Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Weekly Voice Insights #76 – The Shortcut Offering 

Shortcuts, Attribution, and Learning




A friend recently sent me an ad for a small breathing device being marketed to singers. It was presented as a science-driven innovation, something that could change the way singers train, make high notes easier, reduce fatigue, and simplify voice work overall.

On the surface, none of that is misleading. The device does something real. It creates airflow resistance. It slows the breath. It reduces excess pressure. Used briefly, it can interrupt habits that get singers into trouble.

The question isn’t whether it works, but what the singer thinks just happened.

What Changed—and Why It Felt Better

When someone says, “I was struggling with my high notes, I used this for a couple of days, and I was better,” that improvement is usually genuine. But the improvement often gets credited to the object instead of the behavior that changed.

Breath, Onset, and Range

In practice, what shifted was likely very simple. The breath became more deliberate. Less air was taken in because less air was needed. The singer adjusted airflow earlier, before sound began, rather than reacting at the moment of the pitch itself.

This timing matters more than most people realize, especially as pitch demand increases.

Before reaching a higher pitch, the breath demand changes first. If that adjustment doesn’t happen early enough, other muscles step in to compensate. Those muscles are not designed for efficiency in this task, but they will try to help anyway. What follows often feels like instability, effort, or loss of control.

That experience is psychological, but it’s caused by vagueness rather than fear. The singer doesn’t know what needs to change or when it needs to change, so the body fills in the gaps.

This is where terms like onset are often used imprecisely, so it’s worth slowing down. Onset literally means beginning, but in voice work I use it more specifically to describe the start of the vowel—where the core of the sound lives and where much of what we hear as emotion and intention is communicated. It isn’t something you soften or harden as a goal; it reflects whether breath and sound are coordinated appropriately before the vowel is released.

Range plays into this as well. When I talk about low, medium, and high register, I’m not referring to abstract zones or vocal labels. I’m talking about proximity to a person’s natural speaking range—their tessitura.

If it helps, think of range the way you would a set of numbers: the highest and lowest values define the range, but the average tells you where things usually sit.

The area where someone speaks most of the time functions as their medium register. Slightly below that sits a lower register. Slightly above it sits a higher register. As the voice moves away from its habitual speaking range, the breath needs to be recalibrated. That adjustment happens before sound, not during it.

If the singer doesn’t know this, the transition between these areas can feel unpredictable. That unpredictability is often described as panic, but it’s more accurately a lack of information.

This is where devices like the one advertised can feel helpful. By adding resistance, they slow everything down. They make airflow changes easier to sense. They interrupt the habit of waiting too long to adjust the breath.

A quick sense of relief is why the device can feel effective almost immediately.

Attribution, Placebo, and Learning

There’s also a placebo element at work, in the technical sense of the word. When someone believes a tool will help them, the nervous system often settles. The body behaves differently. The singer stops forcing without realizing they’ve stopped forcing. Something real changes, but it happens without conscious attention, and the change gets credited to the tool rather than the behavior.

Placebo doesn’t mean nothing happened. It means the right thing happened without awareness.

Possibly this is where confusion begins—not with the device itself, but with how the change gets attributed.

Learning depends on language. If you don’t have a way to name what changed—when the breath adjusted, how the onset began, or what shifted as you moved out of your speaking range—then the experience can’t consolidate into something repeatable. Without shared or usable language, improvement remains an isolated event rather than a skill you can return to. If the singer believes the object fixed their voice, then the learning lives outside the body. The improvement feels borrowed. Confidence depends on having the tool nearby.

A crutch isn’t something that causes harm. It’s something you rely on because you don’t yet trust your own balance.

Breath work has always been about two questions: how are you taking in the breath, and what are you doing with it once you have it. Exercises like the Farinelli were never designed to build strength or force coordination. For a fuller explanation of how this kind of breath work is practiced and why it’s structured this way, see Weekly Voice Insights #11 and #17: Building Your 12‑Minute Practice Plan—Start with Breath. They exist to slow the system down enough for awareness to emerge. Once that awareness is there, the exercise becomes unnecessary.

A difference between interruption and skill.

A tool can interrupt a bad habit. Only attention turns that interruption into something repeatable.

None of this is an argument against tools. Some tools are useful. Some are clarifying. But no device changes the way singers train unless it teaches them to notice what they’re doing without it.

Learning shows up when the singer can recreate the result without the tool. If the improvement disappears when the object disappears, the experience never became something the singer could count on as their own.

The work has always been internal, even when a shortcut makes it feel faster.

Shortcuts trade on speed and immediate results. They move the experience forward quickly, but they don’t shorten the learning itself. If the singer doesn’t understand what the tool helped alter—how the breath changed, when the adjustment happened, what demand shifted—then the time gained early often shows up later as inconsistency.

What was skipped early in the learning process eventually has to be addressed. When conditions change, when pressure increases, or when something unexpected happens, the singer has fewer reliable options for adjusting breath and coordination.

A shortcut doesn’t eliminate the work. It produces results without teaching the user how to reproduce them without the tool.

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Weekly Voice Insights #75- Euthymia: Stoic Insight and the Practice of Voice


Between Seneca and Epictetus sits a question of use, judgment, and voice.

Euthymia in the Stoic Tradition


Seneca uses the Greek word euthymia to describe a stable condition of mind in which judgment, emotional response, and action remain proportioned to one another over time. The word refers to an inner coherence that allows a person to stay oriented as circumstances shift, without becoming internally fragmented or expending unnecessary effort.

