The scientists described seven experiments of “event-based
auditory illusions.” They say, “In all cases, silences elicited temporal
distortions perfectly analogous to their sound-based counterparts, suggesting
that auditory processing treats moments of silence the way it treats sound.
Silence is truly perceived, not merely inferred.”
The full meaning of this is beyond my limited scientific
understanding, but the results are confirmed in my experience. There truly is a
“sound of silence,” as Simon and Garfunkel put it. In the Times article one of the authors, Rui Zhe Goh of Johns Hopkins, explains,
“Silence is the experience of time passing.” He explains this to mean that
silence is “an auditory experience of pure time.”
I often listen to silence. It is my everyday spiritual
practice. I do not sit on the floor in the lotus position, but throughout the
day I pause to listen to silence. I understand silence as the voice of God. God
speaks in the open spaces of life – both physical and auditory. These spaces
are everywhere and everywhen. They are the openings between what we call
“things.” They are the pauses between sounds. That spaciousness and quietude is
experienced as divine.
As I write this post I am sitting on my back porch. The
birds are singing a psalm of thanksgiving for the meal that my wife put out for
them a few minutes ago. Each species is a different instrument in a symphony more
beautiful than any human music. There
are other sounds as well. Cicadas are singing an ode to the sun. Insects buzz
outside the screen and occasionally bang against it. Someone is cutting a lawn
in the distance. Once in a while a vehicle drives by. I also hear my granddaughter
giggling as she watches something on her tablet in the living room.
In the midst of and under all these sounds is ever-present
silence. Over time it has become easier for me to focus on the silence instead
of the noises. I notice that all noises arise from and recede back into silence.
Silence is the mother of sound. There is more silence than noise. Whereas the
noises are all different, the silence is the same.
I understand this Silence to be the Word of God. Before
there was the Song of Creation, there was the Sound of Silence. The gospel
calls it the Word. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God
and the Word was God.” This Eternal Word we know as Silence resonates with the
silence at the core of my being. Silence outside and silence inside is one
Silence. I am that silence.
This Silence is omnipresent. It is all the proof I need for God. Not the noisy “old man in the sky” who plays the role of cosmic dictator. There is God beyond this anthropomorphic God. True God is Love. God is here now always. Some people hear God only through words of scripture, creeds and preachers. I hear God best through silence.
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