жыл бұрын

    I’m a slow reader and I mainly read fiction. Over the years I have learned to enjoy reading slow. Taking my time has become so relaxing. When you find that beautiful sentence and read It a few time over, is what I love. Just looking at the words is special too me. You can’t do that with an audiobooks. However, audiobooks are amazing. There’s is a time a place for both.

  • @TheDopery
    @TheDopery2 жыл бұрын

    I read books at home and on my 10hr delivery routes I listen to audiobooks. And if it weren’t for audiobooks I would have never fell in love with reading! There’s a place to enjoy both and I could not live without either one!

  • @Ssaidak

    @Ssaidak

    Жыл бұрын

    But reading and listening is different. The oral narrative is culture too but is not reading. It has its own importance.

  • @aadamkhan9956
    @aadamkhan99562 жыл бұрын

    Great video! Although at first I was somewhat apprehensive about what this vid would entail upon reading the title, as I’m registered as blind thy’s audiobooks and listening being the only way I can ‘read’ , I actually found myself agreeing with you on a lot of things. In particular the imagination idea, I’ve realised that my mind works in an incredibly analytical manner and I do find it difficult to conger images of things in my head. Also I hate the fact that I can’t just get a book and read it, I envy any sighted person who can do that😩

  • @Disgusted19

    @Disgusted19

    2 жыл бұрын

    In fact i'm like you bro i'm also blind but a few years ago i was wishing to find someone has empty time to read books to me but after i have started using available technology for blind i've become an independent person more i can read books by screen reader or i can listen if i want. a lot of things who were dreams for me have become easy . Islam from Iraq

  • @markhambelton357
    @markhambelton3572 жыл бұрын

    I take on board your perspective and others have mentioned this, but there is a very ablest perspective to many of your points. As someone with dyslexia, I fell in love with literature from being read to as a kid. Audiobooks allow people of all ages to explore literature when their disabilities would prevent this. I have just the same ability to imagine a story when it l listen to and when I read it, but the fluency of comprehension when I listen is easier than when I read. Not all neurodiverse people are the same, but it's a shame the title of your video will be divisive to those with certain disabilities. When authors take the trouble to make an audiobook version of their work available I feel included and that they and their publishers value their disabled readership, rather than just catering for only the neurotypical and visually able consumer base.

  • @sonjachisnall

    @sonjachisnall

    2 жыл бұрын

    I second this, although it's hard to account for every perspective when making content and I think it may have lightly been mentioned as a benefit ("accessibility") but the first argument was very generalised and argued that one is definitvely better without clarifying the nuances of neurodiversity in that section. So I'm not dyslexic but to shed light on the neurodiversity I have experienced the same or similar to what you describe. From my studies in biopsychology I wondered whether this is to do with a stronger connection in some people within the audio processing region and Wernicke's area of their temporal lobe where others who have a strong ability to process and comprehend visual code tend to have this function to a weaker degree. While it's not neurotypical it's not abnormal either in the sense that it's not a dysfunction and likely functions just as well as someone who reads but in reverse. I scored highest in class for comprehension as a kid but struggled to process the visual information of text so would always read aloud to process it faster. They even thought glasses would help me read faster but it wasn't the case, it was about the ability to process what I saw from code to semantic meaning in linear sequence. Nowadays I'm able to listen to audiobooks on 2.5x speed and lightly tune in if need be or slow it down to focus in on certain parts. I have been able to listen through more books than I could ever read and being a slow reader held me back in studies where I needed extensions but give me an audiobook and I could recall a whole pie of information. I'd also take notes in my phone's notepad. My imagination is also wild and enabled to run wild when I slow the speech down so the audio to visual processing speed is fairly quick for me in contrast. I feel that reading paper actually takes that away for me as my mind is trying to keep up with the slower processing like an old computer and I have to re-read parts more often. Another benefit is you can lay in the sun or shade without having to hold the thing up, you can just lay there and feel the breeze, smell the trees. People have commented I can speak as fast as I listen and sometimes do by mistake which in effect means I have to slow my speech for others and then my mind gets garbled because thoughts are already racing ahead of words. So I wouldn't say it's a problem in itself but rather a problem when it's not accommodated for. Others may have to be patient with me organising my thoughts when I have to slow them down but I also have to be patient for others when I need to slow down for them. I hope this provides some insight :) I love your videos by the way even if a different perspective. On the occassion I do get a book it's normally a quick section reference book like a guidebook, cookbook or a visually appealing keepsake!

  • @distantearth

    @distantearth

    Жыл бұрын

    She literally said audiobooks are great for people who can’t read physical books. Did you not hear that?

