More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Amy Chavez

GET UPDATES FROM Amy Chavez
 

Rolling Blackouts and the Power of Silence

Posted: 05/11/11 09:43 AM ET

The rolling blackouts in Tokyo mean interruptions in watching TV, running computers, stereos and electric heaters, not to mention recharging cell phones and electronics. While some have suggested that the rolling blackouts will merely reconfirm the need for nuclear power in this country with so few natural resources, I wonder if the blackouts could create a backlash.

You see, the blackouts have given us the chance to reconsider the role of silence in our lives. Google CEO Eric Schmidt, in an article written by James Fallows in the April issue of The Atlantic, said, "If young people are awake, they are connected. When they're walking, when they're in a car, if they wake up at night, when they're in class." I'm glad to know that at 48, I am still considered young. But I wonder if the younger people actively seek quiet moments to keep a work-life balance. This craving for silence is one factor that drives people to go sailing, surfing, hiking, camping, mountain climbing and other individual sports. Silence is a tool we use to cope with life.

A competitor is silent at the beginning of a race so she can concentrate. A moment of silence is called for to remember the victims of disasters. We pray to God in silence. And most of us need silence to sleep well.

The silence between songs on a music player provides closure for one song before starting another. Writers and poets insert ratios of silence, called pauses, into their works via commas, dashes, ellipses or full stops. Lots can happen during a pause (consider the pregnant pause).

Silence is one of the lifestyle options I took when I moved to this island of just 631 people in Japan's Seto Inland Sea. I wanted to live in a place where I could concentrate for long periods of time but still be connected to everyone and everything. Because of this decision, I've had time to consider the virtue of silence.

When I want an hour devoid of cell phones, email or internet, I take a walk up to the Flying Dragon Shinto shrine on the island. One who takes a vow of silence can hear many things. I'm not talking about the sound of your own footsteps or that of the wind in the bamboo -- most people can hear those things. Only the perceptive can note how the wind carries the laughter of two women chatting in their veggie gardens, or distinguish that the sound of a water drop is actually a frog surfacing from an abandoned well.

On my way up to the shrine, I walk past the port, where fishing boats are tied up while their captains sleep peacefully in their houses after a full night at sea. White herons stand on one leg in the shallow waters waiting for a meal to swim past, while a hawk is on lookout from the top of the mast of a yacht.

Stray cats stretch out on the sun-soaked road, sleeping with one eye open. Weeds grow freely along the road, knowing no one will cut them down as long as they have blossoms. Gods peek out from stone statues all along the path. Just off the path, someone has planted ostentatious red tulips in front of their house.

I haven't heard a human-made noise yet.

When you hear a noise on the island, it's because something has happened. Something has been put in motion: someone starts walking, someone initiates a greeting or someone starts a boat to go out fishing. This is in contrast to city noises, many of which are ongoing and confirm that everything is still happening: ceaseless neon lights, cars on the road or the background humming of vending machines.

As I get closer to the shrine, I begin to hear some human sounds as the road-turned-walking-path winds through old Japanese country houses. I hear the scraping of a hoe in sandy dirt as an old woman removes weeds from around her walkway. When I pass a garden, a man impatiently pulls out daikon radishes, their roots snapping under the stress. Laundry flaps on a clothes line and dried leaves scoot across the path.

When I reached the Flying Dragon shrine, it was so quiet, I could almost hear the lion statues' silent roars as I passed through the gate. In the shrine grounds, the last flecks of pink fluttered down from the cherry trees. With the cherry blossom viewing parties finished, no one is around to hear their last petals fall to the ground.

Environment and sensitivity to noise is well-documented. Buddhist priests after doing the Gumonji meditation for 100 days are said to have such keen senses that they can hear the sound of burning incense. I believe it. But it is the previous intense environment that allows them to have such perception. Who knows, in another 100 days, they might be able to hear fruit rotting.

We mortals, however, must strive for something in between. By welcoming the occasional periods of silence that the rolling blackouts offer, we can heighten our senses enough to be able to hear what our real energy needs are. When you can once again hear your cat purr, you just may decide to keep it that way.

When the loudest thing on my entire walk is bright red tulips, I understand the virtue of silence and I wonder if I need nuclear energy at all.

 
 
 

Follow Amy Chavez on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JapanLite

The rolling blackouts in Tokyo mean interruptions in watching TV, running computers, stereos and electric heaters, not to mention recharging cell phones and electronics. While some have suggested that...
The rolling blackouts in Tokyo mean interruptions in watching TV, running computers, stereos and electric heaters, not to mention recharging cell phones and electronics. While some have suggested that...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 15
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Wanjiru
Debatably relatable ...
07:39 PM on 05/16/2011
What a beautifully written piece. Thank you for making me smile.

