What Erodes Your Vocal Confidence?
It’s a fresh year, and that always makes me take stock. Where am I? Have I progressed since I last took stock? Am I where I want to be?

Today, I’m going to ask to you to take stock of where you are vocally. As you teach yoga (or speak publicly, or even just interact with others in your everyday life) — are you sending out an accurate message of who you are through your voice?
And if not: why not?
Many things can compromise our vocal integrity. I spoken at length in past blogs about nervousness and even adopting a character “affectation” having a way of altering your voice in a negative way. But here are some other roadblocks to effective voicing you may want to consider:
Past Trauma .
I’ve entered into uncertain territory occasionally when teaching my workshops, when an attendee has said: “Ever since the past trauma, I haven’t been able to reclaim my voice.” This is figurative *and* literal. I am very upfront about what I’m qualified to coach about and what I’m not — and past psychological trauma is most definitely best sourced to a professional. I will refer anyone with past trauma to the right resources — and if you can trace a lack of vocal confidence to an event in your past, I encourage you to access qualified, expert assistance to address the issues.
Situational Mis-match.
Any time we feel out of our element — whether it’s being new to teaching, called upon to speak, or even confronting a stranger in an unfamiliar situation — we might find that our vocal confidence is scarce. This is not necessarily a sign that we’re in a situation that we shouldn’t be in; it just means that we’re testing the waters and acclimatizing ourselves. My favorite thing — when watching a presentation — is when the speaker has gotten a sense of the room, evaluated the risk, judged the safety of the situation, and then they lose themselves in what they are saying and just hit their stride. They *forget* to be self-conscious and they just….are. Even some experienced yoga teachers whose classes I attend will have an uncertain first five minutes of the class where they’re just trying to feel things out — and then the magic happens when they submerge themselves in their instruction and they find their groove.
Lack of Self Kindness and/or Elevated Expectations.
We’re awfully hard on ourselves. I can speak for myself: it’s always easier to imagine things going wrong in a high-stakes event like public speaking or a meeting; it’s harder to visualize things clicking into place and doing well. Or perhaps we build up in our mind just how important something is, arbitrarily assigning more importance to it than it actually deserves. I’ve actually done better on auditions or bids for jobs where I had no idea of the scale/scope of the project; there’s just no basis for me to psych myself out. That’s the opposite of self-kindness, where you should be advocating for yourself rather than circumventing your confidence with doubt and negativity.
Let’s vow to live in this year with a deliberate, confident voice. Or at the very least: do some detective work into the aspects which may be eroding your vocal confidence.
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