  • @ZoeysMusings
    @ZoeysMusings2 жыл бұрын

    Reading and listening are definitely two different things. Reading can be such a personal thing and an audiobook takes away that intimacy to some extent. But for nonfiction, audiobooks are great because you're learning versus fiction which is better reading because you can be as imaginative as you like and makes notes at your pace. Great insights, Elizabeth 🙂

  • @areeshatahnee2193
    @areeshatahnee21932 жыл бұрын

    Love your videos Lizzie! Hoping for you to make a video on your favourite philo books for those of us who are thinking of dabbling into philosophy. Much love

  • @FE-fs1su
    @FE-fs1su2 жыл бұрын

    I love that you put 2 different ideas and explain them objectively. In this way i am in the process of thinking with you 💯💯

  • @pietro_ferrari
    @pietro_ferrari2 жыл бұрын

    For me, each person has a specific methody for studies. It's a development, not a game. If a person prefers study by audiobooks, so do it. If prefers by paper books, go for it. The only thing that we need to worry if we are improving our lifes for a better way. Just this.

  • @luizamaria5170
    @luizamaria51702 жыл бұрын

    Lizzz, firstly, congrats for this great content! And, secondly, please make a video of how you babyliss your hair!!!! It's sooo perfect

  • @thestraycat69
    @thestraycat692 жыл бұрын

    Audiobooks help to sustain attention which keeps the focus on a single task for a longer period. Audiobooks help stimulate the auditory process in the brain that keeps the information that comes from your ear to those specific areas of the brain. This active listening process helps analyze the information and store it in our memory. Some of the documented benefits of audiobooks may include: Help improve ComprehensionImprove the imaginationSpark a more emotional response than readingHelp reduce negative thoughtsImprove time management abilityHelp build literacy skillsBuild your VocabularyHelp prevent age-related related cognitive deficit

  • @em4200
    @em42002 жыл бұрын

    Personally, i find the experience of listening to an audiobook and reading it are the same. The only difference is that one is the voice in my head, and the other is a voice of someone else. For me, I get super distracted while reading a book, and it takes me so long to read even a few pages. With an audiobook, it keeps going, so I am more focused. Audiobooks help make reading accessible to those who have a hard time reading, so we shouldn't judge wether you listened or read a book.

  • @3choblast3r4

    @3choblast3r4

    3 ай бұрын

    You're lying to youself. You find that listening to a book expands your vocabulary like reading does? What books do you read bro that you never need to reread a paragraph or consider what just happened etc etc. it's not the same, it's not even close. First of all there are different books of different complexities. Some will be easy to listen too while others will be impossible to understand if you're just listening to it while doing the dishes or whatever. E..g Let's take a more extreme example, do you think you will understand a science text book if you listen to it? Do you think you will retain the information and learn what's on the page the same if you read? it's fine to listen to books. But story time is not readng.

  • @em4200

    @em4200

    3 ай бұрын

    @@3choblast3r4 Your comment is so dumb. I never said anything about vocabulary or complexity… Reading books and listening to audiobooks is just for fun - a form of entertainment. It’s not that deep. If I get a book that’s deeper/more difficult then yes, I will read it. Maybe I like books because I enjoy them; I don’t have to be chasing great literature and expanding my vocabulary. All I am saying is that in my experience, the two are not that different.

  • @3choblast3r4

    @3choblast3r4

    3 ай бұрын

    @@em4200 You just said they are different .. while your original comment claimed they were the same. You don't have to read complex books for them toexpand your vocabulary. But if you're reading you're more likely to learn new words compared to just listening. My point was that the more complex a book is the harder it will be to keep up listening to it. You might keep up with a more straight forward YA book but anything with strange, complex etc prose might get lost on you. It's just frustrating to see. It's completely fine to enjoy audiobooks. But they aren't the same as reading. Reading and listening are two completely different experiences using different senses.

  • @someperson9998

    @someperson9998

    27 күн бұрын

    @@3choblast3r4 Not everyone cares about expanding their vocabulary. You seem to have a massive intellectual superiority complex. Once again, their original comment mentioned absolutely nothing about comprehending more complex books. You're only upset that not everyone appreciates what you believe is your self worth.

  • @kvothe.9916
    @kvothe.99162 жыл бұрын

    I liked the subject. I liked the way you aproach to it. 1) eye or ear. all progress in the brain. 2) you can turn settings that the right pace for you 3) if you pause and think about it, it is same to stop reading and think about it. 4) you can take notes the ones you might underline. 5) the smell of the book, it is beyond my heal :) you are mostly right and i think i should share my ideas about this which i think about this, almost everyday. Thank you.