"When the loudest thing on my entire walk is bright red tulips, I understand the virtue of silence ..."
.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Michael Gene Sullivan
05:26 PM on 05/14/2011
George Carlin once said something about all the sounds of today - cars, trucks, radios, planes, sirens, jackhammers, the constant loud buzz of machines that we've become accustomed to - and how 150 years ago none of them existed. I tell my son that through most of human existence the loudest sound was most likely a shout, and the rest of the time wind and waves, birds and animals. That is the volume we are evolved to respond to. I'm not an old fogey - at least not yet - but I end up spending quite a bit of time walking around with earplugs in. Quiet should be normal and noise the exception, but in our modern world it is the other way around.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Amy Chavez
Columnist, The Japan Times
02:05 AM on 05/16/2011
Well said!
11:06 AM on 05/13/2011
Wonderful piece! And then your line…"The silence between songs on a music player provides closure for one song before starting another."
…is also poignant. To take that a step further, playing with two other musicians, we talk about and attempt to honor, the spaces in between the notes – we feel giving more significance to the notes played…if that makes any sense.
Thanks for helping us all stay in touch with a rapidly diminishing necessity.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Amy Chavez
Columnist, The Japan Times
11:15 PM on 05/13/2011
What a nice thought that music and silence, something we normally think of being opposites, can yet be one and the same!
09:59 PM on 05/12/2011
Amidst the silence of their sitting vigil, the cela heard the music of her surroundings. Even in the urban centers, the jackhammers' staccato rhythms, backfires of old cars, blasts from motorcycles became the percussion for the orchestration of city sounds. These vigilant sitters have learnt the silence within noise.

Thank you for this article.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Amy Chavez
Columnist, The Japan Times
11:17 PM on 05/13/2011
"silence within noise"--very nice.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lrobb
Southern Rational
08:42 AM on 05/12/2011
Insightful article.

Those of us who live in semi-rural areas where weather frequently causes power outages have involuntarily learned the power of silence. What it has taught us is slightly different from Chavez's experience, however.

We are usually so wired to our gadgets and pushed for time we barely even say hello to our neighbors. Odd, because I live in the South where rocking chairs on the front porch are ubiquitous--and almost never used. Until the lights go out.

Then people and pitchers of sweet tea appear on the porches and neighbors walk by to pass the time of day--or evening. When the air conditioners are silent and a few oil lamps illuminate our homes, the cicadas and stars take center stage.

it is quite lovely, and most of us consider a power outage a micro-vacation from real life rather than an inconvenience.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Amy Chavez
Columnist, The Japan Times
11:23 PM on 05/13/2011
It sounds like you have found the perfect work-life balance ;)
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Priscilla Warner
Author of Learning to Breathe, co-author of The Fa
06:49 AM on 05/12/2011
Thank you for this gorgeous meditation on the power of silence. I will savor the images you described so beautifully - from the scraping of a hoe to the lion statues' silent roars...
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Amy Chavez
Columnist, The Japan Times
11:24 PM on 05/13/2011
How nice of you to hear them with me! Thank you.
photo
Imago1122
Without a hurt, the heart is hollow...
02:59 PM on 05/11/2011
Thank your for this simple and beautiful meditation on silence and the spaces between where we find our true selves with all their questions and tunnels to the past and the striving to accept the present as it is. Perhaps that's why silence is uncomfortable for many of us; we do not want to see what we haven't been able to accept, that life is suffering and beauty at the same time.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Amy Chavez
Columnist, The Japan Times
01:19 AM on 05/12/2011
Nice thoughts, thanks.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
ecotopian
I am nerd, hear me geek
11:01 AM on 05/11/2011
I spent yesterday outside doing some yard work and sitting in the sun. Except for the occasional small airplane, all I heard was the birds singing. This is normal for me, though. I live on a road that has a total of three houses on it. There's a couple of hours between cars. When we had a blackout a few years ago, it gave me a feeling of what this old farmhouse was like back in the 19th century when it was built. There are no street lights on my road, so it was pitch black. There was no traffic, so it was very quiet. It made me realize how much our lives have changed by our modern conveniences.

I should add that when there is a full moon it is BRIGHT. It's light isn't swallowed up by the city lights. You can almost read by it. Yes, it's truly is that bright.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Amy Chavez
Columnist, The Japan Times
01:20 AM on 05/12/2011
Glad to see you are enjoying silence.