Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Do You Like Your Voice?


emeraldmountain

Recommended Posts

Hello!

 

I was curious if anyone here likes their voice associated with their gender assigned at birth?

 

I really appreciate the richness of my male voice and am tickled by the fact that I'm often complimented on my voice, especially by women. I'm not always comfortable with my voice, but sometimes am. I desperately wish to be able to produce a genuine sounding female voice, as well as have the male voice in my back pocket, so to speak (haha). However, when I'm out in public and look the feminine way I do, it is definitely awkward to use my male voice. I am doing voice training, but not yet comfortable using the female voice in public.

 

Anyone under the trans/nonbinary umbrella is welcome to post here, not just male to female!

 

Thanks and have a great week!

 

 

Edited by VickySGV
Member request
Link to comment
  • Forum Moderator

I don't mind my voice.  I'd be happier if I had a more feminine voice, but it is what it is. 

 

When speaking, I can raise my pitch to a plausible deep female level, but of course, the resonance will always remain male.  I do try to put more feminine inflection into my voice.  The result, while maybe not totally convincing, is usually good enough that it doesn't automatically "out" me.

 

However, singing is another thing entirely.  I avoid singing if I can.  At Saturday's Remembrance Day ceremony, as is customary, everyone sang O Canada and God Save the King.  I sing as quietly as possible, since an obviously baritone voice coming from a woman is just a bit odd.

Link to comment

I have been going to speech therapy for about 4 months and it has really helped me. I still have a lot of work to do but I can pass by in public and by phone without someone questioning it. After I finish the vocal part, I'm going to attend a class on nonverbal communication. 

Link to comment

I get by with my voice everywhere except on the phone / digital microphones, and my grandson....  I guess it is because face to face I give enough clues about my gender to make it easier for people to get it right, and I am old. I'm not really worried about people around me except for my 9 yo grandson who is confused about my gender, and it hurts me to think my being trans is causing him confusion. I attended voice therapy for a year, and it helped a little, but I still get misgendered on the phone.

 

Last week, I was invited to be part of a trial for new wearable technology which is supposed to give immediate feedback and suggestions, and I am a bit intrigued. I have an info session soon and will decide to commit or not, but if I do I will review this technology here IF I am allowed to!

 

I believe the online apps currently available are not as good as having female company (for MTF's) and professional therapy. There is too much emphasis on pitch, and not enough on gendered language.

 

Hugs,

 

Allie

Link to comment
1 hour ago, AllieJ said:

Last week, I was invited to be part of a trial for new wearable technology

Sounds very cool. Keep us posted, please.

Link to comment

AFAB, and I don't like my voice.  Not so much because it doesn't match how I present in my boy form....it doesn't matter since I look androgynous.  Its just the quality of it isn't great.  Some people have a clear singing voice, I don't.  Its like...crackly.  Don't know a better word for it.  And trying to voice-text with my phone or use one of those multi-option phone menus where you have to talk to it is a nightmare.  It either doesn't pick up my tone or my accent....when it does hear me, it gets everything wrong. 

 

To add more on top of it, if I'm surprised, I make a sound somewhere between a squeak and a yip.  Which is made more embarrassing by partners and friends who think its cute. 

 

Link to comment

I started voice training with a speech pathologist about a year ago and, though I’ve been lazy, I’m relatively pleased with the results. Sometimes — usually with strangers when I am on my best behaviour — my voice sounds exactly right to me. It usually doesn’t last if I keep talking, since I forget my good habits and revert slightly to my masculine voice, but I’ve clearly made progress.

 

One thing that helped give me confidence was listening to Cate Blanchett speaking. She is clearly feminine, but her voice hovers around the same area mine does, though it does occasionally jump higher if only very briefly. (I know this for sure because I analysed both our voices using the pitch analyser on the Voice Tools app.) What Blanchett has is pitch variance, a sing-song quality. This is huge. In contrast, most men speak monotonously. But she also has forward resonance, which is my biggest focus atm. 
 

I also spend most of my time with cis women, and I think that does make a difference. Their speech patterns rub off on me without my being conscious of it, I think.

