The Art and Science of Silence

Achieving a state of silence isn’t a passive activity. I know that sounds weird, but it is true. Have you ever tried sitting still, being quiet, and then waiting for your brain to slow down? It isn’t easy. We are mammals wired for action like running down prey or avoiding the same. More apropos to life today, our fast-paced, multimedia, multitasking, full-sensory-explosion lifestyle makes it nearly impossible to tune out the world and turn down the volume in our heads.

Yet for years we’ve been advised to do just that in order to live a more satisfied and healthy life. Dr. Deepak Chopra, whose expertise in neuroscience and meditation is well known, says that in the beginning when we try to relax and breathe in slowly, deeply to a state of silent meditation, the brain runs around like a drunken monkey. It’s true, by golly. My wild brain is not only running like a drunken monkey, but like one that has taken seven hits of speed! It takes a great deal of practice to settle down and just be. We are either: talking, listening, or doing both at the same time (especially if you are a woman). And when alone, the endless dialog in your head has an elusive off button.

Ever notice how children are constantly being verbal? They are either talking to their playmates or singing to themselves. Babies will awaken and lie in their cribs cooing and softly verbalizing to themselves until they get bored, then the alarm cries begin and every parent knows the quiet has ended. We don’t teach our children the art of being silent. On the contrary, we encourage them to talk, socialize, sing, and even debate. These are all good things, but what about listening? Oh sure, we command them to be quiet when we are disciplining them: “I said be quiet and listen to me,” or, “Didn’t you hear me?” or, “Didn’t you hear what I just said?” No, they didn’t hear you, because you didn’t teach them how to listen.

Certainly, children should not be just seen and not heard, but perhaps we are doing them a disservice by not giving them another important skill: the art of silence. Being able to control oneself to the point where silence isn’t threatening, where silence is an opportunity to let something fill the space that has greater value.

People aren’t even quiet when they are asking the answer to a question. One of the things I find most disappointing and distracting is when an interviewer doesn’t allow the interviewee to respond. The interviewer asks a question of their guest, and before the guest can answer, the interviewer is talking again, barely stopping long enough to allow the guest to utter a word. Bill Moyers may be an exception, but even he can sometimes forget that silence is a tool.

When I began in the newspaper industry, I had the opportunity to attend a few seminars on the topic of reporting. Back at the office as I shared with my colleagues what I had learned from one seminar, a crusty old newspaper reporter said, “You didn’t learn the most important thing.” Surprised that he even deigned to speak – he was known for his taciturn disposition – I asked, “What do you mean?” He didn’t answer right away. The silent seconds seemed to allow my beating heart to thunder in my eardrums. I wondered had he even heard me … I realized I was hungry … I fretted that I might have left the car unlocked … I thought about what to get my friend for her birthday … I couldn’t take it any longer. I nearly screamed, “Well, what was the most important thing?!” He responded, “Silence.” He asked me how uncomfortable I felt when he hadn’t responded right away; he wanted to know if thoughts had crowded into my conscious thinking fighting for space. I acknowledged that I was very busy with thoughts during the silence. He said, “For reporters, when you are silent, you’ll hear the lead for your story.”

From that point forward, I began to use silence as a way to not only give myself more self-control, but also to ascertain what others were thinking. For a reporter, the art of silence is absolutely critical to gaining the trust of those you are interviewing, and also to give them ample time to share the information you need, sometimes adding surprising relevance you’d otherwise never have heard.

But the art of silence, of being present yet being quiet, can be useful in so many interactions. In the heat of a disagreement when emotions are running high, we tend to speak before we think … oftentimes with disastrous results. Being quiet even for a few seconds can cool the situation off. Being silent allows others the opportunity to share their innermost thoughts, which can be very helpful when raising children, especially teenagers. Perhaps more than getting the story lead, or cooling off quarrels, or getting someone to fill the silent spaces with disclosure, the art of silence allows us to absorb the world around us, process it, making it clearer and easier to see and experience joy.

When I joined the corporate rat race, I got swept up on a wave of expectations, deadlines, goals, quotas, and political intrigue. The working environment and a busy home life didn’t allow for silent contemplation. Yet I knew that I was slowly being eaten alive by the demands of the job and began to feel totally overwhelmed with even the simplest things at home.

