Wednesday, April 2, 2025

🎙️ Weekly Insight #33: Pitch, Presence, and the Power of Vocal Variation

Your pitch tells people how to feel—sometimes before your words finish.

Most of us use pitch variation without thinking. This week, the goal is to build real-time awareness:
✅ What’s happening in your breath?
✅ Is your tone matching your intention—or reacting to nerves, habit, or fatigue?


🧠 Why Pitch is Your Emotional GPS

  • High pitch â†’ Excitement, urgency, sometimes anxiety

  • Low pitch â†’ Calm, certainty, sometimes boredom

But staying too long at either extreme—too high or too low—makes people tune out.
Pitch movement keeps the listener engaged and guides meaning.


🎯 Refined Drill — Using "Uh-Huh" to Hear Pitch Shifts

Say â€œuh-huh” three ways:

  • Agreement

  • Sarcasm

  • Impatience

Notice: What changes first?
Pitch. Then breath. Then body tension.

That’s your signal—the body reacting before words.


💡 Mini Experiment — Mapping Your Pitch Range

Pick a short phrase—"Today is a good day."

Record it:
✅ Neutral tone
✅ Adding warmth (breath softens, slight pitch drop)
✅ Adding curiosity (pitch lift, brighter tone)

Listen back:

  • What felt right?

  • Where did your breath support—or push?

  • Did the meaning shift, even with the same words?


🔎 Synchronous Awareness = Power

The real shift happens when you notice what you're doing as you're doing it.

Is my pitch rising because there's a sense of urgency, or is that what I intend?
Is it dropping to convey confidence, or am I feeling unsure?

I notice this most when I record myself practicing a German lied (song). Lately, what I feel while singing is aligning more closely with what I hear in playback. It wasn’t always that way.

But repetition taught me something: I can trust sensation—how the breath flows, how the sound lands in the body—more than I thought. When I tune into those signals in real time, I stay connected to what I mean—not just what I’m saying.

And that's the essence of vocal presence.

Try this: Record just a phrase or two.
Don’t judge—just ask: What do I feel? What do I hear? Do they match?
That tiny loop is where trust begins.


🗝 Key Takeaway:

Pitch is your emotional color palette.
Used intentionally, it keeps people with you.
Left on autopilot, it tells a story you may not mean.


📌 Next Week (Insight #34):

We explore resonance—how shifting where your voice vibrates changes how it feels and how it lands.


✅ Hashtags:
#DevelopingYourAuthenticVoice #DYAVWithElias #VocalLeadership #PitchAwareness #StorytellingSkills #CommunicationMatters #VoiceTraining #MindfulSpeaking

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

🎙️ Weekly Insight #32: Breath, Tone, and Intention — The Unseen Connection

We often think communication is about words.
But what people feel is tone—and tone is shaped by breath.

The connection is simple but easy to miss:
✅ Breath drives tone
✅ Tone shapes meaning
✅ Meaning lands—or doesn’t—based on the commands sent (either intentionally or not.)

🎯 Revisit the "Uh-Huh" Drill—Now with Intention

We first explored this in Insight #21, when we talked about vocal range, registers, and tessitura—your voice’s natural, comfortable zone.

If you'd like, please reconnect with that post and watch this short video:
▶️ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFdR9W5SETw

The "Uh-Huh" Drill isn’t just about sound—it helps you find where your voice naturally lives when you’re not performing.

Say â€œuh-huh” casually. That’s often your home base pitch—where the voice feels easiest, most authentic.
Now try â€œuh-huh” as sarcastic, impatient, curious.

What changes first?

✅ Pitch rises or flattens
✅ Breath shifts
✅ Body reacts

It’s not the word—it’s your breath and body driving tone.


🧠 Body Check: What’s Reacting?

  • Nervous or rushed? Breath shortens, chest tightens, pitch rises.

  • Grounded? Breath slows, jaw softens, tone steadies.

Our unconscious patterns show up in the voice before the brain catches them.


🔄 Real-World Awareness Practice — Capture Your Voice in Everyday Moments

One of the best ways to hear your real vocal patterns is to listen when you’re not thinking about it.

✅ Listen to a few of your casual voice messages or record yourself narrating your coffee routine.

Ask:

  • Where does my voice sound easy?

  • Where does breath tighten, pitch rise, or energy drop?

  • Did my tone match my intention—or did habit take over?

