• @waz
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    22 days ago

    I’ve been told a lot that I have a great voice and that I should be in the radio many times as an adult. I’ve never actually considered it because I hate hearing the sound of my own voice, and I assume people are just being nice.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      522 days ago

      Everyone hates hearing their own voice because it sounds different. Everyone whose work involves them being recorded says you’ll get used to it.

    • @the_grass_trainerOP
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      522 days ago

      That’s where I am, too! Hate hearing my voice in recordings, it’s even worse if there’s an echo over voice calls.

    • @Donebrach
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      21 days ago

      The “I hate the sound of my voice” refrain is the most annoying shit I hear and honestly think most people who vocalize that thought are just acting out their own internalized script of how to not appear self-centered (while actually being incredibly self-centered). Your voice sounds the exact same to everyone else coming out of your fish-hole as it does coming out a speaker.

      Edit: I’m not saying that your perceived own voice doesn’t sound different to you when speaking versus when played back initially but after years of doing recorded voice work I can say—you get used to it pretty quickly and the differences kinda blend away into a wash of “that is how I sound.” That is why I find that common refrain to be annoying.

      Anyway, no one listening to a recording of you thinks “oh they sound weird.”

      • @Nibodhika
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        621 days ago

        No, some of us really hate the sound of our voices, and yes the voice sounds the same to others as in speakers, but not the same I hear it when I’m talking, the reason is that when you’re talking you hear the vibration in your skull, so hearing your voice as it sounds to others is strange, and some of us dislike that compared to how we hear ourselves and don’t understand how people can tolerate us talking.

        • @TheRedSpade
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          221 days ago

          Yeah, supposedly I’d be great on radio (heard that all the time when I worked customer service and had to get on the PA several times per day), but my voice as heard by others makes me want to bash my own skull in.

      • @Hugin
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        221 days ago

        But it doesn’t sound the same to the speaker. The speakers skull vibrates with the speech and makes the pitch lower and richer in their ears.

        If you are not used to your voice being played from a speaker it always sounds more chipmunk then you are used to.

      • @waz
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        122 days ago

        Thanks.