
We entered her flat and were horrified to find… Not filth, not chaos, not the madness we had assumed — but walls lined with soundproofing and piles of old cassette recorders.
Dozens of them, each filled with recordings of people’s voices. At first, it felt sinister. Why would she do this? Why torment us with noises if she was already recording all the sounds herself?
Then, tucked inside a box, we found her journal.
Her words stopped us cold: “I make noise at night so I won’t feel alone. My husband died years ago, and the silence crushed me. Recording voices keeps me company.
Every laugh, every footstep, every shout reminds me I’m not forgotten.” Suddenly, the “crazy lady” wasn’t crazy at all. She was lonely desperately trying to hold onto the echoes of a life she once had.
The young man who rented our flat later told us that every morning, he greeted her through the thin wall with a cheerful “Good morning, neighbor!” and every night, he said, “Sleep well.”
That was why he lasted when nobody else did. He gave her what we never did: kindness. We realized then that what we dismissed as madness was really a cry for connection.
And sometimes, the smallest gestures — a smile, a hello, a moment of attention — can mean the difference between loneliness and feeling human again.
Her death left us shaken, but also humbled. We learned that compassion is never wasted. Because what we call “crazy” is often just a story we never took the time to understand.