***If You Are Suffering from Vocal Abuse, Voice Training Is the Only Answer
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Unfortunately, vocal abuse is a real and growing problem for people who use their voice heavily throughout the day or who are in loud environments and resort to shouting to be heard. The result is often damage to the vocal folds (cords) which may be permanent if it happens often enough.
A woman who teaches high school music has done serious damage to her vocal folds in which she has developed nodes or nodules on those delicate organs. Sadly, unless she stops talking for several months, her vocal abuse will not go away.
When singers get vocal abuse, like Celine Dion, they stop singing, sometimes for as long as a year, in order to heal the folds. And, surgery may be required for some, like Julie Andrews.
While vocal abuse occurs more often to the older voice, I am surprised at how much more of it I am seeing in the younger generations. If you go clubbing 2 or 3 times a week and are shouting to be heard for several hours at a time, you are placing your voice in a most precarious position. A few people may be able to yell continually and never have a problem. For most people, however, this is not the case.
Young and old alike are feeling the pain, whether it is due to rooting for your favorite sports team, trying to be heard at the club, running training seminars and workshops for hours on end, or just talking on the phone all day long. The amount of vocal abuse is increasing like never before. Loud times require loud volume and, if not done properly, your loud volume will affect your throat and vocal folds.
What is interesting is that the young man I mentioned in the 1st paragraph has read a lot of books on voice and not one has told him how to increase his volume. This has always fascinated me because one of the most important things I teach is something called projection. Projection means speaking with a bigger voice, powered by your chest cavity, and does not hurt your throat or vocal folds (cords). No, it is not ‘loud,’ just larger in volume.
If you need a voice that you can depend on for whatever the occasion, learn how to project your voice. The benefits will amaze you. Not only will you immediately reduce the strain on your throat, but you will discover a richer, warmer, deeper speaking voice in the process.
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In The SpotLight
Getting Over StageFright Workshops and books "Getting Over Stage Fright" and "In the SpotLight", and CD, authored by Janet Esposito, M.S.W., to help people overcome fear of public speaking and performing. Janet also provides individual phone coaching with people throughout the country and abroad.
January 19, 2011
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Stefan Hippler
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December 11, 2010
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