Reduce Noise to Reduce Stress: Sound Advice From the Rug Doctor
By Ron Neal
Editor's Summary: Your flooring choices within your home
can impact your stress levels. You will learn the best flooring
types for reducing noise and therefore reducing your stress levels.
Maybe getting the silent treatment at home isn't a bad thing after
all.
With the constant barrage of leaf blowers, lawn mowers and loud
appliances swirling around us, it's no wonder "I need some peace
and quiet!" has become such a popular plea. If your neighbor decides
to fire up the chainsaw Sunday morning while you're sipping coffee
and enjoying the newspaper, chalk up another frazzled nerve. And
scientists and health officials aren't just dismissing noise at
home as a nuisance; they're taking the issue seriously.
The noise inside your home will never rival that of the outside
world. However, it should be a sanctuary from the clatter and commotion
of our environment. With simple solutions to reducing indoor noise,
you can turn a hurly-burly home into a healthy, happy one.
Volumes of Information on Noise and Health
Sure, we have all heard there's too much fat in our diet. Well,
maybe there's too much noise in our diets, too. Now, you can't eat
noise like pint of Haagen-Daz, but you sure can feel it, and the
end result can be more stress and frustration.
A 2004 study that appeared in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology,
concluded that women were more vulnerable to snacking and overeating
than men when exposed to loud noise. Researchers found that women
exposed to loud noise were more likely than men to indulge in common
junk foods like popcorn, potato chips and chocolate.
The study took three groups of men and women, asking them to complete
common math problems while exposing them to alternating levels of
noise. The third control group wasn't exposed to any noise during
their problem-solving tasks.
Between sessions, the study participants were left alone in a room
with several types of bland, high-fat food. The study showed that
women who gave up and were discouraged by the assigned tasks ate
significantly more than the women who were not frustrated.
While men's performance was also altered during the study, the
research showed that the affects from noise lingered longer in women.
The researchers concluded that the impact from a noisy environment
and lack of control over that environment can manifest itself as
stress in women and may lead them to overindulging in fatty foods.
Not surprisingly, the issue of noise not only leads to stress in
adults, but can leave a significant imprint on a child's ability
to learn.
A recent German study showed that children exposed to loud noises
learned to read more slowly. It also concluded that being subjected
to loud surroundings had an impact on motivation, long-term memory
and speech acquisition.
"This study ...nails down that it is almost certain that noise
is causing the difference in children's ability to learn and read,"
says environmental stress researcher Gary Evans, a PhD from Cornell
University and the lead researcher on the study. Evans has also
discovered that blood pressure and levels of stress hormones were
higher in children subjected to a noisy environment.
Silence can also be golden during the golden years.
For seniors, constant exposure to noise may increase the risk of
heart attack. Studies have shown that, much like women's eating
habits were altered by stress-inducing noise, that consistent exposure
to noise leads to increased blood pressure. This change, along with
changes in cholesterol, can lead to heart disease.
Some Sound Decorating Decisions
Certainly, noise-related health issues shouldn't lead you to hide
out in a soundproof room the rest of your life, but having peace,
and piece of mind at home can go a long way in reducing stress.
More homes are looking like the local audio-video store, with high-definition
TVs, surround-sound systems and booming video games. This is in
addition to the old standbys: barking dogs and screaming kids.
Basically, sound needs someplace to go. The way to quiet things
down may seem strange, but it's a solution that is pure science.
Absorbing sound is one way to turn down the volume in your house,
and the best place to start is your floors.
Area rugs and carpet serve as sound insulators. With builders reshaping
homes to combine big spaces, like the popular great room, noise
levels have gone up.
Rugs and carpet reduce the sound that bounces off walls and
floors. Homes with hard surfaces like tile and wood floors - where
carpeting isn't used - really benefit from the use of area rugs.
Not only do area rugs help soak up noise, they also provide a form
of insulation when used beneath tables and chairs. Because hardwood
floors tend to amplify sound the most, using a pad under an area
rug is also beneficial.
Most flooring bounces sound around like a rubber ball, but cork
flooring is actually a noise-reducing product. The material can
also be used as an "underlayment" for laminate and hardwood floors.
Other noise-reducing household tricks include using slipcovers,
pillows and drapes instead of blinds. Small spaces around doors
and windows can also let unwanted sound in. Close them up with weather
stripping.
Shelves with books, valances and even potted plants can help. And
sound machines can add a bit of tranquility throughout the house
while helping drown out the police helicopter or the takeoff of
that Gulfstream jet.
The kitchen can benefit as well, with throw rugs, wood cabinets
and stone tables, all sound absorbers.
Noise is something we all have to live with. But it doesn't mean
we have to like it or are powerless to do anything. A theologian
once said: "There is a close connection between tranquility and
sanity." And what better way to practice that philosophy then by
starting at home.
Based in Los Angeles, Ron Neal is a free-lance writer, editor and
owner of Writemind Media. With more than 20 years of experience,
including six at the Los Angeles Times, Mr. Neal has produced and
edited hundreds of articles on a variety of subjects, including
flooring, home improvement and area
rugs of all kinds, including Oriental
rugs.
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