Another in my very occasional series of articles on depression – my depression. They are written from a very personal perspective; they are my views of how I see things working and what it feels like on the inside. Your views and experiences may be vastly different. My views and experiences are not necessarily backed by scientific evidence or current medical opinion. These articles are not medical advice or treatment pathways. If you think you have a problem then you should talk to your primary care physician.
Noise and Depression
Helicopters, leaf blowers, sirens, car alarms, washing machines, motorways, food processors, construction sites, microwaves, air conditioners, lawn mowers, hair dryers, motorcycles, motorboats, cell phones, TVs, stereos, car doors, people constantly talking loudly, aeroplanes, screaming children …
We have non-stop noise these days in our lives. How can we possibly have mental clarity and peace? Our minds are constantly being jolted and thrown violently back and forth by this sudden noise and then the next. [1]
We live in a noisy world – we shouldn’t. No wonder we get so fraught, anxious and depressed.
It is well established that noise is a major disrupter of health – both physical and mental – and seems to be a factor in depression [1,2,3,4,5,6].
Is depression the inevitable aftermath of unabating stress on our bodies, minds and souls living in this noisy, fast-paced modern society? If depression can be caused by a depletion of chemicals that our body naturally produces when in harmony, how can we expect to have this harmony in such an environment that violently assaults our natural relaxed state with noise at two-second intervals? [1]
Noise is certainly a factor in my depression, which is often triggered by pure overload. I don’t want to be assailed by noise – any noise, but especially secondhand noise – just as I don’t want to have too much to do heaped on me.
I need quiet. Much to Noreen’s bemusement, I seldom play music these days; or have the TV or radio on. I used to have something playing all the time but I now cannot function with continual background distraction. Continual (especially man-made) noise – even just the hum of my PC – drives me up the wall.
We live in a noisy world – far too noisy. To demonstrate just how noisy our world is, try doing my 10-minute test.
- You will need: pencil and paper, a watch.
- Go and sit outside, somewhere where you aren’t going to be disturbed for 10 minutes: your garden, your balcony or the square you live in.
- Sit quietly and listen – really listen, 100%.
- Write down every single noise you hear as you hear it. (If you hear it more than once, write it down each time.) What do you hear?
- At the end of 10 minutes have a look at your list. How many noises have you written down? How many are natural sounds (birds, animals, the wind, the stream); how many are man-made (cars, planes, appliances)?
- Ideally you should be able to hear only natural sounds – the more man-made sounds you hear, the more your environment will be stressing you.
Now compare with what Piers Plowman would have heard 500 or more years ago while eating his lunchtime bread and cheese under a tree: birds, sheep, a distant dog barking, wind rustling the trees, his horses’ whinnying, a babbling brook, maybe the swoosh of the windmill. How often do any of us hear these natural sounds?
Unless you live in the depths of the countryside I wouldn’t mind betting well over 50% of your noises are man-made and/or drown out the natural. That, at least, is my experience. OK, it isn’t scientific, but it is likely to demonstrate just how noisy our environment is. Is it any wonder we feel hammered?
What can you do about it? Here are twelve things which may help you:
- Avoid places with high noise levels; if necessary walk away to somewhere quieter.
- Avoid open-plan offices; research shows they are a major disrupter of work and mental processes [2].
- Don’t have the TV, radio or hi-fi on unless there is something specific you want to listen to/watch (and then give it your undivided attention).
- Don’t play music, especially through headphones, as background; this doesn’t make it better [2].
- Complain in bars, restaurants and shops which play “musak”; if they don’t like it, go somewhere else; remember you have a choice.
- Keep your mobile phone on vibrate and your PC speakers on mute.
- Try to avoid having the phone ring; try using text messages instead [5].
- Avoid noisy household appliances like hair dryers, food processors, lawn mowers and leaf blowers.
- Try to find quiet household appliances.
- If you have hearing aids and want more quiet, take your hearing aids out; it isn’t rude if it is looking after your mental well-being.
- Spend time away from the city; go somewhere you can listen to the birds or the sea.
- Plan for some quiet time every day.
References
[1] Noise Pollution, Depression, … and Nature As Our Guide
[2] Seven Ways Noise Affects Your Health
[3] Decibel Hell: The Effects of Living in a Noisy World
[4] What Did You Say?! How Noise Pollution Is Harming You
[5] Depression: On Noise, Answering the Telephone and Making Decisions
[6] The ubiquity of the modern beep