The Beeps

 Josh Freed is an award-winning journalist and documentary film writer.

Uh-oh.  Something in the house is beeping – but what?  Is it the stove announcing that dinner is cooked?  Or is the dryer proclaiming my clothes are ready?  Is the fridge defrosting, the thermostat adjusting, the smoke alarm dying, or is my cell phone dead?  I’m living in an electronic jungle, trained to leap at every beep – if I could just figure out which beep it is.

I grew up in a time of easier-to-identify sounds, when telephones ding-a-linged, cash registers ka-chinged, and typewriters clacked; when school bells clanged, fire alarms rang, and ambulance sirens wailed –instead of today’s digital whooping.  Now they are all being replaced by the beep-beeps and bing-bings that are the frantic soundtrack of the 21st century.

Many of these high-pitched beeps are strangely hard to locate, even when they are right beside you.  I usually fumble around for my cell phone when it rings because I can’t figure out which pants pocket it’s in – or which pants.  Maybe it’s lost under the armchair again?  Several times a week a mystery beeping goes off somewhere in our house, and I run around like a lunatic trying to find whatever it is.  I listen to our bookshelves, to our laundry piles, and even to the inside of the fridge.  But the beeping always stops long before I crack the mystery.

Meanwhile, I am bombarded on every side by other urgent electronic sounds.      My car beeps constantly, nagging me to put on my seat belt, or turn off the lights, or lock the trunk, or whatever else it’s trying to tell me – probably:  “Wipe your shoes before you mess up my floor, mister!”  My printer beeps identically when it’s out of paper, or out of toner, or when something is jammed – but which is it?  My microwave beeps all the time, just for fun.

Out in the world, elevators and ATM machines beep constantly.  TV shows beep when they bleep out swear words.  Store machines beep when they swipe your groceries, or you try to swipe theirs without paying.  Then there are security beeps: the loud BEEEEP . . . BEEEEP . . . BEEEEP that says you’re about to be run down by a city street cleaner that’s backing up; the shrill beep-beep-beep-beep that says you have 15 seconds to punch in the house alarm code or an old-fashioned siren will go off alerting a security firm that you are an intruder in your own home.  The simple but dreaded beep of an airline security wand means it’s time to start your striptease act.

Even life itself is measured in beeps.  Hospitals are full of machines whose soft beeps indicate you are still alive.  “I beep, therefore I am.”  We are born into the world in a noisy jungle of beeping medical monitors and wires.  We will probably leave it the same way – for most of us, the world will end with a beep, not a bang.

Who would have guessed the sound of the 21st century would be the cry of the cartoon Road Runner, the fast-stepping bird that was always pursued by Wile E. Coyote, crying beep-beep as it ran?  Today we are all Road Runners, frantically beeping as we run for our lives, chased by our own high-speed machines and hectic lifestyles.

Beep-beep!  Fasten your seat belt.  Beep-beep! You have another new email . . . NOW.  BEEP! BEEP!  Hello, we value your call, but we can’t be bothered to take it now, so please don’t speak until the beep.”  Electronic sounds have become so widespread, ornithologists report many birds are now mimicking our beeps, buzzes, and chirps as art of their mating songs.  There are parrots that sound like cellphones, mockingbirds that mimic microwaves, and white-bellied caiques that do perfect car alarms.

Will the entire animal kingdom eventually chirp, roar, and growl electronically? Or will a new generation of humans choose more soothing sounds, like a phone ring that sounds exactly like birdsong, instead of vice-versa?  Or an alarm clock that sounds like a rooster?  Or a cash register that once again makes a genuine Ka-ching?  Perhaps we will all have truly personalized ring tones made by gentle New Age mechanical voices that show some respect for our space: “Jossshhh . . .  This is your sto-o-ove speaking.  Dinner is ready whenever you are, but don’t rush – I’ll keep it warm.  Sorry if I disturbed you.”  “Suu-ssan . . .  This is your phone ringing.  Suu-ssan.  I’m in your brown purse, under your make-up and your dirty gum socks.  Will you take the call . . . or should I?”  To beep or not to beep?  That is the question future generations must face.  But for now, I’ve got to run.  That beeping just started again, and I’ve just figured out what it is: my computer.

 

Directions: Write a clear, concise, well-organized, and fully-supported paragraph in response to each of the prompts below.

Your paragraph should have a topic sentence/main idea, three major supporting details, minor supporting details/examples to clarify your point, transitions, and a concluding/summary sentence.  Remember to proofread carefully before submitting your writing.

Guidelines:

  1. Type in 12 pt, Times New Roman
  2. Double Spaced
  3. Write your last name and the page number at the top of each page.
  4. You may use an outline.
  5. You may use a dictionary and/or thesaurus.

WRITING PROMPTS

  1. Do you own any gadgets or gizmos? Discuss 1 gadget that you own and explain 1 reason why it is useful.
  2. What is your most valuable possession? Explain 1 reason why it is valuable.
  3. Reflect on the quotation by Alice Kahn. Does modern technology make life easier or was life better when technology was simpler?  Explain 1 reason to support your point of view.