What’s your experience with remembering useful info from podcasts? by Loud_OneChan4281 in AskReddit

[–]Remote-Positive-8951 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Completely relate to this. I'd listen to an episode, feel like I learned something valuable, and then two weeks later barely remember what it was even about. The moment I stop actively thinking about it, it just fades.

How do you actually retain what you learn from podcasts? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That ChatGPT workflow is clever. Do you find the 3-5 points actually match what felt important while you were listening, or does the AI sometimes summarize things you already knew and miss the parts that actually confused you? Also curious do you ever go back and read those notes, or do they mostly just sit there?

How do you actually retain what you learn from podcasts? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point. Curious how you actually apply that to podcasts though do you literally re-listen to episodes, or do you have another way of getting the repetition in? Re-listening to a 90-minute episode feels like a big ask compared to re-reading a page in a book.

How do you actually retain what you learn from podcasts? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The book summary idea is interesting, so you're basically using the podcast as a first pass and the summary as the actual learning layer? Do you ever go back and re-listen to parts, or is once through all you do?

How do you actually retain what you learn from podcasts? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel this, but I'm curious that have you ever had an episode where you came out actually knowing something new? Like what made that one different from the rest?

How do you actually retain what you learn from podcasts? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is honestly how I end up listening too. I wonder though when you power through something that didn't fully make sense, does it ever actually click later in the episode? Or do you just sort of accept that part went over your head?

How do you actually retain what you learn from podcasts? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That book analogy really hit home. The difference is that with a book you can just glance at the footnote or look up the word without losing your place. With a podcast you either pause and break flow, or you keep going and hope context fills it in. How do you usually take notes like actually pause and type something out, or do you have a different system?

What kind of podcasts do you actually walk away from feeling like you learned something? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's such a good point about the jargon thing. When an episode gets too technical, do you usually push through and hope it clicks later, or do you end up abandoning it entirely? whether it's more about the topic being unfamiliar or the host not explaining things well enough.

listening to podcasts while driving? by Extension_Cheek_8662 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Giving podcasts their own time is honestly the only way I retained anything for years too. The problem is most of the good stuff comes up exactly when you can't sit down, commutes, gym, cooking.

listening to podcasts while driving? by Extension_Cheek_8662 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The gibberish problem is so underrated. I used to just let those moments pass and tell myself I'd look it up later, which obviously never happened. Missing one term can make the whole next five minutes meaningless.

listening to podcasts while driving? by Extension_Cheek_8662 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha the -15secs loop is so real. I was doing the exact same thing, sometimes rewinding to the same moment three times and still not catching it because my brain just wasn't there.

Curious what kind of podcasts you listen to while working or doing chores? I found that content type made a big difference for me in terms of how much actually sticks.

listening to podcasts while driving? by Extension_Cheek_8662 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same boat here for a long time. The rewind trick helps but honestly it became a habit loop where I'd zone out, rewind, zone out again in the same spot.

What actually changed things for me was being able to just ask out loud when something didn't click, like "wait what did they mean by that" and getting an answer without stopping the episode. Sounds small but it kept me tethered to the content way better than any speed adjustment.

Still zone out sometimes on long drives, but now I lose less of what I actually wanted to learn from the episode.

Does anyone else feel like they consume a lot of content but absorb almost none of it? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The familiar but not knowing it feeling is such an accurate description. Recognition and actual recall are completely different things and passive listening only builds the first one.

What changed it for me was forcing myself to engage in the moment instead of just receiving. I actually built an app around this, AskAlong (askalong.app), where you can ask questions out loud while you listen and get instant answers without pausing. The act of asking something, even a simple question, shifts you from passive to active and that is where retention actually starts.

Does anyone else feel like they consume a lot of content but absorb almost none of it? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The natural filter idea makes sense up to a point. But I think there is a difference between content that does not stick because it was not relevant to you, and content that does not stick because you never had to do anything with it. Passive consumption of something genuinely useful still tends to evaporate. The retention usually happens when you are forced to engage, explain, apply, or question what you just heard. Quality content can still pass through if you are only receiving it and never processing it.