While at work one day, my inbox contained a catalog of motivational materials. Everything from Earle Nightingale (known as the dean of personal development)to Dr. Wayne Dyer (now frequently appearing on PBS, especially during pledge drives) to Chopra and even Ram Dass, whose seminal book Be Here Now was one of the first to introduce the American public to meditation and the power of positive thinking. I was thunder struck by them all. With some limited purchasing power, I ordered several of the cassette tape series and began the process of training my brain to settle down. I’d pop the tapes into my car system and listen as I drove to and from the office. I’d arrive as if carried on a cloud of spiritual healing causing several co-workers to wonder if I was smoking pot on the way to work, “She looks like she’s on something.” On the way home I’d mellow out after a hectic day listening to Joseph Campbell. It helped to put my life into perspective. Perhaps the world didn’t revolve around me after all. What a relief!

One day, as I was sitting in my car in the parking lot of the office, I began to practice the Silva Method of self-hypnosis. Counting backward slowly from 100, visualizing each number and concentrating on only seeing that number in my mind’s eye, I drifted into a comfortable, peaceful, warm, lunchtime snooze. My mind wasn’t tormented with a to-do list. My emotions were level and calm. Nothing troubled, bothered, or invaded my space. Hmmmmmm … bambambam! I was blasted out of my imaginary hammock by a very upset co-worker who said, and I quote, “By the look on your face, I thought you were dead!” (Thanks for your concern, bubby.) After that incident, I moved my afternoon meditations to another parking lot. But the point is, I found those recesses from the struggles of producing and providing very helpful. I recommend naps.

Another person whose ideas of how to live a life free from the pressures of the outside world was Tasha Tudor. Tudor (August 1915 – June 2008) was an artist and practitioner of old-fashioned culinary arts and crafts. Through her early childhood struggles and native intelligence, she learned that stillness allowed the creative process to flourish. It also gave her peace. As she pursued a lifetime filled with raising her children, painting, writing, gardening, and cooking, she found deep within those activities joy. She also practiced a nearly silent and very peaceful lifestyle. She believed that we have the choice each day to either take on the day as a chore, or to see and experience joy in the task at hand. Tudor proved that living a life where one finds and takes joy is better for the soul. Her children have continued her work building on her legacy of enjoying a quiet gentle lifestyle versus the frenetic marathon of the 21st century. I’ve decided that my tombstone will have etched for all eternity the simple phrase “Take Joy.”

Now that I’m out of the whitewater rapids of the corporate world and into the placidity of retirement, I don’t seem to require timeouts so often. Yet when I face the blank page, simply stepping away mentally often allows the creative process to flow. I’m going to try and educate my grandchildren on the power of silence. I just have to make sure that when I share this invaluable wisdom with them, the ear buds blasting One Direction’s latest hit are removed.

By Marilou Newell

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Mattapoisett Friends Alternative Gift Fair

An Alternative Gift Fair – believed to be the first for the Tri-Town area – will be held in Mattapoisett on November 9 to benefit several nonprofits.

The idea was brought forward by Mattapoisett Friends Meeting member Alan Harris as a way to provide additional financial support for non-profits on the local and national level. His parents have taken part in similar fundraisers at a New Hampshire church.

The fair provides space for each nonprofit to set up exhibits and receive donations. In addition to outright donations by cash or check, some of the organizations will offer gifts for birthdays, Christmas, and other special occasions.

For example, the Mattapoisett Land Trust will offer T-shirts and other merchandise, gift memberships as well as conduct a silent auction. The auction will feature objects d’art including an 11-inch carved alabaster profile of the Wampanoag chief, Metacomet, by Hugh Kelly, and a painting of ducks on a saltmarsh by his wife, Donna. They are residents of Weston and own a summer home at Aucoot.

SERRV, a national organization, will offer special Fair Trade gifts from around the world.

Other nonprofits invited include Habitat for Humanity, Friends of the Bike

Path, St. Vincent de Paul Society, Heifer Project International, Sanga Sangai, and Smile Train.

The Saturday event will run from 10:00 am to 1:00 pm in the Quaker church hall, 103 Marion Rd., Mattapoisett. The success of this venture will determine if it will be repeated in the future. So, please make every effort to take part.

Mattapoisett Free Public Library Events

Friends’ Used Book Sale: The next Used Book Sale will be held Saturday, November 9, from 10:00 am to 1:00 pm. Hundreds of like-new books have come in since the last sale, so be sure to stop by and browse the great selection for adults and children. New note cards and cookbooks are also available for purchase to support the work of the Friends. They make wonderful holiday gifts for teachers, relatives and friends. The Jr Friends of the Library will be holding a bake sale at the same time. They also collect redeemable cans and bottles from 10:00 to 11:00 am outside of the library. Do you have books or DVDs to donate? Items in good condition are accepted every day the library is open (Tuesday-Saturday). The library is located at 7 Barstow St.

iPad Workshop With Tech Expert Jacqui Pinto: There is room for a few more iPad users in the upcoming workshop on Tuesday, November 12, from 6:00 to 8:00 pm with Pinto, tech guru from the Brockton Public Schools. Find out how to best use your iPad or iPhone for many different functions, and learn some tips and tricks. Space is limited so call 508-758-4171 to register. Be sure you have upgraded to iOS 7 on your device before the workshop.