  • @rmmccarthy1240
    @rmmccarthy12409 ай бұрын

    While having breakfast, I watched a video of the last NYC Marathon. And then I told my trainer that I ran 26 miles that day. Words matter.

  • @feedmespeed
    @feedmespeed Жыл бұрын

    For me, reading is like guided meditation. I have noticed that when we watch movies, or listen to music, our mind may wander. But when we are reading with comprehending it, it leaves us thoughtless about anything else for those moments.

  • @captaindestruction9332

    @captaindestruction9332

    9 ай бұрын

    While true I find that this scenario can apply to both instances. Unless its just something really great and interesting im reading im probably not going to be interested or willing to finish it. Same thing with audiobooks however I find some of the frustrations I have with reading a book go away with audiobooks. Reading a book I find myself looking at how much I read of the book, how long its taking me, is that how the words pronounced? How would this character sound etc. Audiobooks main issue is my mind wanders or I need to be in a scenario were im alone/working by myself etc. Both have there benefits and often I find myself using either or depending on the scenario.

  • @UnicornRoseDust
    @UnicornRoseDust2 жыл бұрын

    In general, I'm grateful that technology has brought us to a place and time where anyone can consume what they want in the format they like the most or what they find most convenient (As you said there are people with certain disabilities and limitations that cannot consume traditional books!). Looking at the subject in retrospect it's amazing 😄

  • @ONSYAM
    @ONSYAM2 жыл бұрын

    The hell, i love this speed speech for my audiobooks. Your voice is clear with a perfect speed and love your accent. 😁😁

  • @thisisarika
    @thisisarika2 жыл бұрын

    Wow thank you! All we see on youtube is people promoting audiobooks as a way of multitasking and advertising audible lol. Definitely prefer reading books as well :) Btw, I might be totally off but did you get a new camera or something haha.. set up and quality looks amazing~

  • @whatznext28
    @whatznext282 жыл бұрын

    Great vid Elizabeth! My biggest takeaway is that for fiction audiobooks limit our scale of imagination. For non-fiction books I like to read the physical or ebooks and use the audiobooks as refreshers and reminders. What do you think?

  • @MarianaKobayashi
    @MarianaKobayashi2 жыл бұрын

    I love this! I would like to put your video in 1.5x but your voice and the music are so smooth it's impossible to have the full experience!

  • @elizabethfilips

    @elizabethfilips

    2 жыл бұрын

    AWH thank you Mariana!

  • @qazedc3
    @qazedc32 жыл бұрын

    I love audiobooks for multi tasking and while walking. I quickly realized that my brain can't do fiction audiobooks however, I only like listening to non-fiction. My mind gets easily confused with fiction especially if it's written in 3rd person, also with remembering all the story details and characters I space out easily while listening.

  • @ginashepherd9552
    @ginashepherd95522 жыл бұрын

    I love audiobooks when driving long distances, doing housework, and crocheting. It makes yucky housework much more bearable too. I read books before bed, on kindle or physical books, but audiobooks have been a game changer and have increased my already considerable book consumption.

  • @247Hamza
    @247Hamza2 жыл бұрын

    congrats on 125K subscribers 🎉 . not long ago you reached 100K, now onto 150K 🔥

  • @frmanmikaylzad1091
    @frmanmikaylzad10912 жыл бұрын

    Wow, that sounds amazing, thanks for great video Elizabeth, I don't know why, but I hate British accent till your videos, but for now, I'm start to listening a lot of british accent videos, specially your videos, you started to inspire me!

  • @lucycoles3860
    @lucycoles38602 жыл бұрын

    Great video!! Also I am in awe of your hair - I would be first in the queue if you made a haircare video lol

  • @anso7613
    @anso76132 жыл бұрын

    Agreed with you. I like the non fiction books in audiobooks but for the fiction ones are the best in physical books.

  • @anushadewase6089
    @anushadewase60892 жыл бұрын

    This is an internal war that I am waging every day and faced the same issue when kindle first came along and I just want to hold the book and feel it in my hands

  • @fluntimes
    @fluntimes2 жыл бұрын

    All great points, many I had not considered consciously. One thing I love about audiobooks is that some of them are theatrical and highly entertaining. Mark Manson's Subtle Art on audio absolute gold. A great narrator can make the content come to life. Works well with psychology / self help books.

  • @AbeVsTheWorld
    @AbeVsTheWorld Жыл бұрын

    For me, it is hard to dedicate my time to sit still and read paperback because I have ADHD. I just can't find it intriguing. But audiobooks came in handy for me while I'm grinding in anyway especially in video games. And when the audio book has voice acting, even better for me. I started off with Goosebumps books. Then step it up with Harry Potter 1 and 2. A complete collection of essays from C.S Lewis. And now I'm wishlisting Imajica by Clive Barker.

