Ambient Noise
A Report on the Breakdown of Information

I am standing in a room filled with eighty people.
The floor is concrete and the ceiling is high,
which means the sound of every voice
is bouncing off the hard surfaces
and returning to my ears as a single,
undifferentiated mass of noise.
*
You are standing twelve inches from my face.
Your mouth is moving.
I can see your teeth and the way
your tongue hits the roof of your mouth,
but the air between us is too crowded with other sounds.
I hear the first word of your sentence.
I hear the second word.
The third word is buried by a laugh
from the group of men standing behind you.
The fourth word is lost to the clatter
of a glass hitting a table.
*
I am missing thirty percent of what you are saying.
*
Because I want you to think I am attentive,
I have tightened the muscles in my face.
My lips are pulled back into a smile.
that does not reach my eyes.
It is a static, frozen expression
designed to signal agreement
without requiring comprehension.
*
My neck is beginning to ache.
I am leaning my left ear toward your lips,
tilting my head at an unnatural angle
to shorten the distance the sound must travel.
The tendons in my throat are tense.
My shoulders have risen toward my ears.
*
I am nodding my head at regular intervals.
I do this every four seconds
to keep the rhythm of the conversation
from collapsing entirely.
Inside my mind, I am trying to fill
the gaps in your speech with logic.
I am guessing at the nouns.
I am inventing the verbs you might have used.
*
We are participating in a failure.
You think you are being heard.
I am pretending to hear you.
The concern is that we are two people
occupying the same small space
while the information you are offering
is disappearing into the room
before it can reach my brain.
*
My neck is tired.
My jaw is sore from smiling.
I still do not know what you said.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
I am an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. I write about rural life, family, and the places I grew up around. My poetry and essays have appeared in Beautiful and Brutal Things, My latest book. Check it out on Amazon



Comments (1)
This is another really strong poem. I am meeting friends this weekend to see a band and I'm arriving early. I told one of my friends I'm doing that because "I want to hear at least SOME of the conversation." Once the band goes on, I will be participating in a failure. Great illustration of real life and real emotion.