 

Oh, and you mentioned richness. I think my voice actually sounds richer in its feminine form because it’s smoother, and I know Cate Blanchett’s voice is rich. I sometimes meet trans women who seem to have focussed on pitch too exclusively, and their voices have a pinched sound, still recognisably masculine because still emanating from the throat. 

Link to comment
1 hour ago, Betty K said:

and their voices have a pinched sound, still recognisably masculine because still emanating from the throat

R3 plays a huge part in the masculine voice.

 

I am a voice person, I have long done impressions and accents. I do not have a good ear for the feminine voice, however, and find it difficult to pull off a natural sounding one. I would love to learn how, but I don't know if I need to learn how. I am not presenting feminine, I don't know if I ever will, but I absolutely love the idea of having that in my locker; for practical use or simply to expand my repertoire.

Link to comment
32 minutes ago, MaeBe said:

R3 plays a huge part in the masculine voice.

 

I am a voice person, I have long done impressions and accents. I do not have a good ear for the feminine voice, however, and find it difficult to pull off a natural sounding one. I would love to learn how, but I don't know if I need to learn how. I am not presenting feminine, I don't know if I ever will, but I absolutely love the idea of having that in my locker; for practical use or simply to expand my repertoire.


Hi. I don’t know anything about how to deliberately produce a masculine voice, but I know my feminine voice training is centred around bringing the resonance forward. 

 

If you’re keen to try a feminine voice you could use the voice app EvaF. I hear it’s good. 

Link to comment

I had a first (virtual) appointment with a voice therapist (and a grad student in training) today, lots of questions and a few measurements, my range was OK, hopeful I can chime in with some success story in the future. 

 

I've had a couple intro sessions with other therapists at trans support meetings or pride events, the app one of them recommended, @Emerald-may, was voice tools, I've played with it a little and haven't paid them anything yet. 

 

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/voice-tools/id1447495900

Link to comment
1 hour ago, emeraldmountain said:

The Voice Tools app looks great, but I couldn't find much info on the developer, no info on their business address, etc., so I'm hesitant to download it.

Here is their privacy statement: https://devextras.com/privacy-policy/

 

They state they do not store data or transmit it over the internet.

Link to comment
  • 2 weeks later...

I don't hate my voice, but I just don't want it for myself. Not necessarily a bad voice in the least, but it doesn't really feel like me. It's like how you see a piece of clothing and you sometimes think "Wow, that's really nice!" but it's also not a style that you like on yourself specifically.

Link to comment

I really hate my voice. Before I started T, it was very* high-pitched. Think Snow White. 

Because I started from such a high place, my voice didn't drop as much as it could, leading me to not like it now either. I do a lot of vocal practice, and hopefully it will get better/deeper.

Link to comment

I hate mine, which is why I talk much quieter now. My voice sounding feminine caused me to have a panic attack at my work training place after I had helped the customer. 

Link to comment
  • 3 weeks later...

As someone who wanted to do cartoon voice acting I love my voice and it's capabilities. I've been practicing since I was a kid so I was able to get my voice pretty quickly. But beyond that the depth and range I have I like.

Link to comment

Just putting this out there, but if anyone is interested in free voice training, find out if your local college or university has a speech language program. They might offer gender affirming voice therapy, such as with a student who is supervised by faculty.

Link to comment

Voice dysphoria was especially painful for me. Before I had any voice training, I would always speak quietly, and very little, because I could not stand to hear myself. Not just the usual discomfort you might have around hearing your own voice, but a visceral reaction in my whole body. In my job, I talk on the phone a lot and every time I was misgendered was like a blow to my heart. Working with a speech therapist was one of the very best decisions of my transition. I invested a lot into the 1:1 sessions I had with her, and I practiced a lot at home and in my daily life. The results have been stunning!

https://www.speechvoicelab.com/voice-samples (I am client F!)

There used to be a really great customizable and ad-free pitch tracker on Github that my speech therapist connected me to, but sadly it has been taken down. I have Voice Tools on my phone but I find I am using it less and less as my confidence in my authentic speaking voice has grown.

 

Love,

~Audrey.