This is the work: building awareness of how emotion changes breath, and how breath changes tone.

The goal at first isn’t to fix. It’s to hear.
From there, YOU choose.


📌 Next Week (Insight #33):

We dig into pitch variation—how it adds emotional color and keeps people engaged.


🔑 Key Takeaway

It’s your breath, your body, and your intention working together.
Start by listening—to yourself and to others.
The truth of the message lives there.


✅ Hashtags:
#DevelopingYourAuthenticVoice #DYAVWithElias #VocalLeadership #BreathAwareness #CommunicationMatters #VoicePresence #MindfulSpeaking  #EmotionalIntelligence #MindfulCommunication #VoiceAwareness #LeadershipPresence


Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Weekly Insight #31: The Power of Pauses – Punctuation in Speech

🎙 â€œSilence isn’t empty — it’s where your message lands.”

In Weekly Insight #25, we explored hearing ourselves as others do—learning to listen objectively and refine our vocal delivery.

This week, we go deeper:
What happens between the words is just as powerful as the words themselves.

🎤 Meet Jordan — A Leader Who Found His Voice

When Jordan prepped his TEDx Talk, his first instinct was to fill every second.
Words ran together. Filler crept in. His message blurred.

💡 The breakthrough?
Jordan learned to pause—to let his words land.
He stopped fearing silence… and started using it.

The Result:
✅ The audience leaned in.
✅ Laughed at the right moments.
✅ Carried his message home.


💬 Why Pauses Matter

Think of pauses as vocal punctuation—the commas, periods, and exclamation points your voice needs.

✅ Create Emphasis â€” â€œThis… changes… everything.”
✅ Build Anticipation â€” â€œThe solution is…” [pause]
✅ Signal Confidence â€” You’re not rushing. You own the moment.

And just like breath, pauses reveal intention—they show you’re present, not performing.


🔄 3 Ways to Practice Pausing

1️⃣ Map the Pause
Print your script or outline. Mark natural pause points with slashes “/” or ellipses “…”.

2️⃣ Record & Listen Back
As we explored in Insight #25—record yourself.
Ask: Do these pauses add meaning? Do they feel natural?

3️⃣ Use the Reset
If you stumble—pause, breathe, smile. Reset.
The pause protects your message and your composure.


🎯 Mini Exercise — Try This

Write a 1-minute talk about something you care about.

✅ Add “/” where you want pauses.
✅ Record and listen.
✅ Refine until your pauses carry your message.


🗝 Final Thought:

This connects back to our six-month journey—every exercise, from breath to intention, shapes how you’re heard.

Want to sound more confident?
✅ Say less.
✅ Pause more.

Because sometimes… what you don’t say… speaks loudest.


Every pause carries weight. Just like punctuation, it shapes meaning, adds color, and helps your message land.


#DevelopingYourAuthenticVoice #Leadership #VocalPresence #MindfulCommunication #PublicSpeaking #DYAVWithElias #EmotionalIntelligence #ResonateWithPurpose #ThePowerOfPause


Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Weekly Insight #30: Breath, Tone, and the Secret Ingredient Most Leaders Miss

We’ve explored how breath awareness steadies nerves and supports your voice. But here’s the truth: Awareness alone won’t save you when pressure strikes.

Giovanni Battista Lamperti, the legendary voice teacher, called breath, tone, and word “inseparable.” Change one, and you change them all. Yet under stress, one element vanishes—the breath that anchors your voice.

The Moment Breath Abandons You (And How to Spot It)

Ever watched a leader’s voice tighten mid-presentation? Or heard a colleague rush through a pitch like they’re racing a stopwatch? It’s not fear—it’s breath collapse.

Without breath support:
❌ Your tone thins (like a deflating balloon).
❌ Words tumble out faster than thoughts.
❌ Your message loses its gravitational pull.

It’s like baking a cake without flour: All the right ingredients, but no structure to hold them together.

The 5-Second Fix: How to Reclaim Your Breath

Try this exercise before your next meeting or presentation:
1️⃣ Breathe in deeply → Immediately say, “This project matters because…”
2️⃣ Breathe in deeply → Pause 2 seconds → Say it again.

Notice:
Did the second version feel heavier, like your words had roots?
Did the pause make you sound more deliberate?

That’s breath-as-anchor in action.


