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The Voice on the Answering Machine

The Voice on the Answering Machine

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Welcome back to Infinite Threads. I’m your host, Bob.The other day I was thinking about answering machines.If you’re younger, that sentence probably sounds strange already.There was a time when if someone called and you weren’t home, they didn’t get a text message. They didn’t get a read receipt. They didn’t know where you were.They left a message.And if you were lucky, you got home in time to hear it blinking.I can still remember that little feeling of curiosity.Who called?What did they want?Sometimes it was important.Most of the time it wasn’t.But that’s not what I found myself thinking about.What I found myself thinking about was the voices.Because somewhere in garages, attics, closets, and old cassette tapes are voices that no longer exist anywhere else.People laughing.People saying hello.People asking someone to call them back.Ordinary conversations nobody thought were important.At least not at the time.It’s funny how often life works that way.The things we treasure later are rarely the things we carefully preserved.They’re the things we accidentally kept.A recording.A voicemail.A home movie.A few seconds of sound that somehow survived.I remember years ago hearing an old recording of someone I hadn’t heard in a very long time.The moment their voice came through the speaker, it was as though time folded in on itself.Not because of what they said.I honestly don’t remember the words.I remember the voice.The rhythm.The tone.The little mannerisms that made it unmistakably theirs.For a few moments, they didn’t feel like a memory.They felt present.I think that’s because a voice carries something unique.A photograph shows us what someone looked like.A voice reminds us what it felt like to know them.That’s a different thing entirely.You hear the warmth.You hear the humor.You hear the personality.And suddenly you’re not just remembering a person.You’re experiencing a tiny piece of them again.Recently, I had one of those experiences myself.I was going through old voicemail messages and discovered messages from two people who are no longer with us.My cousin Debi.And my good friend Steve.When those messages were first left, they seemed completely ordinary.A quick call.A reason for reaching out.The kind of message most of us hear and then move on from without giving it much thought.But time changes things.Today, those messages feel precious to me.Not because of what they said.Because of who said it.I can hear their voices.I can hear their personalities.For a few moments, they’re not just memories in my mind. They’re speaking again.And I have to admit, that’s a gift I never expected to receive.Years ago, if someone had asked me whether those messages would one day become treasures, I probably would have laughed.Today, I wouldn’t trade them for anything.I’ve thought about my brother Sean while working on this episode too.Not in a sad way.Just in a human way.There are things about people that memory preserves remarkably well.A laugh.A phrase.A certain way they would tell a story.The older I get, the more I realize that the people we love leave echoes behind.Not ghostly echoes.Human echoes.The habits we picked up from them.The expressions we still use.The stories we continue telling.Sometimes those echoes arrive through memory.Sometimes they arrive through a recording.And every once in a while, they arrive unexpectedly.A stranger says something in a familiar way.Someone laughs and it reminds you of another laugh you haven’t heard in years.A voice on television sounds strangely familiar.For a second, the past taps you on the shoulder.Then it’s gone again.I think that’s why people hold on to old recordings.Not because they’re trying to live in the past.Because certain things deserve to travel with us.The sound of a parent’s voice.The laughter of a friend.The voice of someone who helped shape our life.These things become part of our story.And stories matter.Not because they keep us from moving forward.Because they remind us how we got here.Technology changes so quickly.Answering machines disappeared.Cassette tapes disappeared.Even voicemail feels old-fashioned now.But the human need underneath all of it hasn’t changed.We want connection.We want reminders of the people who mattered.We want to know that the moments we shared didn’t simply vanish.Maybe that’s why a voice can be so powerful.It’s more than sound.It’s evidence.Evidence that somebody was here.Evidence that they laughed.Evidence that they loved.Evidence that, for a little while, their story and our story were woven together.And perhaps that’s the beautiful thing about the voices we carry with us.Even when the conversation ends, something remains.Not just the words.The person.And sometimes, years later, that’s enough to make us smile.Infinite Threads is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to ...
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