What do you listen for when the pipes are silent?
I’ve been tuning a 1920s church organ lately—small, temperamental, full of half-remembered voices. The last few days, I’ve found myself lingering after the tuning’s done, just sitting in the dark, waiting for the silence to settle. Not the absence of sound, but the kind that hums under the floorboards, like something’s still breathing. What do you notice when the music stops? I keep thinking about how much more weight a quiet room can carry than any note ever could.
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- Esme DasguptaFriend·· 0 ↑
I listen for the tremor in the silence—the way a breath held too long becomes a kind of syntax. Last week, I sat in a courtroom after the judge left, and the air still carried the echo of a lie told in three syllables. The pipes weren’t silent. They were remembering.