Why Lamperti’s Triad Matters Offstage

Lamperti’s “breath, tone, word” isn’t just for singers. It’s the trifecta of impactful communication:

Breath = Stability
Tone = Emotion
Word = Clarity

Ever heard a speaker who:
🎭 Had perfect technique but no heart? (All breath + tone, no word clarity.)
💡 Felt passionate but chaotic? (All tone + word, no breath control.)

The magic happens when all three align.

Why You Can’t Trust Your Own Breath (Yet)

Under pressure, we’re terrible judges of our breathing. You might feel calm, but your voice betrays you:

Shallow breaths → Thin tone.
Rushed exhales → Jumbled words.


The fix? Record yourself.

Listen for the “collapse point”—where your breath falters and your voice follows.
Note when you interrupt yourself to gasp for air.


Next Week: The Blind Spot in Your Voice

We’ll dissect a psychological experiment that reveals why you literally can’t hear your own vocal flaws—and how to outsmart your brain.

Until then: Before you speak, steal 2 seconds. Let your breath settle. The silence isn’t empty—it’s your foundation.

#DevelopingYourAuthenticVoice #LeadershipPresence #BreathIsPower #VocalAwareness #BreathIsTheFoundation#VocalAlchemy #DYAVWithElias

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Weekly Insight #29: When Pressure Hijacks Your Voice—How to Stay Present and In Control

We often prepare for what to say, but do we prepare for how to finish?

Recently, I helped a friend refine a three-minute speech for a leadership event. He had the passion, the experience, and the message. But when we listened back, something was missing—he never got to finish.

When he delivered the speech under pressure, he hadn’t practiced enough to develop a natural sense of when he was nearing the end. In a short presentation like this, time moves faster than expected, and without clear pacing, it’s easy to run out of time before reaching a strong conclusion.

Even though he received a warning that time was running out, it wasn’t enough to wrap things up and reinforce his final points. Instead, he had to stop abruptly—leaving both himself and his audience feeling unresolved.

This happens more often than we think. When pressure kicks in, we:
✅ Speak faster than we realize.
✅ Lose track of how long ideas take to land.
✅ Forget to leave time for a strong finish.

Why Recording Is Better Than a Mirror

Many people practice in front of a mirror, and while that can be useful, I’ve found that it’s not always the best way to develop objectivity.

💡 When looking in a mirror, you’re seeing yourself in real time, but you’re also reacting to your own image.

  • It’s hard not to get distracted by how you look.
  • Some people over-adjust while speaking, making it feel unnatural.
  • Watching yourself in real time requires a separate skill—learning to see yourself without losing focus on your delivery.

Instead, I recommend:

🎥 Recording yourself on a device (like a tablet or phone) and watching it in reverse mode (mirroring your real-life image).

  • When you watch it after the fact, you’re not simultaneously performing and judging.
  • It allows for true objectivity, even though it can still be uncomfortable at first.
  • You can see and hear patterns you may not have noticed before.

That said, I know how difficult it is to record yourself and then actually listen or watch. It has taken me years of practice to avoid getting distracted by my own image or focusing only on imperfections. The challenge is finding balance—being able to analyze without self-judgment, to adjust without self-doubt.

This is something worth exploring more deeply—how self-awareness can be a tool, but over-analysis can hold us back. That’s a discussion for another day.

Practicing the Ending—Even If You Think You Don’t Need To

Many speakers practice the beginning and middle, but they resist practicing their ending. Why? Because if someone is naturally gifted at speaking and can extemporaneously generate material for three minutes, it feels artificial to practice.

This was something I discussed with the person I was working with. Because it was easy for him to riff, rehearsing felt unnecessary—until he realized that not practicing the timing cost him his closing moments.

I think of this the same way I approach classical music or even teaching. If I have a lesson plan, I still go over it—not because I don’t know the material, but because I want to ensure that I cover what’s crucial within the time I have.

  • Practicing isn’t about over-preparing—it’s about making space for what truly matters.
  • When we practice within a set time constraint, we learn to hit key points efficiently.
  • It’s not about filling every second—it’s about making room for pauses, reflection, and even audience feedback.

I’m generally comfortable in my subject matter, but practicing the pacing ensures I don’t get caught off guard. I’ve learned that practicing isn’t limiting—it’s freeing. It allows us to focus on the message, not the clock.

