Out - Lights
So tonight, try it. Flip the switch. Let the dark in. You might just find that the world doesn’t disappear when the lights go out. It simply shows you its other, softer face.
The irony is that we fear the dark. Evolution hardwired us to associate night with predators and the unknown. But in our crusade to banish every shadow, we have lost something essential: the velvet silence of a moonlit room, the ability to see the Milky Way’s dusty arc, and the deep, restorative rest that only absolute darkness can provide. Lights Out
Consider the turtle hatchlings on Florida’s beaches. For millennia, they found the ocean by following the horizon’s natural light. Today, sprawling condos and streetlamps send them crawling inland toward highways, away from the sea. For them, lights out is a matter of life and death. The same is true for migrating birds, which circle illuminated skyscrapers until they collapse from exhaustion, or for humans, whose melatonin production—and thus cancer-fighting ability—is disrupted by nocturnal light pollution. So tonight, try it
Yet, perhaps we need more "lights out" moments. You might just find that the world doesn’t
We live in an age of luminous excess. The average person’s waking hours are a glare of blue light from screens, the hum of fluorescent office ceilings, and the perpetual orange glow of city streets that erases the stars. We have forgotten that darkness is not merely the absence of light, but an ecological condition and a psychological necessity.
The command is simple: Lights out. For a child, it is the signal for bedtime—a moment of protest followed by the slow surrender to sleep. For a soldier in a trench, it is a fragile shield against enemy eyes. But in our modern, hyper-connected era, "lights out" has taken on a more ominous meaning. It is the sudden, sinking plunge into darkness during a blackout, or the final, irreversible shutdown of a failing industry.