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   14 Members, 0 Anonymous, 77 Guests (See full list)

    • Susie
    • Cyndee
    • LC
    • Heather Shay
    • KatieSC
    • Timi
    • awkward-yet-sweet
    • Petra Jane
    • Lydia_R
    • EasyE
    • JenniferB
    • Birdie
    • Stefi
    • DeeDee
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      770.5k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,118
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Tiffany Cross
    Newest Member
    Tiffany Cross
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Clara_D
      Clara_D
      (53 years old)
    2. Deborah121
      Deborah121
      (64 years old)
    3. Kerry_Autumn
      Kerry_Autumn
      (38 years old)
    4. OC
      OC
  • Posts

    • Mmindy
      Good morning    @Ivy I hope you have a wonderful time with your meeting and after dinner.    My morning started early letting the puppy out to take care of business. While he was doing that I brewed my coffee.    Mindy🌈🐛🏳️‍⚧️🦋
    • Vidanjali
      Hello & welcome @The Lake. The imagery of this name evokes expansiveness and reflectiveness - a calm lake reflects the entire sky and all surroundings in it. It encompasses all that but is not itself pervaded by it. 
    • Cyndee
      This was really positive to read DeeDee, refreshing actually.    Your avatar picture looks great btw....   Hugs   C
    • Vidanjali
    • Ivy
      I'll be going up the mountain for my VA support group today.  It's a bit of a drive, but worth it for me.  Some of the people up there have been eating together with me after the meetings, and it's been really nice to be around other trans folks of both genders.  I don't have that around here.
    • DeeDee
      The full report and debate is available to watch on the Church of Scotland YouTube channel, but it is 50 minutes long, and other than a few uneducated comments from folks with obvious agendas it was overwhelmingly positive. The forum committee is made up of ministers with deliberately wide/opposing doctrinal beliefs so a unanimous statement is rare, as part of the consultation process it gives me hope that there will be a place for me and my voice.   "First, building on the Church's existing statements on transgender people, we believe that transgender people should be loved, and respected, and welcomed in our congregations. "It is the foundation of Christian ethics that all people are made in the image of God, and are worthy of our respect and love, and this is true of transgender people also. "Yet second, and based on our exploration of gender in the Bible, the Forum is also unanimous in believing that transgender people should not only be welcomed in our church, but allowed to serve in our Church. "That the Church should not treat transgender people differently from others, but after considering their giftings and callings, should admit them to office if we believe God wills it. "By focussing on the importance of welcome, and the ability of God to use every Christian for service, we believe our report offers the Church a route through a debate that has, at times, become toxic, and allows us to model a better way of engaging with issues of gender. "Because in these days when we as a Church are building for the future, we need to make sure that it is the Lord that is building the house. "That it is the Triune God of Father, Son and Spirit - confessed in our creeds and confessions, yet experienced most fully when we live in love - that is building us up.”
    • Ivy
      She sounds wonderful.  I'm glad for you.
    • Ivy
      The whole idea of using law to enforce gender is kind of weird when you think about it.  I still don't get why it's so important what some people think (or know) about themselves, and why it matters to anyone else. I don't expect everyone else to put on a dress just because I do it. And then they bring "God" into it - like they know what he/she/them/it knows.
    • Davie
      "Music flows from mouths of my flowers." —Basho
    • Ivy
    • Ivy
      They do, but it's about keeping their "base" stirred up - not the kids themselves.
    • Ivy
      Yeah for me it was all in But you gotta do you.
    • Birdie
      My new therapist is really nice. She asked me about grandma raising me making wedding dresses and cakes as well as raising me to be a "tom boy".  My love of sewing, cooking, knitting, etc... She loves my preferred name (Birdie), and that her best friend in school was called Birdie as well.  I will be seeing her every month. 😉
    • Cyndee
      Welcome Bobbi, hope you find this site useful and enjoyable.    In this area we have "top pot" doughnuts    Hugs   Cyndee 
    • KymmieL
      Well my wife totally understood. I don't really know what would have happened if she didn't. Everyone believes it is bull.   The hunt started yesterday, it continues.   Hugs, to all   Kymmie
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...