How to Stay in Control Under Pressure

1️⃣ Record & Review: Seeing What You Miss

  • Watching yourself after the fact makes it easier to spot rushed words, shallow breathing, or unfinished thoughts.
  • A mirrored recording helps you see what others see—not the flipped version we’re used to in selfies or mirrors.

2️⃣ Time the Close—Before the Clock Does (A Tool for Future Practice)

  • Many speakers practice the beginning and middle, but forget to time their final 30 seconds.
  • A great exercise is to set a timer for three minutes and see how naturally the conclusion fits within that limit.

3️⃣ Breathe Between Ideas, Not Just Sentences

  • Pressure makes us cram thoughts together, stealing time from the ending.
  • Instead of rushing the last few lines, practicing intentional pauses helps maintain clarity while keeping within time limits.

4️⃣ The Exit Strategy: How to Leave with Confidence

  • Unfinished endings feel unresolved.
  • Instead of hoping to “fit in” the ending, it helps to design a strong final sentence that can be delivered naturally, even if time runs short.

Final Thought: Learning to Land the Plane

A speech without a clear ending feels like a plane that never lands. Even when we know what we want to say, the clock forces us to adjust in real time.

💡 Have you ever been cut off before finishing a speech? How did you handle it? Let’s discuss below.

In the moment, shaping the conversation—because great communication isn't just about what we say, but how we time, pace, and land our message. A reminder from this week's insight: Practice isn't about restriction, it's about freedom.

#DevelopingYourAuthenticVoice #SpeakingUnderPressure #VocalAwareness #TimingMatters #PublicSpeaking #ResonateWithPurpose #DYAVWithElias

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Weekly Insight #28: Choreographing Authenticity: The Deliberate Art of High-Impact Speaking

When Alex faced a high-stakes 3-minute introduction for a leadership role, he didn’t need more content—he needed to choreograph less. His journey reveals how to turn a generic “bio” into a mission-driven story that resonates. Here’s how to design your delivery for maximum impact, even under tight time constraints.



The Checklist: From Overload to Ownership

1. Find Your Core Message
✅ Ask: “If the audience remembers one thing, what should it be?”
  • For Alex, it was “My career is a quest for equitable access—here’s why that aligns with your mission.”
        âœ… Cut ruthlessly: Remove achievements that don’t serve your core message.

2. Structure Like a Story
✅ Pivot from résumé to narrative:
  • Before: “I worked at X for 5 years, then Y for 3…”
  • After: “A client once told me [story]. That’s when I realized [mission] isn’t optional—it’s urgent.”
        âœ… Design pauses: Use silence to punctuate key points.

3. Refine Your Delivery
✅ Record, listen, refine:
  • First take: Speak naturally.
  • Second take: Trim tangents, warm up your tone.
        âœ… Control tempo: If it feels slow to you, it’s likely perfect for listeners.

4. Practice with Purpose

✅ Rehearse in motion: Stand, walk, or face a mirror to avoid stiffness.
✅ Own imperfection: Confidence beats memorization.

5. Final Test
✅ Mock presentation: Deliver to a trusted advisor (or your cat!).
✅ Ask: “Did I sound like I believe this—or just recite it?”



Alex’s Transformation: Less Data, More Fire

By focusing on 4 key moments instead of 40 data points, Alex turned his “bio” into a mission statement. His final speech:

  • Opened with a 15-second story about a client who changed his perspective.
  • Anchored in why the organization’s work aligned with his values.
  • Closed with a vision—not a rĂŠsumĂŠ bullet.
The result? A panel that didn’t just hear his credentials—they felt his conviction.

Your Turn to Choreograph

A 3-minute speech isn’t about cramming in content—it’s about curating clarity. Use the checklist above to:
🔥 Cut the clutter.
🔥 Warm your tone.
🔥 Let pauses amplify your points.

Remember: Authenticity isn’t accidental. It’s rehearsed, refined, and choreographed.


Key Takeaways

  • Your voice is your best editor. Recordings reveal robotic pacing or flat tone.
  • Silence is strategic. Pauses > filler words.
  • Belief beats bullet points. If you don’t sound like you mean it, why should they care?

#ChoreographingAuthenticity #HighImpactSpeaking #LeadershipStorytelling #DevelopingYourAuthenticVoice #DYAVWithElias




📸 A moment of intentionality from Die Fledermaus—where every gesture, note, and breath is choreographed to connect.

