Podcasts save my sanity

I didn’t manage to post anything earlier this week because I was struck down by a bout of mini-flu. It wasn’t as bad and debilitating as the virus that had me knocked out for a couple of weeks in November but it was enough to confine me to my sick bed for a couple of days.

I’m not very good at being ill. I get frustrated and fed up and bored. When I’m sleeping it’s fine, of course, cos then I don’t notice a thing - and sleep is the best thing for you when you’re ill. But it’s those times in between when you’ve slept too much but you’re still not well enough to walk around or do anything useful.

Back in the old days (5 years ago?), I would have been languishing in front of the telly, turning my brain to mush with day time TV. But these days, it’s podcasts that help me make it through the dreaded influenza. If you choose the good ones, you can be educated, entertained and amused - all without leaving your bed.

Here are just a handful of the podcasts that have kept me sane during the last few days:

The Spirit of Things - Australian radio’s spiritual discussion podcast, whose presenter Rachel Kohn has the most sooting voice I’ve ever heard.

This American Life - an award winning US series that takes a literary look at true stories about ordinary people. Their episode about Testosterone had me laughing out loud - especially, the story about the woman who took a double dose of the hormone and began to lust after sports cars and to understand physics as well as what happened when the radio station team had themselves tested to see who had the most testosterone.

The Politics of Culture - another intelligent and in-depth US program looking at “the intersection where the world of politics and culture meet and sometimes collide”. I really enjoyed the interview with the author of the book “Starbucked” - did you know that Starbucks in the US deliberately built stores on the right hand side of the road as you commute from the suburbs to the city to make it easier for commuters to stop and buy a coffee?

The BBC World Service also has many great documentary podcasts but they are generally very earnest and keen to tell you all the troubles of the world. So, when I am feeling fragile, it’s not the best time to listen to documentaries that begin “I was nine years old when the soldiers came to the village and killed everyone…” or “Every year, 10,000 women die of [insert terrible disease]….” - or anything that refers to “Iraq”, “Jihad”, “Israel”, “political prisoners”, “genocide”, “famine”, “war” etc etc etc! That sort of thing would just make me even iller!

What are your favourite podcasts? Do you listen to different types of podcasts for different activities? Please add a comment and let me know.

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