Suburbia -

Inside every house, a TV flickers. Dinner is served at 6:30 sharp. The garage holds a minivan, a treadmill used twice, and a box of forgotten hobbies. Conversations happen in decibels low enough not to disturb the neighbors. Arguments are whispered. Affairs are conducted in hotel parking lots twenty miles away.

Welcome to Suburbia, where the streets are named after trees that were bulldozed to build them. It’s 7:15 PM. Mr. Davis from number 42 is watering a lawn that doesn’t need it. The Henderson kids are practicing violin scales behind double-paned windows. A jogger passes you for the third time, earbuds in, eyes ahead. Suburbia

And yet, every Sunday, the cars line up outside the same three churches. Every June, the block party happens—potluck salads, forced laughter, and the unspoken agreement to pretend everything is fine. Suburbia doesn’t scream. It hums. And that hum, once you hear it, never quite leaves your head. Let me know which tone fits your project, and I can tailor it further. Inside every house, a TV flickers