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ND Dev

@libroraptor @Kay @anne_twain @Gustodon @georgepenney
Here in the UK, most supermarkets have a quiet hour once or twice a week. They shut off the awful background music and, in some cases, turn down the glaring lights a bit. You might want to ask at customer service whether your supermarket does something similar (and, if not, why not). The intention is to help autists and other people who find supermarkets overstimulating, but you don't have to be autistic to benefit from a slightly more civilised environment.

4 comments
Alistair K

@nddev @Kay @anne_twain @Gustodon @georgepenney We're gradually getting those here, too, also at public libraries.

Jon

@libroraptor @nddev @Kay @anne_twain @Gustodon @georgepenney as recently as 25 years ago, libraries *were* "quiet hours" in most places in the US. Then they started moving to "quiet rooms" and not particularly enforcing even that.

Perhaps this does get more people in the library, though I'm not among them. These days I just checkout ebooks, or occasionally reserve something and go in and out as fast as possible.

Kay :heart_bi: replied to Jon

@oddhack @libroraptor @nddev @anne_twain @Gustodon @georgepenney Wellington City Libraries (NZ) are civilized places and while mostly quietish, they're not silent. They also allow visitors to eat there although they request not smelly or messy food please. I've been known to spend hours at a library in between other engagements. Free Wifi, comfy furniture, restrooms, and if you have a packed lunch, food too. My local branch Te Awe has a cafe too.
wcl.govt.nz/visit/locations/te

Kay :heart_bi:

@nddev @libroraptor @anne_twain @Gustodon @georgepenney Quiet time in supermarkets is in trial in some branches of Coles supermarkets in Australia and in one or two in Aotearoa New Zealand. It's unlikely to catch on in big chains unless legally required as research shows higher spending rates associated with certain beats of music. Possibly from disrupted thinking as suggested. Supermarkets are there to make their owners money not to benefit customers.

FWIW I sometimes wear earplugs to cope

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