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A Silent Night — Not At My House (standard:Inspirational stories, 914 words)
Author: GodspenmanAdded: Apr 03 2006Views/Reads: 3552/0Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes)
People say, as they get older their hearing is not what it used to be. I have found this to be true for myself. The older I get, and I plan to get as old as I can, the more I hear noises in the middle of the night. Noises, I might add, that I have never h
 



People say, as they get older their hearing is not what it used to be. I
have found this to be true for myself. The older I get, and I plan to 
get as old as I can, the more I hear noises in the middle of the night. 
Noises, I might add, that I have never heard before. 

I'm not against noise. Personally, I try to make as much noise as
possible. I'm just against noise not orchestrated with my sleeping 
habits. 

And at this juncture of my career, sleeping has become a habit. In fact,
I might describe it as an addiction. I tried breaking this addiction 
once but my wife complained I was just becoming crotchety. 

When I was younger, I didn't need as much sleep as today. Some experts
opine that as a person gets older they don't need as much sleep as they 
used to. I find this absolutely, positively untrue. I need more sleep 
today than I have ever needed in my entire life. 

Actually, what I really need is to be able to sleep all night without
disturbance. My definition of disturbance is anything I hear when I am 
trying to go to sleep — and I demand everything to be quiet. I will not 
mention any names, but this also includes persons who have the annoying 
habit of trying to talk while I'm trying to sleep. 

It is not that I'm not interested in what this unnamed person has to
say; it's just that I don't want to hear it when I'm trying to go to 
sleep. People have all day to get whatever is on their mind all talked 
out. That is why God gave us daylight hours. 

It seems of late that no matter when I go to bed or how long I have
actually slept, in the morning I always need just one more minute of 
sleep. That one minute more of sleep is the most crucial aspect of my 
nightly siesta. 

Personally, I do not believe in alarm clocks. I think they have evolved
over the years from some Neanderthal idea that it is important to get 
up at a certain time in the morning. 

I'm of the opinion that getting up is a relative thing. One man's
wake-up time is another man's “please, don't disturb me yet.” 

If God wanted me to get up at a certain time every morning he would have
made it a little more appealing. As far as I'm concerned, I know I have 
slept enough when my wife is standing at the bedroom doorway, both 
hands on her hips and saying to me, in that wonderful voice of hers, 
“Are you ever going to get out of that bed today?” 

I suppose I would be more willing to get up earlier if wasn't for all
the noises in the night. I believe in silent night, and not only at 
Christmas. 

It is amazing to me how intelligent these nighttime noises can be. They
are absolutely quiet until I'm just about ready to drift off into 
La-la-land, then there is a medley of screeching and yelling and 
screaming right outside my window. 

It is not that I hate cats; it is rather I abhor cats making noise when
I'm trying to catnap. Cats are wonderful creatures. For the most part, 
these cats mill around throughout the day and refuse to pierce the 
daytime with any fracas. 

They stay out of my way and I reciprocate by staying out of their way.
They keep quiet all day long but when I'm just about ready to drift off 
to sleep ,they start a Hullabaloo concert right out my window. 

Show me a cat that is silent all night long and I will show you one that
has been run over by a truck. Cats do not know how to be silent at 
night. This confuses me because all day long you don't hear one little 
whimper from these creatures. 

It does not matter what time I go to bed, all of the cats within a
10-mile radius of my bedroom are alerted to this pertinent information. 
All I can figure is there must be some sort of a feline union, or maybe 
it is tabby-telepathy for all I know. Just two nights ago, I counted 
2,972 cats outside my bedroom window, all fighting each other at the 
same time. 

Perhaps, and this is pure conjecture on my part, these cats are working
in shifts, which is why the entire night can be thoroughly covered with 
screeches, squawks and meows that grate on my fragile nerves. 

When the neighborhood cats finish their nocturnal routine and settle
down for the night, quietness settles over my backyard, which is 
conducive to sleep. At this point, the only bird the neighborhood cats 
have not successfully chased out of my backyard awakens to serenade a 
new day. 

If it is not the night noises keeping me awake it is worrying about
something n anything. 

But a verse in the Bible gives me some encouragement. “Except the Lord
build the house, they labour in vain that build it: except the Lord 
keep the city, the watchman waketh but in vain. It is vain for you to 
rise up early, to sit up late, to eat the bread of sorrows: for so he 
giveth his beloved sleep.” (Psalms 127:1-2 KJV.) 

Not all the cats in the neighborhood can take from me what God delights
to give me. 


   


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