  • @MrStatix69
    @MrStatix69 Жыл бұрын

    I find audiobooks useful as a background track while I’m doing things to see if it’s a book I REALLY want to read and take the time to digest. If not, I often still pick up a thing or two listening to a book that was not, on the whole, useful for me to spend the conscious time on.

  • @Jasmine-ho9iz
    @Jasmine-ho9iz Жыл бұрын

    Audiobooks are a life saver for students who don’t have hours a day to read any more. When I was in highschool I use to spend up to 5 hours a day reading… can’t do that anymore so I listen to audiobooks when I’m working out, on transit, or cleaning, and save the actual reading for the weekends. I also think audiobooks are VERY harmful if you’re purpose of reading a particular book is to study it. To study a book I think it’s essential to actually take notes and actively engage with the text, reflect on a page, etc.

  • @angelgutierrez5950

    @angelgutierrez5950

    Жыл бұрын

    Why wouldn't students have the time of day anymore?? Everything you listed students did and still read real books before the internet and advancement in technology. Your generation is just lazy and want everything easy. Listening and reading are two different things. This new generation also use thier phones to cheat on school work, test, etc. If we had more of today's kids, reading real books, playing outside and not on social media. Maybe the world would start getting better.

  • @habituscraeftig

    @habituscraeftig

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone whose self-education as an adolescent involved a lot of Great Courses lectures, I agree that taking notes is helpful, but I don't know how necessary it is. I find that a lot of what I did *not* take notes on was more completely absorbed and integrated, because I was not actively externalized by trying to take notes. Instead, I frequently paused and talked (out loud) through my thoughts. I try to make a practice of actively noticing when I am confused or something doesn't fit with what I thought, so this practice also makes me more critical of real-time encounters with spoken assertions (lectures, persuasive speeches, &c.), as well.

  • @NawalMustafa
    @NawalMustafa2 жыл бұрын

    Not being paced by yourself but someone else is one of the main reasons why I still haven’t come to love audiobooks. Thank you for sharing your perspective on this ♥️

  • @charliecarrot

    @charliecarrot

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great point! I have no elitist attachment to physical written texts, I can just understand them better and take it at my own pace.

  • @luvasaur
    @luvasaur2 жыл бұрын

    A bit glossed over but yeah dyslexia or other learning differences makes audio books essential! Hooray for audio books

  • @Wingedmagician
    @Wingedmagician2 жыл бұрын

    “Do I have your attention right now? I hope so the idea that we’re missing so much of our own lives is pretty alarming. But now that I have it I won’t be able to keep it for very long. As you listen to this chapter it’s likely that you’ll miss up to half of what I say. And on top of that you’ll finish listening convinced that you didn’t miss a thing.” From Peak Mind by Amishi Jha, first chapter first couple minutes.

  • @harshilthakkar3289
    @harshilthakkar32892 жыл бұрын

    HELLO MA'AM! I AM YOUR NEW SUBSCRIBER AND I WATCHED SOME VIDEOS... THEY'RE SO FABULOUS I'M SO IMPRESSED KEEP GOING MA'AM ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @regerde2711
    @regerde2711 Жыл бұрын

    I don't think either is better or worse than the other. I prefer physical books. As you said it is much easier to highlight things and make notes. You can have your own pace and if you lose your concentration you can find the passage you last remember much faster. On top of that I'm very picky with voices. Most audiobooks just don't work for me. I really don't enjoy someone else reading to me and often lose my concentration. However I met quiet a few people who have the opposite problem. They can't stay focused on a page of black and white text but will be fully engaged while listening to someone else's voice. Not to mention people with disabilities like sight issues. The only thing that really bothers me is when people call audiobooks reading. It is listening, which is fine. Please don't change the meaning of words. Other than that I'm just glad that there are different ways for people to enjoy stories and everyone should do what works for them. Listening isn't less than reading. I wish I could listen to audiobooks and enjoy them since I also like to take walks or would listen in the dark but my brain can't engage well with that so I stick to reading.