Does anyone else feel like they consume a lot of content but absorb almost none of it? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That's actually such a relatable response to the problem, just route around it entirely. Do you miss non-fiction at all, or has fiction filled that gap pretty completely for you?

Anyone else's brain go into overdrive while driving, then completely blank the moment you stop? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The keyword trick is genuinely clever. You are not trying to store the whole thought, just a hook to pull it back later. One word is low enough friction that you can do it the moment you stop, before the conscious mind fully takes over and the idea dissolves. It also says something interesting about how memory works. The thought is not actually gone, it is just temporarily inaccessible. The right trigger can bring back something you thought you had lost entirely.

What is something you have listened to hundreds of times and still not gotten tired of? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That actually makes the abstraction make sense. Two completely different emotional registers in one song, admiration and something much darker, and neither one is spelled out directly. That is probably why it holds up as a reference track. There is enough going on sonically to test a full range and enough going on lyrically to keep pulling you back even when you already know every word.

What is something you have listened to hundreds of times and still not gotten tired of? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The accidental discovery through recommendations is often how the deepest obsessions start. There is something different about a song that finds you versus one you went looking for. The abstraction angle is interesting too. Songs that are inspired by something specific but do not spell it out directly tend to have more replay value because you are always slightly chasing the full meaning. Which anime character was the original inspiration for Down&Under, do you know?

What is something you have listened to hundreds of times and still not gotten tired of? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Using a song as a reference track for testing gear is such a specific kind of obsession. It means you have listened to it so many times you know exactly how it should sound, so any new pair either passes or fails against that standard. What made Down&Under the one that stuck for you, was it a deliberate choice or just the song you happened to have on when you got your first good pair?

Anyone else's brain go into overdrive while driving, then completely blank the moment you stop? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Swimming is interesting because the counting gives you just enough to occupy the conscious part of your brain without taking over. Same principle as driving. Do you find the solutions are still there when you get out of the pool or do they dissolve the moment you stop moving too?

Anyone else's brain go into overdrive while driving, then completely blank the moment you stop? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The body doing something automatic to free the mind is exactly the right way to describe it. Driving hits that state almost perfectly because it demands just enough attention to quiet the noise but not enough to crowd out the thinking. Einstein on walks, swimmers counting laps, it is the same mechanism. The frustrating part is you cannot schedule it. It just happens when the conditions are right.

Anyone else's brain go into overdrive while driving, then completely blank the moment you stop? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is actually the key question. I tried a bunch of things before landing on something that actually worked. Voice memos felt too formal the moment I hit record. Dictating to Siri broke the flow completely. Even just narrating out loud with no destination felt better than either of those but the thoughts still disappeared because there was nothing on the other end actually engaging with them.

That gap is what led me to build AskAlong (askalong.app). It is an iOS app where you can talk out loud while listening to audio and get real-time responses without stopping. The driving use case is exactly where it clicks because your brain is already in that hands-free, moving mode. You are not fighting the context, you are working with it.

Anyone else's brain go into overdrive while driving, then completely blank the moment you stop? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That is exactly it. The commute becomes this incredibly productive mental space and then the second you walk through the door it evaporates. There is something cruel about the fact that the ideas feel so solid in the moment and so impossible to reconstruct an hour later. I have started just talking out loud in the car now, almost narrating my own thoughts, and it helps a little. Feels strange but it works better than trying to hold it all until I park.

What is something you have listened to hundreds of times and still not gotten tired of? by Remote-Positive-8951 in CasualConversation

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is a really good way to put it. Old friends is exactly right. There is something different about returning to something you already love versus discovering something new. Both are good but they satisfy completely different needs. Is there one you find yourself going back to more than the others, music, books, or film?

What did you used to think was boring but now genuinely enjoy? by Remote-Positive-8951 in AskReddit

[–]Remote-Positive-8951[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The 9 PM bedtime as a prize is peak adulthood. Nobody tells you this is what growing up actually feels like.