Hearing voices
When 8:18 comes, I am standing on a snow-dusted path that
runs along a wide creek. It is
bone-chillingly cold. I am alone. And yet, all around me is a quiet chatter.
I hear the birds
talking: the staccato laughter of a crow, the churr of a woodpecker, the high cadence of a Carolina wren. A small raft of ducks splashes into
flight. Cardinals flutter in brambles
nearby, stopping to inflate against the cold.
But there is also the liquid voice of the stream and the whispering of
the ice as the current washes new crystals over the frozen shelf.
A few years ago, I began to learn the language of
birds. It wasn’t long before I could isolate
the songs I’d hear as I walked through the neighborhood. I realized then that there had always been
this conversation going on unnoticed around me.
Individual voices in the chorus became distinct.
On the way home from
my walk, I stop in the once-a-week farmer’s market. I’m now attuned to listening, so as I pass
stalls, I catch snippets of conversation.
Again, I am aware of how much I regularly tune out.
Years ago, before a church service started, I closed my eyes
and just took in the full range of human conversation in that sanctuary. The sound was a complexity of chatter. A hum of human dialog. I wondered then at God’s ability to hear unique
voices in the white noise of prayer that rises up to him. It is beyond my comprehension.
I have enough to handle just tuning my ears to what is in
ear-shot.
I cannot fathom, Father, how you can isolate my voice in the din of
human prayer. But I am so grateful that
you do. Help me to hear the world around
me, to revel in the rich panoply of sound you give to us each day.
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