Monday, 29 June 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

The house is still sleeping but it is not silent. You can hear it if you stop. The faint tick of the wall clock in the hallway — not the second hand moving, just the mechanism underneath, the small click every few seconds that you never notice during the day when the children are awake and the house is full of voices. It is there now. Steady. Counting nothing you need to count.

The refrigerator hums in the kitchen. Not loud. Just the low electrical note of the compressor doing its work, keeping the milk cold, keeping yesterday’s leftovers safe for today. It has been humming like this every night for years. You have never thanked it. It does not need thanks. It just keeps humming. But this morning you can hear it clearly and the sound is almost companionable, like someone breathing in the next room.

There is a bird outside. You do not know what kind. It makes three notes, a pause, then three notes again. Not frantic. Not calling for anything urgent. Just announcing itself to the morning. It has probably been doing this every dawn for weeks and you have been too inside your own head to notice. But it is there now. The same three notes. The pause. The three notes again. It will keep doing this whether you listen or not. You are listening.

Your father’s door closes upstairs. Not a slam. Just the soft click of the latch catching. You know that sound. You have known it your whole life. It means he is awake. It means in a few minutes you will hear his footsteps on the stairs — the particular creak of the third step that has always creaked, the slower pace than it used to be, the small pause at the landing. You are not upstairs. You cannot see him. But the sound tells you he is there. That he woke up today. That in a few minutes you will sit across from him again and eat and the meal will be one more in the count that you can feel but do not say out loud.

The kettle begins to boil. You can hear the water starting to move inside before the whistle comes. The small rumble. The heat doing its work on the molecules. Then the whistle — sharp, insistent, asking you to come and turn it off. You do. The silence after the whistle is different than the silence before it. Louder somehow. Your ears are still adjusting. The kitchen feels more awake now. You pour the water. The sound of it hitting the cup. The small clink of the spoon against the ceramic when you stir. These are not important sounds. They are just what this moment sounds like.

Somewhere in the house your daughter turns over in her sleep. You cannot hear it. But you know it is happening. The bed shifting slightly. Her breath changing rhythm. She will wake soon and her voice will fill the house and the morning will become a different shape. But right now she is still quiet. Still dreaming whatever children dream. And the house is holding that quiet like a gift it will give back to you tomorrow morning if you wake early enough to receive it again.

Your son is silent. Completely. That particular silence of a small body in deep sleep, the kind of sleep that comes easy when you are four and the world has not yet taught you to worry. He does not know you are downstairs. He does not know the kettle boiled or the bird sang its three notes. He is just sleeping. And that sleep is something you can hear even though it makes no sound. The absence of him crying, of him calling out, of him needing you right now — that absence is its own kind of music.

You can hear yourself breathing if you pay attention. Not loud. Not labored. Just the in and the out. The body doing what the body does without asking permission, without needing to be managed. Your lungs have been doing this every moment since you were born. Billions of breaths. You have not thanked them once. They do not need thanks. They just keep breathing. But this morning the sound of your own breath is something you can be grateful for. Not because it is special. Because it is still happening.

The clock ticks again. The refrigerator hums. The bird does its three notes. Your father’s footsteps start down the stairs — there is the creak, there is the pause, there he is. These sounds are building the morning one small noise at a time. You are not doing anything. You are just here. Listening. Letting the sounds arrive and pass. Letting them tell you what is still standing, still working, still alive in this house.

The water in your cup is cooling. You can almost hear that too if you are quiet enough — not the temperature dropping, but the small contractions of the ceramic as it adjusts. Everything is making some kind of sound. Everything is announcing itself if you are willing to stop and hear it.

This is what the morning sounds like when you are awake before the world asks anything of you. This is what is here before the work, before the managing, before the day becomes the thing you have to get through. Just the clock. The hum. The bird. The footsteps. The breath. The small symphony of a household that is still standing. That woke up again. That is letting you wake up in it.

You do not have to do anything with this. You do not have to make it mean something. You just have to hear it. The ordinary sounds of an ordinary morning. The proof, arriving through your ears, that the people you love are still here. That the house is still holding. That your body is still breathing. That the day is beginning again and you are here to hear it begin.