August 19 How We Became So Noisy
Someone recently asked me to word associate
into a sentence the things I think about when
I think about summer. I came out with this:
I lay in bed and watch the ceiling
shake off plaster scraps when a car passed
by blasting rap music or Harleys with dummy
pipes warn an empty road of a biker present.
For years, I have had evolving theories of
why people needed to be so loud. They themselves,
when pressed for an answer, have produced
reasons of varying plausibility. "My
motorcycle is loud because drivers never pay
attention on the road. With cellphone usage,
I need every help I can get to make sure they
know I'm there, in case they decide to change
lanes without looking," a biker said.
"The chicks dig the rumble," another
said.
Then you have the suburban boys who plug
up their ears and drive around with all the
windows down, blasting rap music as if amplitude
could somehow be Midas-converted from suburban
comfort into street cred.
Everything grows larger in one's own imagination.
When boomboxes were all the rage in the
70s and early 80s, I had a notion that airspace
was being marked as a territorial right for
those who were disenfranchised: It was a way
of saying, "you can't sit in your brownstone
and pretend I'm not here." I still believe
there's a measure of this in the need to make
one's presence felt. After all, everyone loves
a bit of attention, no matter how he or she
may deny it.
Of late, I am beginning to see our culture's
involvement with noise as an attempt to eradicate
the surrounding din. Fighting fire with fire,
the answer comes in the form of a tower of
Babel, ending in more babble. While it sounds
unlikely, there's quite a few examples of
how we seek to dominate the competition through
largesse, as opposed to rendering their scale
invalid by seeking alternative measures. The
increasing size of SUV's on American highways
in the name of safety, the increasing volume
of cinema movies in place of an actual plot,
the supersize burger. More is not only better,
more makes the previous version less good.
In doing so, however, one is validating, thereby
establishing the created system as a reliable
indicator of achievement.
How do the folks who chose not to participate
answer this escalating war of decibels?
While the scale is absent, we can look to
economic theory for relief. Those of us who
treasure our silence as gold will be able
to cherish in the equally improbable notion
that the unsaid can become more golden.
After all, demand goes up as supply diminishes.
©2005 Pristine Ann Gee
August 10, 2005 : The
Art of Movie Warfare
July 20, 2005 :
Online Dating Is Wrong?
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