Award-winning cookbook author Karen Covey will be at the library on Wednesday, November 13, at 6:30 pm for a book signing. Her beautiful new cookbook, The Coastal Table, is now available for purchase. Stop by and join in the discussion of this project, which will make a wonderful holiday gift for yourself and those on your gift list. This program is co-sponsored with the Joseph H. Plumb Memorial Library and the Elizabeth Taber Library.

Author Talk and Tea with Author Hank Phillipi Ryan: Join us at 2:30 pm on Friday, November 15, in the Reading Room for tea and treats and a book talk with award-winning mystery author and investigative reporter for WHDH Boston Channel 7 news, Hank Phillipi Ryan. She will be signing copies of her new novel, The Wrong Girl. Bake Books will be on hand to make copies available for purchase. Co-sponsored with the Joseph H. Plumb Memorial Library and the Elizabeth Taber Library. Please call 508-758-4171 to sign up.

Former Boston City Council President Larry DiCara to Speak: Join us for an evening of politics and prose with former Boston City Council President Larry DiCara on Tuesday, November 19, at 6:30 pm. DiCara will be signing and discussing his new book, Turmoil and Transition in Boston: a Political Memoir from the Busing Era. Copies of the book will be available for purchase with the assistance of the Marion Bookstall (cash or check only, please). Refreshments will be available. Co-sponsored with The Elizabeth Taber Library and the Joseph H. Plumb Memorial Library.

Library Writers Group: The Writers Group meets the first and third Wednesday of each month from 6:30 to 8:00 pm. Join writers of all genres in this interesting and supportive group. The writers will meet on November 6 and 20. Everyone is welcome.

Memoir Writing: Have you tried to write down a few anecdotes for your children and grandchildren? Interested in writing your family stories, but don’t know where to begin? Join the memoir writing group that meets the fourth Friday of each month at the library from 10:30 am to noon. The next meeting will be November 22. Participants encourage each other’s writing projects and suggest helpful resources. Everyone is welcome. Call ahead for more information 508-758-4171.

Holiday Jewelry, Accessories, and Ornament Sale: The Friends of the Mattapoisett Library are once again holding a jewelry and accessories sale. Don’t miss this wonderful opportunity to see the funky and the sublime on Friday and Saturday, November 22-23, from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. Great items are available for crafters. Lovely donated jewelry, handbags, scarves, and other accessories are available for purchase at unbelievably low prices. This season’s donated holiday ornaments and decorations with also be for sale. If you would like to donate jewelry, accessories, or decorations, please drop them off any day at the library’s circulation desk. All proceeds benefit the work of the Friends of the Mattapoisett Library, a nonprofit charitable organization that provides needed items and programming for the library.

Marion Recreation Public Ice Skating

The first Marion Recreation Public Ice Skating of the 2013-2014 season will be on Sunday, November 24, from noon to 2:00 pm at Tabor Academy Ice Rink. The other dates are as follows: December 8, 15, 22, 26 and 29, January 12, 19, 20 and 26, February 2, 9, 16, 20 and 23. Admission is still only $5 per person. Hats and gloves are required. Any questions, please contact the Marion Recreation Department at 774-217-8355 or info@marionrecreation.com.

ORYF Jr Midget Cheer Team

The Old Rochester Youth Football Jr Midget Cheer Team went to the RISMA competition this weekend and won First place as well as Grand Champions overall for the Jr Midget Division. The team will next move onto Regionals in Springfield on November 9th

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Travel Basketball Tryouts Next Week

Marion Recreation will be holding tryouts for the seventh- and eighth-grade travel basketball team on Monday, November 4, and Tuesday, November 5, at the Sippican School Gymnasium. Any and all boys in grades 7 and 8 from Marion, Mattapoisett, and Rochester are welcome to try out. New this year, the team will be playing in a league at the Kingston Sports Center. Additional tournaments will be added throughout the season. If you make the team, the fee is $200, which covers all expenses, including uniform and league fees. For more information, please contact Coach Kyle Erha at kyleerha@gmail.com or Marion Recreation at (774) 217-8355 or info@marionrecreation.com.

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Officials Sign Off on Fall Town Warrant

The Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen and Town Administrator Michael Gagne finalized on Thursday the warrant for Fall Town Meeting.

