
Of all my senses, sound is the one that I could most easily do without. Unlike most of the world, I like, but don’t love, music (although practically speaking, it serves a purpose–to evoke a mood, etc.–and I do have a small iTunes collection I listen to when the spirit moves me.) I enjoy conversation and socializing–when I choose to participate. I listen to radio when I’m in the mood—usually at night when I’m in bed, because it relaxes me and drowns out the chatter in my head. I even participate in selective experiences of being noisy, such as when I used to play the doumbek with a pick-up group of musicians and would bang the hell out of my drum and thoroughly enjoy it. My main problem with sound is that there’s just too much of it all at the same time.
I think much of this is simply a matter of how we develop as children, and what we grow accustomed to. When I look at my life and try to think of my happiest moments, I think of being a child and spending summers with my grandparents in their house by the sea. The sun beat down fiercely outside, but inside we were cool, calm, quiet. There were no blaring radios, no arguing neighbors, no interruptions, just the tick of the grandfather clock as I turned the pages on my book, lying on my stomach on the couch. That peaceful, carefree quiet is something that I can never recapture, try as I may.
Senses are not democratic. For most of my life, I’ve been highly attuned to sight and smell, and can tolerate and revel in visual and olofactory riches no matter how fast or furious they zoom by me. I can watch and enjoy multiple images or texts at the same time. I have felt the pure intoxication that comes from a gluttonous surfeit of beauty or sensibility---like the visual feast of traveling in Europe and going to eleven museums in three days, or the rapture of standing inside a botanical garden and seeing and smelling the intensity of three hundred different flowers and trees at once--but such transports make their way inside my brain via my eyes, not my ears. An equivalent amount of sound input would drive me mad.
I do fully realize I’m unusual in this respect; paradoxically, many of my friends are music lovers and even musicians, who adore sound in all its many forms. I understand the joy of sound in the abstract and even in the here and now, when it’s not competing with sixteen other sounds. I love talking one-on-one or in small groups, I love hearing music when I want to hear it, I love attending a musical or theatrical performance even if it’s loud and dissonant.
So why can I deal with some kinds of sounds, but not others? Why can I cope well with one kind of sense overload, but not aural assaults? I have a few theories, but it’s probably a combination of things. ADD for one–I have enough voices inside my head, thank you very much; adding more to the mix is a situation that’s sure to tax my powers of patience. Tinnitus for another; having a constant pulsing sound in one ear for the last, oh, four or five years makes it hard for me to keep other sounds straight without considerable strain. But it’s a preference for quiet more than anything, and I’ve had it for as long as I can remember.
I dream someday of taking a vacation on the moon where all is still and quiet. All I’ll need there is a Thai restaurant that delivers, and a few good books.