  • @ZohraMaura
    @ZohraMaura2 жыл бұрын

    I like to have one audiobook and one physical book on the go at the same time. also, I tend to read books under 500 pages and audiobooks for books over 500 pages. I would never have completed War and Peace over lockdown last year without listening to it on audiobook on my daily walk! I also tend to remember characters and storylines more through audiobooks more than physical books x

  • @devilsolution9781

    @devilsolution9781

    2 жыл бұрын

    Some books are a proper slog to read physically, the silmarilion i tried to read twice and had to turn to audiobook in the end

  • @devilsolution9781

    @devilsolution9781

    2 жыл бұрын

    Imagine trying to read shakespear, might aswell buss out the german thesaurus

  • @mchobbit2951

    @mchobbit2951

    Жыл бұрын

    I do like that too. I am always reading a physical book, but always have an audiobook going that I listen to while doing art and before bed with my eyes closed. I am so thankful for both as they both enrich my life.

  • @sunshinethecat222
    @sunshinethecat2222 жыл бұрын

    Your hair is GOALS✨

  • @elizabethfilips

    @elizabethfilips

    2 жыл бұрын

    AWH THANK YOU!

  • @KreatorX1029
    @KreatorX10292 жыл бұрын

    I've been listening to Harry Potter audiobooks since the start of this year, mostly at night as a bedtime tale :) Reached Half Blood Prince now, and it's been fun, actually! About the inability to imagine, I think you need a good narrator, is all. Check out Jim Dale's narration of HP, he's too good!

  • @candiceseretin7230

    @candiceseretin7230

    2 жыл бұрын

    I preferred Stephen Fry reading the Harry Potter series. He was absolutely fantastic

  • @jojosantiago2576
    @jojosantiago25762 жыл бұрын

    You talk with sense, thanks for sharing your ideas its well noted😃👍👍👍❤💟💟💟❤

  • @snide_b
    @snide_b2 жыл бұрын

    As someone with adhd, reading has become an insanely difficult challenge when it comes to reading for pleasure. I'm not sure what the reasoning is, but audiobooks are so much easier for me to actually picture settings and characters in stories, and my comprehension is much better when listening to an audiobook versus reading a book. Anecdotal stuff aside, iirc audiobooks utilize a lot of the same parts of the brain as used when physically reading something. So I don't think you're missing out on anything from a mental benefit standpoint. As usual, I think it always just boils down to a sense of preference.

  • @devilsolution9781

    @devilsolution9781

    2 жыл бұрын

    Does your mind wonder while your still reading the words? Audiobooks are deffo less pervasive and more forgiving in that respect. In terms of neurological activation though, reading is the bread winner

  • @allisonirving8759

    @allisonirving8759

    9 ай бұрын

    As a reader of both physical and audiobooks I feel the exact opposite. I actually notice when my mind wanders with audiobooks and promptly use the -10 second button to go back. If I'm reading a physical book I can't be bothered to search for the spot and often continue on without stopping. I also have a system that makes note taking easier with audiobooks than it would be with physical books.@@devilsolution9781

  • @RohanYesudian
    @RohanYesudian2 жыл бұрын

    Key take away from this video: read audiobooks if you are just looking for information / if book just has lots of examples (like in some non fiction books). Read physical books for fiction because you have more scope to immerse yourself in your own imagination of the scene the author is depicting

  • @axsh970
    @axsh9702 жыл бұрын

    Reading subtitles in a TV series count as reading? If it does then I have read alot lol.

  • @BlueSky-gu1vn
    @BlueSky-gu1vn9 ай бұрын

    I like both but prefer physical books hands down everyday of the week. 😊👍

  • @rbrooks2007
    @rbrooks20072 жыл бұрын

    An interesting version tagged onto the end of this video might have been your narrative for this solely displayed as paragraphs of text on screen then find out what reaction readers have regarding it.

  • @alfiemarie
    @alfiemarie Жыл бұрын

    maybe its like how at one point on tiktok, users called out certain tiktokers for calling their recipe vegan steak when it really is just spiced and grilled watermelon, or something like that. or vegan hotdog but really it's just carrots. i dunno. i love audiobooks. i retain information better that way. i think calling it for what it is exactly is just apt. i dont know why saying " i listened to..." didn't really become a thing. instead, when people listen to an audiobook, the norm has become to say "i read bla bla bla". to me, reading books and listening to a recorded version of the book are two very different experiences. and sometimes i do both at the same time. this allows me to be more immersed in the story. anyway, i don't know anymore where im going with this LMAO so ill stop. ps: ive nothing against vegans or meat-eaters

  • @judyives1832
    @judyives18322 жыл бұрын

    Being a blind person, listening becomes a very different process . It’s a bit hurtful to have someone say that how we interact with books is inferior. You don’t understand how blind people create a sensory world without needing to use vision.

  • @elizabethfilips

    @elizabethfilips

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sorry, I definitely don’t understand that! I did try to refer to it in as much as I believe I can, but this definitely was from my personal perspective. I’m sorry if it wasn’t sensitive enough 🙏

  • @thestraycat69
    @thestraycat692 жыл бұрын

    Also it had gifted me understanding other people who have different dilect, and adapt for the most part quicker to different accents.

