What Happens When Everything Is Just Quiet?

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Beneath the gray sky of that afternoon, I found myself released earlier than expected from work, not out of generosity but because the entire rhythm of the city had been fractured by something as simple and as absolute as a power outage. The rain was steady enough to blur the horizon yet not fierce enough to keep people indoors, and so the streets were full of hesitant steps, umbrellas tilting like crooked flowers, voices subdued by the weight of a silence that came not only from the storm but from the machines gone mute. I walked without hurry, letting my shoes sink into shallow puddles, letting myself notice the contours of a city stripped of its noise. When the traffic lights blinked their last pulse and died, I felt the odd sensation that I had slipped into an old photograph, one where nothing moved except me.

Crossing avenues that were usually a pulse of horns and motors, I began to realize how fragile the illusion of permanence is. The kiosks stood half open, vendors waiting in twilight, faces marked by resignation, some lighting candles or turning on the flashlights of their phones like small defiant stars. I felt like an intruder walking among them, holding my camera, capturing fragments of this unintended stillness. The air carried the scent of wet asphalt and fried dough from a food stall that refused to surrender, smoke rising like a stubborn memory. Every step echoed louder than I was used to, as if the pavement itself had discovered a voice now that engines and stereos had been silenced. Even the rain seemed amplified, every drop landing with a clarity that made me think of pages being turned.

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Perhaps the strangest part was the intimacy that emerged between strangers. Without the protective screen of constant background noise, people looked at one another more directly. Children giggled when their mothers allowed them to splash in puddles, old men leaned on canes and shook their heads at the absurdity of a city so often undone by the simplest failures. I noticed a neighbor I rarely greet, now standing outside his building, nodding to me in recognition, both of us suddenly accomplices in this suspended reality. It was not camaraderie in the usual sense but a shared awareness that we were all exposed, that without electricity our differences collapsed into the same vulnerable waiting. My camera shutter clicked again and again, but I knew the true images were those etched into my memory, where every gesture seemed sharper, every shadow longer.

Despite the inconvenience, a part of me felt reluctant to return home. Work had ended early, yet the idea of facing my apartment in darkness while the rain pressed against the windows seemed heavier than wandering through streets that carried the flavor of another century. I thought of Pizarnik’s words on silence and realized how much of our daily existence is a defense against it. The blackout stripped away the defenses, left me face to face with a city that breathed slowly, awkwardly, like someone learning to sleep without a fan’s lull. I stood beneath a tree, droplets running down my arm, and wondered if this was what it meant to live more truthfully: to be forced into contact with both the external and the internal, without escape routes made of screens and buzzing lights.

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Memory insists on preserving certain fragments above all others. A boy holding his mother’s hand, raising a plastic lantern like a trophy against the dusk. The laughter of teenagers who found in the outage an excuse to walk endlessly, their voices carrying without competition. The moment the first star revealed itself, faint and stubborn, above rooftops usually drowned in neon. These became the anchors of my walk, the testament of a city reduced and yet somehow enlarged by the absence of electricity. By the time the lights returned, humming back with a violence that seemed almost indecent, I realized I had not missed productivity, nor the clock, nor the rush. What I had been given, instead, was a corridor of quiet hours where every step resonated deeper, where silence became not emptiness but a companion, and where walking turned into a way of listening.

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All photographs and content used in this post are my own. Therefore, they have been used under my permission and are my property.

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Waoo!! I just selected my favorites pictures in this post!!
In the other side, a lot of history in those pictures! Thanks for sharing, it reminds me a lot of things from my childhood, which is good to think about it!!

Oh thank you for stopping by, love. Which one remind you to the good old days in childhood? And why?