Tuning In to the Sound Environment
A year goes by, time ticks on, we grow, we further our missions in life. This year was the year of music growth for me as a human. What does it mean to truly care for your fellow human and to use music as a catalyst to care for them? I garnered a lot of ways to do this in a year. What is the main thing I learned? Listening. What truly is the art of listening?
I focused heavily on my 10 domains of care. The one I honed in on the most was environmental sound. The environment impacts us all, it’s our scope. The little things count, a movement. It can be a rhapsody, it can be fingernails on a chalk board. I focused on rhapsody and said hello to chalk board screeches. How could I make sounds more pleasant? I adjusted volumes to devices, tones, pitches. I created musical soundscapes that fit the unique quality of the human condition within our realm. I listened with quenches or smiles, I aimed for relieved looks, looks that said, “this sounds right.” I chose sounds that spoke to the tribe. When I worked one on one, I spoke to the spirit of the one. I’m listening to Bob Seger writing this and his song, “Against the Wind.” That’s what I did this year; I ran against the wind. I tackled an inevitable, sounds. Sound should speak to us all, not turn off our volume.
I also learned how to help, not only myself cope with unpleasant sounds, but my folks I care for too. The answer? It lies in the acceptance. Call it out- admit it’s way of making you feel. Feel, hear, react, adapt. So, this year as I ran against the wind? The wind began to become a song instead of a gush. It now is more of an orchestra at our facility. Each little hiss, buzz, ring, ding, ting or veritable element of sound is something part of an accepted orchestra. Each or us tuned into our humanness here, in our domain.
I also launched our own record label. It’s called Gentog Records, named after our mission. Generations together. We launched our first single to major distributors, it is called, “New Beginnings.” It is music written and inspired by humans dealing with neurodegenerative disorders with me as their Sherpa. It represents a big no to what we call “disease”. It shows that humanity and dignity exist, despite it all; the human spirit is the definition. The label is two-fold. 1) To offer ownership and authorship as creators over their sounds and over their feelings and stories. 2) Generate income for the non-profit we have Gentog Community Services.
It’s been a year, one of triumph and failure. Still here we are, perhaps still running against the wind. But, bring on the wind! Embrace its orchestral movement. I know one thing for sure, I’m more in love with sound and humanity. And that, that sounds lovely.