  • @darstar217
    @darstar2173 ай бұрын

    I think they have to count as reading. There are a lot of people who can’t read physical books medical reasons but listen to audiobooks instead.

  • @solo-gdz6466
    @solo-gdz64662 жыл бұрын

    Totally agree, especially about about your own history and personal bagage, even though I'm new and slow at reading books, also I prefer to listen to podcasts rather than audio books.

  • @speakingfreely6770
    @speakingfreely67702 жыл бұрын

    4000 weeks was a book that I just finished on audio book, downloaded an ebook and might now buy the physical book.

  • @rogerhuggettjr.7675
    @rogerhuggettjr.76759 ай бұрын

    There are only two situations where audiobooks make sense to me. If I'm reading heavy theology or philosophy, it forces me to stop reading the same thing over and over and get beyond it to see the greater context. Of course I have to listen to it a second time through to get that back. The second was when I'd go on bike rides and want to extend my route, this allowed me to lose track of time as I focused and make it feel shorter in a way music didn't require of me. Plus, no matter how far I went out I then was required to ride myself back home. I have a very negative view of audiobooks in general as I hate having to use tech to do the most low tech activity imaginable. I should not need electricity to read a frickin' book (this is why I'll never own a kindle). I also enjoy seeing the trophies of my time investment sitting on a shelf and for the most part only buy hardcovers. Finally, I've started reading Terry Pratchett who has many puns in his books that would be missed in spoken word. A booktuber pointed out a good example of this: a person who steals musical instruments during a riot is a LUTER.

  • @StefanoCanepa1970
    @StefanoCanepa1970 Жыл бұрын

    I don't "read" audiobooks, but I listen to audiobooks while reading the book. Why I'm doing that to myself? To improve my pronunciation.

  • @3choblast3r4
    @3choblast3r43 ай бұрын

    Whenever I hear an author talk about their revenue being 60% or so from audiobooks it really depresses me. And the messed up part is that audiobook listeners are obsessive and adamant about claiming that listening, .. let me repeat that. *Listening* is the same thing as *reading.* They won't say, "I listened to a book" they will claim to have "read" it. They will call people who don't agree, elitists etc. When in my experience, it's audiobook people that will bring up how it's "the same thing" over and over, practically forcing us to go.. "no, no it's not" To be very clear, audiobooks are great. There are some people for whom reading is a lot harder, people losing their sight, people with certain neurodivergencies (I myself have ADHD). But, that does not change. That "story time" is not the same as reading a book. It doesn't expand your vocabulary like reading does. It doesn't give you the room to breath, think, reread a chapter, consider what happened before because it goes on without a break. And I highly doubt the people listening to audiobooks while doing the dishes etc get the full context let alone rewinding parts that they didn't get or pausing to take a breather and consider what they've just heard.

  • @memeworld7800
    @memeworld78002 жыл бұрын

    Before watching the video... They are different sensory experiences and depending on which style you learn/remember from is important. You still develop the vocabulary from listening (just not the spelling). Although you don't have to "read between the lines" as much as the voice over on an audiobook probably has intonation giving away the meaning behind what they are saying ism

  • @AivarsMeijers
    @AivarsMeijers2 жыл бұрын

    I was guessing that you will mention self help, business books, etc. as perfect material to listen on 2x speed ad see that was right :) I feel the same about audio books.

  • @elizabethfilips

    @elizabethfilips

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yasss we’re on the same page with this!

  • @starchtrek7263
    @starchtrek72632 жыл бұрын

    I prefer reading physical books a lot! When I listen to audio stuff I prefer listening to podcasts. I have listened to audio books in the past but it never quite stuck with me.

  • @habituscraeftig
    @habituscraeftig Жыл бұрын

    Anything repetitive lends itself better to audio. But by the same token, if a work is not repetitive, the audio is best absorbed when it is repeated, after a time. I tend to approach audio lectures (an important resource, for me) again, on a kind of 'spaced repetition' basis - a year later, then three years later, and so on. This allows me to integrate the same information differently over time, and I have come to recognize the restless feeling that comes from having already fully absorbed and perhaps integrated (perhaps dissected and rejected) what a book or lesson has to offer. I often do a similar thing with read books, where I review them in audio or ebook form (or paper if I began with electronic). I find the change in medium often makes different things stand out.

