At the end of a recent trip to my hometown to visit my elderly mom,
my sister passed me an envelope containing a cassette tape. The moment
felt like an exchange between Deep Throat and Bob Woodward. But what was
on this tape was more valuable than anything that might bring down a
president: It was a recording of my father’s voice. A voice I hadn’t
heard in almost 30 years. A voice my wife and daughters had never heard.
I’d long lamented that I’d failed to save even a single voicemail
message from my dad after he passed away in 1989. Audio of him in
earlier life—captured on old home movies—had been destroyed when the
family garage flooded. As the years passed, and my father’s voice in my
head faded, he faded. Yes, there are photos, but photos fail to trigger
the same memory cues.
“The soul is contained in the human voice,” Borges said, and when you don’t hear the voice of someone you love for a long time, it can feel as though they are irretrievably lost to you.
“The soul is contained in the human voice,” Borges said, and when you don’t hear the voice of someone you love for a long time, it can feel as though they are irretrievably lost to you.
This insight is partly what prompted Dave Isay to create StoryCorps,
an oral-history project that won the million-dollar TED Prize in 2015.
StoryCorps encourages you to sit down with an important elder in your
life and ask them to tell you their story. Then, via a simple phone app,
you send the recording to StoryCorps HQ, which in turn sends it to the
Library of Congress, where it’s put on ice forever. The idea is that the
subjective life story of every individual (not just “famous” people)
ought to be preserved. The “voices” of the dead inform the lives of the
living.
But voice preservation is more than an archival project, or at least
it should be. The voices of the people we love are precious beyond
measure. They are a profound psychological tonic, as several social
scientists have demonstrated.
In one study, Leslie Seltzer, a biological anthropologist at the
University of Wisconsin, had experimental subjects take a stressful
exam. Then she let them calm their jangled nerves by contacting their
moms. One group checked in with moms by text message. The other group
talked to their mothers on the phone. Blood samples from each group,
drawn before and after, revealed a startling difference: The students
who had heard their mothers’ voices showed far lower levels of stress hormones, and higher levels of calming oxytocin. The students who had merely texted their moms showed no change in their blood chemistry.
In another study with younger subjects, Seltzer found that talking to mothers activated the same parts of the brain
that hugging them did. In other words, hearing the voice of someone you
love generates the same effect as physically touching them. (A short
capsule of this work can be found on a recent episode of the podcast Invisibilia,
which cites another study, this one from psychologist Theresa Pape at
Northwestern University. When patients in comas had the voice of someone
they loved piped into the hospital room, they came out of the coma more
quickly than other similarly afflicted patients who did not hear their
loved ones’ voices.)
All this suggests we should be thinking of the human voice as almost a
kind of medicine. We should be wallowing in the sounds of the people we
love. Instead, we’re moving away from communicating this way. Who uses
the phone anymore? (Or rather, who uses the phone as a phone?) People
are four times as likely to send an email or text message to someone
than to phone them, studies show. It’s just more convenient, right? Of
course, if you knew the recipient was going to suddenly be gone
tomorrow, you’d pick up the phone in a heartbeat. Or go see them in
person.
So I’m going to suggest the following experiment: Next time you’re
about fire off an email to someone you care about, pretend this will be
your last correspondence with them, ever. No doubt you’ll pick up the
phone. (Now, they may not answer; studies also show that fewer people
are actually answering the phone these days, since the odds are decent
that it’s a telemarketer or a scammer on the line. But it’s definitely
worth a shot.)
Secondly, next time you talk to your aging parents
— on the phone or in person — record the conversation. Then take that
digital file and store it in the cloud and back it up. Put it in the
fireproof safe. Never let it be lost.
Last week, I took that cassette tape my sister had given me to the
public library and transferred it to a digital file. And then I took a
deep breath and played it. And there he was. He was reading some
excerpts from short stories, and singing a couple of songs while playing
the piano. He was, oh-so-recognizably and heartbreakingly, a little
off-pitch.
It was good to have him back.
AUTHOR
Bruce Grierson is a social-science writer based in British Columbia.
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