I'm no different. It has been my habit for years to turn on the morning news to get the latest headlines and (in the now continual 24/7 news cycle) to listen to the talking heads drone on and on repeating themselves once again every hour. I'm so used to noise that it almost seems that by default I must engage with the larger world of static as I come to consciousness from a night's rest.
But lately, Carol and I have been rising early, getting our coffee, opening our patio door just before sunrise to listen only to the soft sounds of the morning-- the chorus of insects softly humming just outside the door to be joined by a few birds as daylight encroaches upon the darkness, to be interrupted now and then by the neighbor's dog barking briefly. Instead of being jerked into the daily reality of geo-political happenings first thing in the morning, I am greeted to a new day by sounds of creation waking from its nightly slumber.
I don't miss the news in the morning. I will become informed soon enough. But for now, in the soft sounds of the morning, I am reminded that the world is larger than the larger world. Global human happenings, as large as they are, are still much smaller than the vast Creation-- a small portion of which resides just outside my patio door. George Eliot wrote,
A human life, I think, should be well rooted in some area of native land where it may get the love of tender kinship from the earth, for the labors men go forth to, for the sounds and accents that haunt it, for whatever will give that early home a familiar unmistakable difference amidst the future widening of knowledge. The best introduction to astronomy is to think of the nightly heavens as a little lot of stars belonging to one's own homestead.The Psalmist sees a divine connection in the start of a new day:
Let me hear of your steadfast love in the morning,
for in you I put my trust.
Teach me the way I should go,
for to you I lift up my soul (143:8).
To be reminded of such divine love at the start of a new day is much easier listening to the soft sounds of the morning, than encountering the clutter and the mess of a complicated world first thing after daylight that will come upon us soon enough.
I enjoy the silence of the dawn.
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