  • @twoblink
    @twoblink Жыл бұрын

    Having 6 hours of commute time; as Jim Rohn says; turn your car into a university on wheels... With audiobooks; I am able to do 100+ books a year; and I usually listen to them 2.5X if the reader is good.. For fiction; yes; slightly robs you of the imagination; and it's more like watching "Theater" but for business books; not comparable. Because note taking is so difficult with audiobooks; i'm actually forced to memorize a lot more info than I normally would. Books aren't being replaced by audiobooks; it's supplimented.

  • @davidranderson1
    @davidranderson19 ай бұрын

    I've heard the brain's processing of the printed word and the spoken word is fundamentally not that different. Both are processed in the language center, but, for the printed word, it has to be "decoded" and matched to its spoken form before the brain processes it. On a purely mechanical level, the only difference between a physical book and an audio book is if decoding is required.

  • @Ollie-dl8fv
    @Ollie-dl8fv2 жыл бұрын

    Lorèal hold the phone! Bellissimo 👌 Presentation was on point as always. I would like to read more, faster. But rememberinbg to read for enjoyment/inspiration/enjoyment/learning is more important I buy books that I read two chapters only but justify it because I believe in the causes of those writers. Book suggestion Norman Doidge the brain that changes itself.

  • @DaringDanielletravels
    @DaringDanielletravels2 жыл бұрын

    Listening is much more passive than reading and in our multi-task obsessed culture most people are listening while distracted.

  • @rosea2350
    @rosea2350 Жыл бұрын

    Audiobooks are great but it’s so important to support bookstores. 📚

  • @Nikita35485
    @Nikita354852 жыл бұрын

    I dunno what I prefer more but it's ruther reading than listening. However listening of Lovecraft's "The call of Cthulhu" before this New Year was outstandingly fascinating for me. I was shocked by the power of audio book in horror genre. High recommendations from me: try horror audio book. It might be great.

  • @pokemongurlz
    @pokemongurlz2 жыл бұрын

    I legit got an audible ad before this

  • @shravanimandhari5867
    @shravanimandhari58672 жыл бұрын

    Elizabeth spoke facts. She always does.

  • @Jays_dead_cat
    @Jays_dead_catАй бұрын

    To expand your vocab and comprehension it's better to read. To just enjoy a story, sharpen your listening skills and get more books ticked off your list in a shorter time then do audiobooks. Both are beneficial

  • @nuxbux9042
    @nuxbux90422 жыл бұрын

    I LOVE YOUR HAIR

  • @PedroHernandesC
    @PedroHernandesC2 жыл бұрын

    omg yes 🙌🏻

  • @enscebose8466
    @enscebose84662 жыл бұрын

    This is how the beef with Ali abdaal starts.

  • @sohailkhanahmed4622
    @sohailkhanahmed46222 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful Elizabeth

  • @Sunshinelollipops223
    @Sunshinelollipops223 Жыл бұрын

    Exactly if I’m not using reading skills then I’m not reading lol. Reading is a skill, it’s also important for learning how to write.

  • @dfjulesful
    @dfjulesful2 жыл бұрын

    Completely unrelated but your hair is magnificent!

  • @Alichills
    @Alichills2 жыл бұрын

    girl when you gonna start med school again? we want another a day in the life of a med school student

  • @mihoang4458
    @mihoang44582 жыл бұрын

    Again, 0.75 speed suits you best :)))

  • @fwwaller
    @fwwaller11 ай бұрын

    I kind of disagree on the whole point about audiobooks taking away the personal pacing of a book. If you get to a certain point in an audiobook where you didn't really absorb something all that well you can always just rewind it back to a certain point, thats probably a good bit more cumbersome than just marking a page in a book, but that personalized pacing does exist with audiobooks.

  • @alicebeshay6124
    @alicebeshay61248 ай бұрын

    I love listening to audio books when doing boring things. Doing the dishes or ironing. It takes me away in a pleasant way. A real book is for times you can sit and concentrate. I don’t like speedreading, reading a book slowly, leaves you in in the story longer. I always ponder on every story 😁

  • @BernieAnderson
    @BernieAnderson2 жыл бұрын

    This is an ongoing argument between my wife and I. :-) AudioBooks are incredibly important to my system. I am an extremely high audio learner. This makes audiobooks an important part of my entire system. That said, I tend to do audiobooks for fiction and ebooks or analog for nonfiction (for note taking). I do count audiobooks in my annual book count though.

  • @dipdas4579
    @dipdas45792 жыл бұрын

    Rightly said 🤞🏻

  • @yunishot
    @yunishot Жыл бұрын

    I think, though counterintuitive, that listening to a complicated philosophy book can be better than reading it. I've been both reading and listening to Thus Spoke Zarathustra and my memory of the audiobook is way more vivid. The audiobook allowed me to think way better compared to reading the book.

