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139 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
139 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
# Noise
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*Your ears and what screaming children do to them*
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---
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Noise is everywhere. Your house, the city, the roads, the beach, noise is everywhere.
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Even the forest has ever so much noise, coming from the forest animals, the wind as it
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blows through leaves and trees, raindrops as they clatter on the forest floor.
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But at some point, when there's enough noise, the term *noisy* comes to light. Straight
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from the cambridge dictionary:
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> *noisy* (adjective):
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>
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> **making a lot of noise.**
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>
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> - *a noisy crowd of fans*
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> - *noisy neighbours*
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Nobody minds noise, not until it becomes *noisy*. Incidentally, our society is full of
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noisy, too. Common examples of noisy things would be traffic, booming commercial
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districts, factories, trains, schools, and *children*.
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Personally I've had a lot to deal with noise and noisiness over the years. I tend to
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be slightly more sensitive to it than others. Additionally I suffer from tinnitus,
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something I hope won't get any worse. And I'm just like a cat in that I'll likely jump
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up to the ceiling if you so much as surprise me with a loud bang.
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## Mass-manufactured noise
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It goes without saying that we are very good at manufacturing noisiness on the
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industrial level. We're packed together into noisy cities and communities, while most
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of our creature comforts create lots of noise as well. Phones are ringing and beeping,
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cars are revving, stereo sets are blastin'. Yes, there's a good chance I'm right when I
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say that *your pc* is currently being noisy to an extend as well. And now I possibly
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made you aware of it.
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Compare this to any other living thing in nature and it comes to no surprise that humans
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easily take the cake when it comes to making a lot of noise. "Well of course, we have
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loud machines and stuff! Progress!", you might say. But really, is there any reason for
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a lot of the things we use to be that noisy, for us ourselves to live as loudly as we do?
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Creatures in nature sure seem to disagree with that.
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In nature, being noisy may prove fatal. A predator might hear you and hunt you down.
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That's why most animals have adapted to being quiet, unless they have a reason not to.
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One of few such reasons might be to make a warning sound, to perhaps scare a predator off.
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Or as a warning sound to others of your kind, to alert them of an enemy presence.
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## My ears are tingling!
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"So what if we make noise?" Perhaps you have a point. Our noise keeps nature out of our
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cities, because wild animals not adjusted to such an overwhelming human presence generally
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choose to walk around us. But there are many negative effects of noise as well.
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The most generally well-known one of these would be hearing damage. Stand near something
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loud enough and you risk blowing your ears out. Sudden damage may involve burst eardrums,
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and long term damage usually comes in the form of hearing loss, and potentially worse,
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ringing ears (known as tinnitus). However lesser known for some of us would be the added
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stress that comes from noisiness.
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Stress from noise comes from the fact that your brain has to process the things your ears
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hear. Generally it will filter out a large chunk of what you're hearing based on how
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important certain sounds are to your brain. However, that filtering takes energy, and the
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more sound there is to be filtered, the more tiring this work gets, eventually overloading
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your brain. That's why breaks from noise are so important; it allows your brain to calm
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down and organize itself.
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This stress is even more evident in those of us that are more sensitive to input, like
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people with certain forms of autism or people with epilepsy. Such people are often more
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easily overloaded from input, with some of them literally getting seizures from it. Of
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course, in the lesser extremes are the group of shut-ins, introverts, night owls and such
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that generally live in quieter environments. For them, a noisy workspace might often lead
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to distractions, lack of concentration, some even get scatter-brained from it. It wears
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them down, and might even affect their sleep.
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## Turning down the volume
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Above I've only just grasped some of the key points involving how much noise we make and
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how badly it can affect us. And sometimes it can be hard to find a solution. In my own
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particular problems with noise, I've frequently had to deal with people snoring. Suffice
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to say, solutions exist, but your mileage may vary; often the only true solution is the
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elimination of the source of the noise.
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Ultimately, as much as with air and light pollution, sound pollution is a real issue that
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needs solving. However, just as with the rest, it's a daunting problem to tackle. But
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there are some things we can consider doing in the future:
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### Sound insulation
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We insulate our houses against heat, but why not also insulate them against noise? This
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is something typical I've had the displeasure of dealing with in my life. I grew up in
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an old brick-and-mortar, concrete house. It was fairly well insulated against sound;
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thick double walls provided very good sound insulation from the outside. Likewise, rooms
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internally were also well insulated from each other.
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But these days I live in a house that's the opposite of that; it's a hard concrete house,
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where vibrations generally seem to penetrate the walls; as for interior walls, they're
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just single-sheet plywood. So in a nutshell, it's *poorly* insulated from noise, both
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externally as well as internally. Being disturbed by noisy sounds in your own living quarters,
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not being able to escape from it, is hell. So we should definitely consider sound-proofing
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our buildings.
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### Ditch mechanics for electrics
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This is one point where we've made the most progress. Over time, we've managed to turn a
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lot of our devices with many mechanical parts into simple electronic ones that barely
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contain moving parts anymore. Even our venerable companion, the car, now has an electric
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variant; with considerably less moving parts, and no noisy combustion being used, it's
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notably quieter than the average car.
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On the flip side, we shouldn't over-digitize everything. Not everything needs to be a
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computer or a touch screen. Overly turning everything into computers may end up introducing
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new noise, and perhaps more importantly, *heat*.
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### Ditch mass-consumption
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Perhaps a rather big subject, but limiting our consumption can help too. The less we need
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to produce, the less noise we make in our factories. Perhaps if we focus on quality over
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quantity, we might even find that we can replace noisy machines with the less noisy and
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more capable human hand. Obviously this would also bode well for the environment, cutting
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emissions and waste.
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### Be considerate
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Maybe a more far-fetched one, or maybe not. Sometimes, noise is literally just your
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neighbour. Or maybe *you* are that noisy neighbour. Being considerate is one other way of
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helping with our home environments. This boils down to really simple stuff, like not
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cranking up your stereo set too much, not turning your back yard into a lumber mill, and
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even the simplest one; teach your kids and pets to stay quiet. But of course that last one
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takes effort, and we all know the one thing we're not gonna do at home. Being considerate
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sometimes requires a little bit of work from you. But the pay off can be big if more of us
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were willing to put in that little bit of effort to be more considerate.
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## Not all noise is noisy
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On a closing note, I'd like to say that not all noise ends up being noisy. Music is among
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some of the things I like most about life. Music is *good*. But be considerate. You obviously
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want to listen to your music; someone else might not. Be considerate; to your neighbours,
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but also your ears, both will thank you for not exposing them to loud noise.
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