My favorite picture of me and my sister is of us sitting close, faces together, in our matchy-matchy Christmas dresses by the beautifully decorated tree, credit to my mother’s impeccable eye for gaudy yet girly design.
I love my sister’s gap and the milky brown tone of her face. I chuckle when I see that picture; she looks so much like the older sibling, and I so mousy, a bright smile, but quiet just the same.
I have a complex view of quietness. I enjoy it, but sometimes it’s pulled from me by well-meaning strangers. It’s often viewed as weak or slow, but it’s my favorite sound after a long day.
Quiet. Often used as a slur for a person unsettlingly at peace with their own company or just socially awkward. Or…?
Quiet,
floods over me more recently. I used to think it was when I plugged in my earbuds and floated into my own world. But it muted my mind, just my loud escape.
Quiet,
and well-behaved, often celebrated by some elders for being so well-trained, respectful, unproblematic, crushed into a figure so small and barely noticeable. Like fine cutlery, only to be fully admired when its owner deems it fitting.
Quiet,
to some people who’ve yet to defrost, I appear to be nothing more than my quiet nature. But how loud and boisterous I am with the ones who melt me. Though, global warming is inescapable, and I find myself less cold but still cautious.
Quiet, be quiet.
I usually am, but today I’m really in pain. Can you listen this time? I know I’m often silent—
silenced, by my own discomfort with overwhelming you. It might just be a one-off thing, a bad day?
Quiet, be a good girl, be nice. Behave. A woman shouldn’t be so angry. Forgive and get back in your trap.
Quiet, don’t act like you don’t have your own issues.
Quiet, ashamed of my mistakes.
Nuanced as it is, I will say the quiet part aloud too.
I see my flaws, but I won’t bury them with yours,
silently suffocating under the weight of the rug I was swept under.
Quiet and gracious, not to ignore the trampling of the elephant in the room,
but because I won’t carry on like a martyr from the ring of mockery.
I don’t often speak unless I’m really in pain. Please don’t make me…
Hushhh. How do you expect to be married if you don’t allow some mistreatment?
I do not want to be fine cutlery, only allowed to speak when given permission. You praise me for being so good at listening, but when I ask for the same, you stay… quiet.
Silence is a beautiful thing, it allows for moments of reflection, but sometimes it’s forced, when voices are trampled over in pride.
Still, there’s this pressure, a pressure to appease others’ discomfort with a nature that is not inherently wrong, not inherently sinful. Shrinking yourself to fit their expectations, to be more palatable, seems less like an act of grace and more like a painful death. Sure, there are conditions, complexities, and nuances, but ultimately it kills slowly.
So, though I love my ability to be silent, I will no longer be
mousy
but quiet, yes.
Epilogue
There’s beauty in not needing a reason, a trauma story, a diagnosis.
But sometimes, there is. And there is beauty in knowing that too.
More than conquers, but Jesus wept.
It’s not black and white, or gray—maybe much worse than that, a muddled brown.
Not everything needs to be pathologized (as some point out), but it’s okay to get the help you need to understand yourself.
I hope you get to enjoy some quiet today.
I wrote quiet as an ode to the complexities of quietness, sometimes as it is seen in women. I share it with you with no subtext; it is not related to one instance but reflecting over a lifetime from my adolescence up to today.