蜜桃恋人

Less Noise and More Quiet Time Boosts Health

Subhead

Physical and Emotional Benefits of Turning Down the Noise

No content available.

Shortly after returning from a long hike in the woods near my house, an online news headline caught my attention: 鈥淣oise Is No. 1 Quality-of-Life Complaint in NYC.鈥 Your body needs peace and quiet time for good health. Learn more about the physical and emotional benefits of turning down the noise. 

The caption under the newspaper headline about noise complaints stated, 鈥淭he city鈥檚 311 hotlines got more than 260,000 calls about excessive noise, up 30 percent in 2 years.鈥

I flashed back 20 years or so to a public hearing in my small rural town for a proposal to install a small sawmill on a road about half a mile from any house or business. More than 40 people turned out, most of whom raised their voices angrily against the sawmill. They equated the noise potential of the sawmill with the awful disturbance during the previous year caused by a large-scale forestry operation that ran day and night, subjecting residents a mile away to the sounds of trucks, saws, chippers, and the endless bleating of backup beepers.

Industrial machines, heavy traffic, construction noise, shrieking trains, honking horns, jets and helicopters overhead, barking dogs, and hollering humans get people anxious, angry 鈥 and sick.

Negative Health Effects of Noise

Most people know that high-decibel noise can damage hearing. However, chronic exposure to noise also has a wide variety of negative health effects that go way beyond annoyance. For example, exposure to noise near airports and road traffic has an impact on public health, leading to . Other studies have shown increased sleep disturbance, autoimmune disruption, and interference with fetal and child development.

It turns out that the study of 鈥渟oundscapes鈥 and their relationship to human health and well-being is broad and breathtakingly complex. Studies of the relationships between humans (and wildlife) and the sound environments in which they live have resulted in  as common resources like soils, air, and water. 

nature-2058243_1920_full_width.jpg

Not Silence, But Less Noise

George Foy, a journalist and New York University creative writing professor, also found the New York City soundscape to be a hellscape and set out to find 鈥渢he last place on Earth without human noise.鈥 He visited an anechoic chamber, a room built specifically for the purpose of excluding all noise, at Orfield Labs in Minnesota.

As Rachel Nuwer of the BBC related:

鈥溾 [M]inutes into his stay in the chamber, he noticed that the silence was, in fact, broken. His own body, it turned out鈥攈is breathing, his heartbeat, even the scratchy sound his scalp made rubbing against his skull when he frowned鈥攚as betraying his quest for auditory nothingness. 鈥楾he only time you鈥檒l hear absolute silence is when you鈥檙e in no position to hear it because you鈥檙e dead,鈥 he realized.鈥

As an in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health noted, 鈥渢he term 鈥榪uiet鈥 is not synonymous with silence; its standard usage implies an absence or masking of industrial noise and/or the presence of natural sounds such as water flow, birdsong, or wind.鈥

Technically, what鈥檚 needed is not complete silence, but less noise. We need to cultivate more peace and quiet. 

Finding Peace and Quiet

There鈥檚 quite a bit of research on the healing effects of nature, although few studies specifically tease out the visual from the sound or olfactory effects. For example, the stress-relieving effects of natural sounds, even in virtual environments, have been identified.

Other research shows that ; perhaps having a reprieve from noise allows the body to recover and more brain cells to generate. Another study shows that short (2-minute) relaxing and decrease stress.

Most of us would define noise as intrusive, unwanted sounds of any kind. I feel grateful that my semirural environment rarely presents annoying noise that I can鈥檛 control. (One roaring exception: 鈥,鈥 when thousands of bikers from across the nation come blasting through central New Hampshire, day and night, all week.)

Somehow, I don鈥檛 find the more usual sounds of chainsaws, snowplows, and lawnmowers in my sparsely populated corner of the universe to be troubling. They connect me to my community in comforting ways. Even the sawmill (which received its permit despite the protests) and a gravel-mining operation half a mile down the road鈥攂oth separated from me by generous stretches of woods鈥攅nter my soundscape with only the occasional muffled sounds of operation.

Find ways to cultivate peace and quiet in your life, whether it鈥檚 a walk in nature, a few minutes listening to relaxing music, or some time relaxing behind a closed door.

The New York Times : 鈥淲here do you go to find peace in this boisterous city? With eight million New Yorkers and 50 million tourists a year all packed into 301 square miles, is there a special park bench, riverside fishing spot, or underused historic site where you go to cherish the sound of silence?鈥

More than 1,000 readers responded, telling the paper that they find quiet space on piers and riverbanks and in places of worship, museums, parks, public gardens, cemeteries, and wildlife sanctuaries. 

The paper created from readers鈥 suggestions. Even just viewing this lovely photomontage, which is replete with soundscapes, brings a sense of peace and calm.

About The Author

Margaret Boyles

Margaret Boyles is a longtime contributor to The Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人. She wrote for UNH Cooperative Extension, managed NH Outside, and contributes to various media covering environmental and human health issues. Read More from Margaret Boyles
 

No content available.