Gender affirming voice blog
Discover voice tips, announcements for events, videos stories about Christie’s clients, or press about New York Speech & Voice Lab.
Voice tips for video calls
Here are some tools and video set-up that can help you achieve and maintain gender techniques and healthy voicing while on a video call.
Aligning your inner voice with your outer voice
The voice in your head may not have a sound to you, but if it does, it may sound more like an undesired, unmodified voice and less like the speaking voice that is changing and serving you better. In that case, aligning your inner voice with those outer changes may help you achieve more overall progress and vocal satisfaction.
Start and end well
Maintaining your chosen voice techniques can be challenging at any level of your gender affirming voice process. Are you starting to practice talking, and find it mentally challenging to think of what to say while also modifying how you sound?
Say NO to "no pain, no gain"
New vocal habits do not require that you push your voice hard. Instead, they demand precision and accuracy.
Tracking your voice in different contexts
Have you noticed how your voice and communication can change depending on the situation? How do you talk to a coworker, boss, classmate, friend, family member, coffee shop barista, or pet? What words do you use? How does your voice sound?
Strained or tired voice? Sing through a straw!
Straw phonation, or making sound through a straw, is a common therapeutic exercise for vocal health problems such as vocal strain or tired voice.
Is changing your pitch enough? What testosterone can and can't do for your voice
Are you on testosterone but still feel unsatisfied with your voice? The pitch may not have dropped enough or there may be other ways you are still using your voice that can be perceived as feminine.
"Does it bring you joy?"
Here is a link to the 4/8/19 episode of Nancy, the critically-acclaimed podcast on WYNC that features stories and conversations about TGBTQ experiences:
https://www.wnycstudios.org/story/nancy-podcast-does-it-bring-you-joy
In this episode, one of the hosts, Tobin Low, a cisgender gay man, discusses how he came to see me in my office in order to verify if he was lowering his pitch on purpose to avoid sounding too feminine, and whether that was the cause of his vocal fatigue and hoarseness.
Getting feedback on your voice
Knowing exactly how your voice sounds is critical for modifying it in ways that work for you. But let's face it, it can be hard to know how you sound outside your own head. And it can be scary and uncomfortable to hear yourself or embarrassing to get feedback.
Embrace your best possible self
Changing your voice and communication patterns to better conform to your gender expression can be challenging. This can be met with new, useful, and more satisfying ways of talking.
The road to authenticity
If you practice and use new ways of talking, these ways will gradually feel more real, both emotionally and physically, as the brain retrains the muscles to produce the desired skills in a more automatic way.
Phone voice
Many transpeople have trouble being misgendered over the phone, even when being gendered correctly in face-to-face conversations. This is primarily because the listener doesn’t have the added benefit of seeing the person’s appearance. Below are some recommendations for strategically using your best voice/speech skills when talking on the phone to people unfamiliar to you.
Laughing in a more feminine or masculine way
Believe it or not, we can modify the way we laugh, because laughing is a kind of behavior, just like speech is a behavior.
The magic of lip trills
This blog post addresses lip trills further, bringing in target pitch and pitch movement.
A daily vocal warm-up
Warming up your voice for the day can help to prevent vocal strain, vocal fatigue, or other voice problems.