Getting Off the Grid
It wasn't until I got home from being on the road that I realized how much I missed it. Yet I love walking in somewhere to the sound of laughter and dogs barking and little kids shouting Brigid's here! But on a daily basis I need just a little bit of that time, just to myself, no cell phones, no TV, no schedule. Just the secret, strong murmur of silence.Some people have a real hard time with the quiet though, finding it illuminates those things within themselves best left hidden. Quiet brings that time in which you can ponder the extremities of loss and the destiny of flesh, something most people don't want to put the remote down long enough to consider.
I had a boyfriend when I was young whose family HAD to have noise around, TVs on in practically every room. Add that to the general shouting across rooms at one another and after a couple days over the holidays, I was near to digging a tunnel from the laundry to escape. On weekends it was auto racing, the sound cranked up to "Car No 8 is in my bathroom" loud. He'd watch all day, live and taped; I never got a kiss unless there was a caution. He started making sounds about getting married someday and I ended it, knowing that I could not be happy in that life, and to stay and pretend I could be was unfair to everyone. But there are noises that bring only a smile. What is a the first sound that you can remember?. As a child, I remember the sounds of the kitchen, my Mom cooking something. I remember the sound of the front door, a heavy hardwood door that shut with the announcement "Dad's home!". Dad would walk in and kiss my Mom. Not a peck on the lips, but a long kiss and she'd giggle, there with flour on her face and that is the sound I first remember. I remember the sound of bat meeting ball as we played with my oldest brother out in the back field. The CRACK as aerodynamics and physics joined, the ball just a spherical dream of speed heading out into the trees as our dog Pepper raced to recover it before we did. I remember the sound of the piano, as I practiced hour after hour as a child. Beethoven, Bach, Debussy. The sounds of the music filled the house, filling me, the opening chords of Rhapsody in Blue awakening something in me I was too naive to articulate. I remember the sound of taps played at a funeral of someone I loved, the wreckage of duty crashing on the ears of those who are left. But it was a sound that fell without lasting damage for we were raised to be fighters, stronger than wreckage, taller than fear. Honor the fallen and continue the fight.
And always and forever, I remember the outdoors, walking or fishing with Dad. A way to get away from the artillery sound of traffic, away from school, worries, bills and whatever it is we need to occasionally shed the load of, even if we always hold the responsibility. Dad could spend all day in hip boots,in a Western stream poised with the relaxation of that first cast of the line. No sound at all, but the gurgle of the water, the wisp of a line as it traveled through the air, with a sense of direction more than speed, carefully seeking those quiet pools where sustenance lay. When he came home we sensed something in him much bigger than the steelhead that he laid on the table. Something he had needed, and somehow found.
My escape has been the hunting camp where even with friends I could seek the inarticulate solitude of a cathedral of trees, where I could watch the moon grow round in the darkening sky as I waited for the flash of a white tail. In the woods even the the most profound acts seem simpler. The crack of a rifle, the crash of a large buck, that act of deliberately taking the life of the game of the forest to put meat on the table; so clear and closing in its sound that no words needed to be spoken. The echo of the shot, the strident fall of the deer remained insular, wrapped up quietly within the chronicle of outdoor life, only to be spoken of in reverent, hushed whispers around a campfire.
Just as there were days of plenty, there were the days of cold feet and a cold barrel but we wouldn't take them back for anything. Whatever we could gain that would set us free of obligation to the suburbs might have been beyond our reach that day, but not beyond our desire. We wouldn't throw down our weapon and stomp out of the forest stopping at the nearest mini mall for takeout. We would wait, there in the blind, there in the stain of dying brush, waiting for it when it came, and doing without if it didn't. Sometimes those meals after, of beans and fresh biscuits and bacon, were the best of all, as we looked forward to the next opportunity to head back out to forest and cornfields ripe with whitetail.Comments
Posted by: Tim at February 21, 2011 09:22 AM (s0R0P)
Posted by: neil at February 21, 2011 09:39 AM (ouFrC)
I live in the woods, have for ten years, and the quiet is wonderful. The only real problem I've found is that when I'm forced to go back into town for some work or any other reason the noise has become nearly unbearable. I think that whatever noise filter we develop when we live in an urban or semi-urban environment just disappears over time.
I'm often surprised how very little noise I want around me anymore. I'm sitting here typing in a house with nothing making any noise at all, just the gentle hum of the computer fan. This isn't due to a conscious decision. It just seems as though over the years I've become so internally quiet living this way that the externals have just followed.
I understand the attraction of monastic life, never talking, always praying, a completely contemplative life. Quiet seemingly begets quiet.
Posted by: Tom Usher at February 21, 2011 09:48 AM (enQdD)
Posted by: Bob in Tampa at February 21, 2011 09:55 AM (KLyqe)
Yes. But it will forever be incomplete and sayd without the sound of children. Believe me I know. and I don't want you to have to find out the truth of what I say.
Papa Ray
Posted by: Papa Ray at February 21, 2011 11:27 PM (z4h0f)
I have a child, and she and her future children will always be a shining star in my home.
Posted by: Brigid at February 21, 2011 11:33 PM (yKDjw)
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