In the quiet, every sound carries a weight.
Lessons From the Retirement Community (10): The Siren’s Aftermath
The EMS siren is the sonic signature of the finite — a sudden invitation to trade the minutiae of the mundane for a life of intention.
The trouble is, you think you have time — Jack Kornfield
In a retirement community, the quiet is often broken by the wail of an EMS siren. While it signals a neighbor’s crisis, it serves as a “grounding rod” for the observer. This essay explores how these moments pierce the distractions of daily life, inviting a vital, intentional recalibration of our finite time.
In the quiet of a retirement community, silence is a norm. We cultivate it in the xeriscaped gardens and preserve it in the stealth silence of electric golf carts driving by. But this silence is punctuated, with a quasi-periodic regularity, by the invasive wail of a siren.
It is the sonic signature of the EMS vehicle — a high-decibel intrusion that slices through the “active adult community” veneer. When that sound is heard, we all pause. We look out the window to see which driveway it claims. For the person behind the door, the siren might signal a minor failure of the body or the definitive closing of a chapter. For the rest of us, the siren acts as a grounding rod. It is a stark, unadorned reminder of mortality that demands to be remembered.
The Gravity of the Mundane
It is remarkably easy to lose oneself in the minutiae of the “well-lived” retirement. We fill our days with a rhythm that mimics importance, and pretends to have some higher meaning and purpose. We step onto the pickleball court and allow the adrenaline of a win or the sting of a loss to feel like a matter of consequence. We sit at our desks to pore over financial tables, performing the modern alchemy of keeping the Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) from tripping the IRMAA surcharge brackets. We immerse ourselves in learning all about the changes in tax rules.
Such “small things” are the gears of a functional life — but they are dangerously effective at clouding the horizon of mortality. We get swept away by these exigencies. We treat tax brackets and court scores as if they are the permanent fixtures of our existence, rather than the temporary scaffolding. In the heat of a “small tussle” over pickleball rules or a portfolio dip, we forget the fundamental math: days of our consciousness are numbered.
The Dose of Reality
The siren is the antidote to this self-imposed amnesia. While it represents a crisis for a neighbor, for us as the observer, it is a dose of reality. It strips away the illusion that we are merely “vacationing” in time.
There is an inherent tension in this. It feels almost predatory to find personal perspective in someone else’s emergency. Yet, to ignore the signal is to miss the invitation. The “toll” of the siren — much like Donne’s bell — reminds us that we are not spectators of mortality; we are participants in it.
Shifting the Perspective
When the siren fades and the flashing lights eventually dim, the silence that returns is different, at least for a while. It is heavier, and touched by introspection, it is also clearer.
It invites a recalibration of who we are, and where we stand.
Living in the retirement community periodically becomes living with the veil pulled back. And that is good. By acknowledging the finite nature of our stay, we not only feel somber; we also become intentional. We return to our rhythms not as people killing time, but as people who finally understand what it is worth, even if that understanding is effervescent.
Ciao, and thanks for reading.



