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Editorial

Noisy Silence, and Silent Noises

Rodger Graham*

Consultant Clinical Psychologist, UK

Corresponding Author:
Dr Rodger Graham
Consultant Clinical Psychologist, UK
Tel: 02380840044
E-mail: rodger_g_graham@yahoo.co.uk

Received date: October 06, 2015 Accepted date: October 08, 2015 Published date: October 12, 2015

Citation: Graham R (2015) Noisy Silence, and Silent Noises. J Biodivers Endanger Species 3:e108. doi:10.4172/2332-2543.1000e108

Copyright: © 2015 Graham R. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Abstract

In psychotherapy silence is often experienced as the noisiest of moments. Moments of quiet in the room afford an anticipatory bubbling of thought to arise - a search for solutions, or maybe a simple anxiety about who will say what next? In general life too these ‘quiet’ moments may quite ironically provide opportunity for our minds to accelerate, to fill the void with the grind of their own machinery. Peace and quiet often are not the charming friends we all hoped for. Cognition is noisy and a silent moment in space-time grants it considerable space to increase in perceived volume.

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