Why Does My Husband Prefer Audiobooks Over Reading?

2026-05-26 06:10:54 317
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2 Answers

George
George
2026-05-28 02:48:29
Could be as simple as multitasking! My brother-in-law swore he'd never 'waste money on someone reading to him'—until he started a woodworking hobby. Now he's always got a biography or sci-fi novel playing in his workshop. Hands busy, mind engaged. Some brains just sync better with spoken words, especially if they grew up with bedtime stories or podcasts. It might also be about comfort; my dad switched after his presbyopia got bad, saying straining to read made him lose the joy. Audiobooks let him focus on the plot instead of fighting font sizes.
Ariana
Ariana
2026-06-01 06:02:55
There's this weird assumption that people who listen to audiobooks aren't 'real' readers, but honestly? My husband swapped to audiobooks years ago, and I totally get it now. He's got a job that involves staring at screens all day—his eyes are fried by 5 PM. Pouring over tiny text after that feels like punishment. Audiobooks let him absorb stories while cooking, walking the dog, or just zoning out on the couch. It's not about laziness; it's about reclaiming time. Some narrators elevate the experience too—like when he listened to 'Project Hail Mary' and raved about Ray Porter's performance for weeks. The voices, the pacing—it added layers the printed page couldn't. Plus, there's something primal about oral storytelling. We evolved listening to tales around campfires, not squinting at Kindle screens.

That said, I used to side-eye his habit until I tried it myself during a long road trip. Hearing Neil Gaiman narrate 'The Graveyard Book' with all those delicate character nuances made me realize audiobooks aren't a 'cheat'—they're a different art form. My husband always says it helps him retain details better too, since auditory processing sticks in his memory differently. Now we bond over recommending narrators instead of just authors. The way I see it, whether it's ears or eyes doing the work, the story still gets where it needs to go.
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