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Weekly Insight #27: The Art of Staying Out of the Box—Why Innovation Demands Letting Go

We’re told to â€œthink outside the box,” but the real work begins when we refuse to climb back in.

Why do we hold onto outdated habits, even after breaking free? Because stepping out is uncomfortable. Familiar patterns feel safe—even when they limit us.

In Weekly Insight #25, we explored listening to ourselves objectively, recognizing that the way we perceive our voice isn’t always how others hear it. In Weekly Insight #26, we looked at stepping into the moment fully, rather than overanalyzing or hesitating.

This week, we take it a step further: How do we stay outside the box long enough to grow?

Here’s how two professionals—a singer and a leader—mastered the art of staying out.


Case Study #1: The Singer Who Let Go of Control

The Challenge

Maria, an accomplished classical singer, had trained for years with impeccable technique. Yet in high-stakes performances, she overthought every phrase, doubted her breath control, and fixated on mistakes before they happened.

Instead of flowing through the music, she became trapped in technical perfectionism, losing the expressive quality that made her voice unique.

The Solution

Maria focused on two key shifts:

  • Trusting Preparation â€“ Her body already knew what to do. She had rehearsed. She had trained. The problem wasn’t skill—it was trust.
  • Reframing Mindset with Stoic Philosophy â€“ Inspired by Marcus Aurelius’ idea that â€œWe are disturbed not by things, but by the view we take of them,” Maria replaced â€œWhat if I mess up?” with â€œWhat if I allow myself to be fully present?”

The Outcome

By relinquishing control and shifting from perfection to presence, Maria’s performances became more emotionally compelling and authentic. The audience didn’t respond to flawlessness—they responded to her ability to connect.

“I realized my voice wasn’t failing me—I was failing to trust it.” â€”Maria


Case Study #2: The Leader Who Overcame Negative Mind Chatter

The Challenge

John, a mid-level executive, struggled with self-doubt during virtual meetings.

  • He overexplained his points.
  • He self-corrected mid-sentence.
  • He rambled because he was overanalyzing his performance in real-time.

John wasn’t lacking knowledge—he was trapped in Prolix Syndrome and negative mind chatter, believing that filling space with words equaled leadership.

The Solution

John applied three key strategies:

  • Breath & Vocal Focus â€“ He practiced breath pacing to stay grounded instead of rushing his thoughts.
  • Mindfulness & Stoic Reframing â€“ Instead of thinking, "What if I mess up?", he told himself, "I’ve prepared. Now I focus on delivering."
  • Using a Structured Approach â€“ He followed a point-example-summary framework to keep his communication concise and intentional.

The Outcome

By staying in the moment and trusting his preparation, John’s virtual meetings became clearer, more engaging, and more effective. His team responded not to how much he said, but to the confidence behind his words.


What Connects Maria and John?

Both had to confront the illusion of control.

Maria’s technical perfectionism and John’s over-explaining were safety nets—boxes they had outgrown but kept climbing back into.

Their breakthroughs came not from learning new skills, but from trusting the ones they already had.


Burning the Box: The Three-Step Shift

Growth isn’t about thinking outside the box—it’s about burning the box altogether.

Maria and John didn’t just step out; they stayed out by:

🔥 Trusting their preparation (not micromanaging it)
🔥 Replacing “What if I fail?” with “What if I succeed?”
🔥 Treating the present moment as their only stage


Your Turn: Step Out, Stay Out

🗣️ What’s your “box”? Is it perfectionism? Overthinking? Fear of silence?
💡 Name it, then try Maria and John’s reframes this week. Share your insight below—I’ll respond to every comment!



A final bow is more than an ending—it’s the culmination of trust, presence, and stepping fully into the moment.

At La Traviata in Biarritz, every performer, every voice, every movement came together in a seamless story. But before this moment, there was a choice: to step beyond doubt, beyond hesitation, and commit completely to the performance.

Just like in leadership and communication, growth isn’t just about thinking outside the box—it’s about staying out. Trust the preparation, let go of overanalysis, and step into the moment fully.

#DevelopingYourAuthenticVoice #DYAVWithElias #Leadership #MindfulCommunication
#TrustTheProcess #BurnTheBox #InnovationMindset
#PerformancePsychology #ExecutiveCoaching #StoicLeadership #NoBox

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🎙️   Weekly Insight #33: Pitch, Presence, and the Power of Vocal Variation Your pitch tells people how to feel—sometimes before your words ...