The document is substantial, with close to $2 million in appropriations and budget transfers slated to come before voters on November 18 at the Old Rochester Regional High School Auditorium.

The Town Hall will ask Mattapoisett to approve a transfer of $232,668 from various accounts “to be added to the Fiscal Year 2013 appropriation as voted by the Annual Town Meeting of May 13, 0213, for salaries and wages of contract employees, personnel by-law employees, unionized employees, and other miscellaneous employees,” according to Article 13 in the warrant. The item proposes an additional $10,844 for the Selectmen; $12,077 for the Accountant/Auditor; $27,649 for Police; $28,608 for Fire; $30,180 for Highway; $24,068 for Library; and $30,121 for Water, among others. It would require a simple majority.

Elsewhere on the warrant, in articles 18 and 19, officials seek appropriations in the amounts of $387,500 and $481,000 “to pay costs of purchasing the fee simple interest” for parcels of land on Brandt Island Road and Acushnet Road for the Nasketucket and Aquifer land grants, respectively. These would require a 2/3 vote.

The following, meanwhile, would require a simple majority:

Article 5 asks for $125,000 for road improvements.

Article 10 asks for $20,000 for recreation improvements, ostensibly to include the town’s tennis courts at Center School.

Article 15 asks for $59,000 to fund the “equipping of a Town-owned boat for deployment as a rescue boat.

Article 16 asks for $80,000 to “pay costs of purchasing a new Boat Pump Out Vessel under the Mattapoisett Clean Vessel Act.”

To see the full Mattapoisett Fall Town Meeting warrant, click here.

By Shawn Badgley

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Halloween Spirit at Town Hall

Town Hall-oween (clockwise from left): Mattapoisett employees Suzanne Szyndlar, Alanna Carreiro, Sarah Piehler, Catherine Heuberger, Brenda Herbeck, and Wendy Travers renewed their longstanding tradition of themed costumes. But while the distant future and prehistoric past themes were planned respectively, the juxtaposition of the two was complete coincidence, the women said. Photo by Shawn Badgley.

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Elizabeth Taber Library Events Update

There’s still space available for the last two fall technology workshops at the Elizabeth Taber Library. Please call 508-748-1252 or stop in to reserve a spot today: November 5 at 11:00 am: Getting good at Goodreads; November 12 at 11:00 am: Saving recipes through Ziplist.

Knitting Group, Thursday, November 7, at 11:00 am: Do you love to knit? If so, bring your yarn and knitting needles to the Elizabeth Taber Library for our informal knitting group where you can work on projects, socialize, and share advice. Please note that this is not a knitting class. No instruction will be provided, although participants are more than willing to help each other if problems might occur.

Healthcare Literacy, Wednesday, November 13 at 11:00 am: Healthcare is complex. Sometimes we all need a little help navigating the system. Members from the Community Nurse & Hospice Care team will offer a presentation and intimate question and answer session on the complex ins and outs of today’s healthcare system. Participants will receive helpful hints, tips, and advice on how to be the best patient advocate for yourself or a loved one.

Travel Lecture Series: Cuba, Tuesday, November 19 at 6:00 pm: Ever wish you could travel to an exotic place to learn all about its history, culture, and more? Well, now you can just by coming to the Elizabeth Taber Library to see some of Cuba’s beautiful sites, and learn more about its history and culture. Light refreshments will be served.

Mystery Book Club, Wednesday, December 4, at 11:00 am: Join us at the Elizabeth Taber Library for our monthly Mystery Book Club meeting. The mystery book we will be discussing is Harlan Coben’s Tell No One. Please stop into the Library today to register and reserve a copy of this book.

Classic Film Friday Presentation: ‘Glory’

On Friday, November 8, the public is invited to enjoy another installment of the Sippican Historical Society’s popular program, Classic Film Friday. Co-sponsoring the film series is the Marion Council on Aging. One Friday each month, the organizations present a classic movie and offer a discussion on its historical context or significance. November’s selection is the 1989 film Glory, based on the storming of Fort Wagner in South Carolina. Starring Matthew Broderick, Morgan Freeman, and Denzel Washington, the film won three Academy Awards.

This year marks the 150th anniversary of the Fort Wagner storming, considered to be the defining encounter of the 54th Massachusetts Regiment. The encounter is credited with spurring the recruitment of more than 180,000 African-American volunteers, a draw that proved instrumental to the Union’s ultimate victory.

Classic Film Friday presentations are held at the Marion Music Hall (164 Front St.) and are offered free of charge to the public. Films begin at 7:00 pm, and refreshments are available. For more information, contact the SHS at 508-748-1116.