  • @yunishot

    @yunishot

    Жыл бұрын

    Though novels are way better to read then to listen to imo. It's way harder to appropriate a character when he is defined by the voice of someone.

  • @ronnronn386
    @ronnronn386 Жыл бұрын

    Underrated but soo true. I feel the same way about audiobook. It's just not feels right

  • @thestraycat69
    @thestraycat692 жыл бұрын

    Both work, both can educate you. The only thing that reading offers that audio cannot is visual such as graphs. So when it's a business book, computer science book etc. I like to use books( unless it's philosophy or politics which can be used as audio.) Now if I want my mind to actually unwind and actually relax/ think about what is being presented to me it's got to go audio. I can read a fictional book and enjoy it but I will wander off and start doing a project of some sort rather than enjoy the fiction. Now I normally just use fiction as background anyways it's soothing, relaxing and reminds me of my mother who used to tell me stories when I was a child. Though I do actually wonder the psychology behind this? You've opened a can of worms.

  • @alexwyler4570
    @alexwyler45702 жыл бұрын

    One should listen to the seven Harry Potter books read by Jim Dale. ( not the other guy). If you are traveling anywhere by car with the kids, you will agree that Jim Dale should have been awarded the Nobel Peace Price hihi. It is the best way to enjoy the Harry Potter books. And the Gift of Fear read by the author is a must read for any American woman. And i really enjoyed Elizabeth Gilbert " Big Magic: Creative Living beyond Fear" as an audio book. Sometimes, it is a great experience to have the book read by the author. For the parents out there, once they went through the Harry Potter books: Belle Teal by Ann Martin narrated Julia Gibson, Counting on Grace narrated by Lili Gamache. my edit: It took maybe three books for Jim Dale to finally master Hermione's voice.

  • @gecogexx
    @gecogexx2 жыл бұрын

    I notice that I don’t reflect on the reading I’m doing with audiobooks. Physical books force me to think about what the author means and how it can be applied.

  • @RICKLUSTOSA
    @RICKLUSTOSA2 жыл бұрын

    With no correlation with the topic being discussed... My God, you are so beautiful and your hair is astonishing! 😁

  • @conderaffael
    @conderaffael2 жыл бұрын

    Well Done! :)

  • @gavindavies164
    @gavindavies1642 жыл бұрын

    i am that person who struggles to read. i could read probably 1 to 2 books a year if lucky as i don't prioritise sitting down to read but i started my audible 24 book subscription in jan 19th of 2022 and have read 8 books so far. even if i dont get everything out of a book the same way i would if i had read a book, I still get alot out of them. getting through 70 books in a year via audio book has to be better than 1 to 2 books a year via reading. in my eyes audiobooks are king

  • @swarth8632
    @swarth86322 жыл бұрын

    Dang, there's no closed captions for this video.

  • @Alliefrownie
    @Alliefrownie Жыл бұрын

    I'm massively dyslexic so audiobooks have been a lifesaver. If I didn't have dyslexia, I'd probably share a similar stance. Good content though :)

  • @charliecarrot
    @charliecarrot2 жыл бұрын

    As someone with ADHD, I literally cannot focus on audiobooks. I'm the kinda person who has to reread a paragraph a few times before I understand it, and I'm always going back to previous pages to help understand what I'm reading better. If I try to listen to audiobooks, my mind wanders and I lose focus. If I listen to them while doing something else (driving, dishes, etc) the same thing happens. I have trouble comprehending what was said and ingesting it before the narrator moves onto something else. A big problem is that the narration is often boring (and slowing it down for better comprehension makes it worse) Podcasts are great and it's easy for me to listen to people having a conversation. For books, I'll stick to my ebook reader. That being said, I have absolutely no qualms with someone saying they "read" a book if they listened to an audiobook. It's equivalent, and everyone has preferences. If you understand audiobooks better, don't let others make you feel like you're "cheating" or "less than" because you didn't read physical words. It doesn't matter, find the best way to ingest the material for yourself!

  • @friedrichnietzsche1853
    @friedrichnietzsche18532 жыл бұрын

    I love this girl 📍

  • @PiaJustynn
    @PiaJustynn2 жыл бұрын

    Ooopppsiee!

  • @gabrielr868
    @gabrielr868 Жыл бұрын

    WTF? I am dyslexic, I don't want to "read", I want knowledge

  • @user-wk7vv3bx5d
    @user-wk7vv3bx5d2 жыл бұрын

    Nice video

  • @ANSAZO
    @ANSAZO2 жыл бұрын

    Again and again i'm Feeling your smile like hipnoteraphy😵