There is a particular silence out here that I did not know existed until I lived inside it. Not the soft hum of a sleeping neighborhood, where someone is always running a dishwasher or backing out of a driveway. This is the real thing. You can stand in my kitchen at noon and hear nothing at all, and for a long time I could not decide whether that was the most peaceful sound in the world or the most unnerving. It turns out it is both, depending entirely on the wind.

Yes, We Live in the Middle of Nowhere
We did not come here from the city. That is the version people expect, the frazzled urban couple fleeing traffic for a simpler life. The truth is gentler. We came from a small town of five thousand people, the kind of place where you still run into someone you know at the grocery store, where there are shops to wander and somewhere to go on a Saturday. It was quiet by most standards, but it was a quiet with people in it. There was a community humming along just outside the door.

It Was Not My Idea
And here is the thing. None of this was my idea. It was Remo’s. He is the one who looked at a piece of land out past everything and saw our whole future sitting in it, while I looked at the same field and saw, mostly, a field. I was skeptical in the way you get skeptical when a person you love proposes uprooting your entire life for a view. I did not want to be the last woman on earth, miles from another living soul.

So we compromised, the way you learn to after enough years together. He got his land. I got my one non negotiable, which was neighbors. Not close ones, I am not a monster, I did not move to the country to hear a stranger’s television through the trees. But close enough that I am not entirely alone out here. So now I have a couple of them, set at what I can only describe as the perfect distance. Far enough that they cannot hear me when I am outside yelling at the dogs to drop whatever horrible thing they have found. Near enough that I can text my neighbor to come over and collect the latest concoction cooling on my counter, or talk her into a walk when I have had enough of my own company. It is precisely as much society as I want. A little, on my terms, and then home to the quiet.
The Quiet Was Never the Problem

Because the quiet was never the part I worried about. I am an introvert, the real kind, the sort that finds other people genuinely lovely in measured doses and then needs to go lie down in a silent room. So when we moved out here, I kept waiting for the loneliness everyone promised me to arrive. It never did. The quiet did not feel like absence. It felt like being handed back something I had been missing for years without ever naming it. I am never more myself than when it is silent and the only company is the dogs and my own thoughts, which, I will admit, are not always excellent company, but they are reliably mine.
So the quiet and I get along beautifully. We came to an understanding early.
And Then There Is the Wind

And then there is the wind.
Nobody warned me about the wind. Out here, with nothing to slow it down, no buildings, no streets lined with houses, just open field running as far as the eye goes, the wind does not blow so much as announce itself. It finds the corners of the house and leans on them. It moves things outside that I did not think could move on their own. On the worst nights it sounds less like weather and more like something circling the place, patient and unimpressed, and I will be lying in bed in my beautiful dream house feeling exactly like a character in the first act of The Shining, quietly working out where the nearest hedge maze would be.
This is the part of the silence that nobody puts in the brochure. When it is calm, the quiet is a gift. When the wind comes up, that same quiet turns into a stage, and the wind is the only actor, and it does not seem to know its lines were supposed to be comforting. I have made peace with nearly everything about living out here. The wind and I are still in talks.
The Mornings Are Mine

But let me tell you what the wind is the price of.
This is our dream house, and I do not throw that phrase around, because we spent years getting here. We watched it go from a drawing, to a hole in the ground, to a place we actually live in. And the reward for all of it is space. So much space that I still do not always know what to do with it. I have a walking trail of my own just outside the door, which is a sentence I never once pictured myself writing. I can step out and walk and walk, mountains standing in one direction and fields running flat to the horizon in the other, and most days not cross paths with a single soul. It is the kind of beauty that is not performing for anyone. It is simply there every morning, whether I come out to meet it or not.

And most mornings, I do come out to meet it. I take the trail with the dogs, who do not walk it so much as detonate down it, barking at nothing and everything, at the wind, at a passing smell, at the sheer outrage of a bird existing. The same wind that terrorizes me at night turns harmless by daylight, and they lean into it and bark straight back at it as though they are winning. Above all of it the sun comes up over the fields, and it honestly does not matter to me whether it is one of those soft warm mornings or one of those brutal Alberta ones where the cold gets into your teeth and my breath hangs in the air in front of me. Either way the light spills out across everything, the mountains go pink along their edges, the dogs lose their minds with joy, and I stand in the middle of all that space and think, with no irony at all, that this is the most magical part of my entire day. I do not have a better word for it than that. It is simply magic, and it is mine, and the best part is that I get to come do it all again tomorrow.

Do I miss anything about the busier life? Honestly, only the dull logistics of it. Being twenty minutes from a doctor instead of half a day from one. The old luxury of noticing I am out of something and simply going to get it, instead of adding it to a list that has to earn the entire trip. Out here, a forgotten ingredient is not a quick errand. It is a negotiation with the calendar. But that is the whole of the list. I will take the inconvenience for the view every single time, and Remo will never once let me forget that he was right.

What nobody tells you about the quiet is that it is not one thing. It is the silence I sink into with my coffee at dawn, and it is the wind that keeps me up at two. It is the walk with my neighbor and the long stretch of trail with no one on it at all. It is the gift and the price, and out here they live in the same house, sometimes on the very same night. I was skeptical. I was wrong, mostly. I would choose it again. And on the calm mornings, out on my trail with the dogs and the mountains and the enormous, generous quiet, it does not feel like anything I have to make peace with. It feels like the thing I did not even know I came all this way to find.
The wind can have the night. The mornings are mine.






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