In Seneca’s writing, euthymia appears as a condition worth preserving. It reflects a life governed by discernment, where desire is shaped by self-knowledge and action remains consistent with what can reasonably be sustained. A person living in this condition continues to encounter difficulty and disappointment, but their response remains organized. Over time, what becomes visible is a reduction in wasted effort and a clearer continuity between intention and behavior.

“A man’s mind ought to be superior to all external circumstances.”
 Seneca, Letters to Lucilius


Within the Stoic tradition, euthymia names a regulated state marked by proportion and continuity. Judgment holds its course, emotional response remains usable, and action proceeds without internal conflict. The person is guided by clarity about what lies within their responsibility and what does not, allowing energy to be directed where it can actually be effective.

Use and Orientation in Epictetus


Epictetus approaches this same condition from a different angle. Rather than naming inner states, he concentrates on the mechanics that produce them. His teaching repeatedly returns to judgment, attention, and the disciplined use of what lies within one’s control. Through careful examination of where assent is given and how responses are shaped, Epictetus trains the reader toward an inner organization that is earned through practice.

Although Epictetus rarely uses the term euthymia explicitly, the condition itself is clearly present in his work. As judgment becomes more consistent, emotional response becomes more proportioned to the situation at hand. As response becomes more proportioned, the individual remains coherent even as external conditions change. Euthymia appears here as the outcome of sustained attentiveness rather than a feeling to be cultivated.

“In every situation, remember to turn back to yourself and ask what power you have for making proper use of it.”
 Epictetus, Discourses

Euthymia as Vocal Regulation


These two philosophical approaches meet naturally in my work with voice.

Developing Your Authentic Voice (DYAV) is a methodology that examines how intention, breath, tone, and connection function together in lived communication. Rather than treating the voice as a tool for expression alone, the work attends to how vocal behavior reflects judgment, effort, and relational orientation in real time. The aim is not to produce a particular sound or emotional effect, but to increase awareness of how the voice responds under demand.

In this framework, regulation refers to how effort is distributed and how response aligns with what the situation actually calls for.

This kind of regulation is audible.

A regulated voice uses an amount of sound and effort that matches the moment. Speech neither accelerates to secure response nor expands to hold attention unnecessarily. Listeners often experience such voices as clear and reliable, sensing that the speaker is oriented to the exchange rather than managing it.

The DYAV path offers a practical way to observe how this regulation unfolds.

Intention refers to orientation. When intention is clear, the speaker’s voice organizes itself around purpose rather than compensation. Speech carries direction, and effort remains proportional to task.

Breath is approached as availability. As vocal demand increases, airflow remains continuous and responsive, supporting speech without interruption or excess pressure. This continuity allows the voice to adapt as circumstances change without loss of function.

Tone reflects proportional use of energy. It adjusts to context, signaling how much effort the speaker is applying and how firmly they are holding their line. Tone communicates reliability through consistency rather than emphasis.

Connection develops through participation in the exchange itself. The speaker remains responsive to the listener, allowing the interaction to inform timing, pacing, and emphasis, without being pulled off course by the need for approval or control. The relationship becomes a source of orientation rather than strain.

Across these layers, a recognizable pattern emerges—one that Seneca would recognize and Epictetus would affirm. The speaker remains expressive and engaged, while their response stays proportioned to the situation. Inner organization supports outward clarity.

Seen this way, euthymia is not a state to aim for directly. It emerges as awareness deepens. As attention turns toward effort, bodily response, and vocal demand, coherence develops without force.

That coherence, once audible, changes how communication is received. It influences how authority is perceived, how boundaries are held, and how meaning is conveyed. What remains is a voice aligned with reality, and a speaker able to remain intact while speaking into it.

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Weekly Voice Insights #74- Knowing When My Part Was Done

A note on preparation and restraint


Surrounded by voices, documents, and legends—my work was to listen carefully, speak only when needed, and know when the record was complete.

There is a particular moment that comes after the work has stopped, when there is nothing left to prepare for and nothing left to manage.

During rehearsal and performance, attention naturally narrows. You respond to what is in front of you, adjust as needed, and keep moving. Reflection does not disappear, but it remains secondary to responsiveness. Whatever understanding might eventually surface has to wait until the work no longer depends on immediacy.

I was aware of my attention throughout the work, but it wasn’t until things slowed that I had any distance from it.

People with experience often sense instability early, recognizing when something needs to be held more carefully.

In those situations, the instinct is often to stay oriented rather than intervene. You remain available, adjust quietly, and keep the work moving without drawing attention to yourself. That kind of steadiness doesn’t call for recognition while it’s happening, and it is rarely visible from the inside.

With some distance, I could see where that orientation had mattered most. It wasn’t a matter of standing out, but of remaining reliable across changing conditions.

In the final scene, I was working with a younger actor who met the exchange fully. The scene found its balance through listening and timing rather than activity. My task was straightforward: stay present, listen closely, and respond when the moment actually asked for it. The scene held without me needing to add anything beyond listening and timing.

Listening, in this context, organized the space. It clarified when response was needed and when it wasn’t, and it allowed trust to develop without being forced.


Judgment, choice, and completion

Epictetus returns again here, less as instruction than as orientation. He reminds us that while events themselves are beyond our control, our judgments about what we experience and the use we make of those judgments remain ours.

I did not have control over the structure of the process or how things unfolded. What I did have control over was how much authority I granted to the impressions that followed, and how carefully I chose to respond to them.

It was clear to me how much of that choice depended on preparation. The work had been practiced, reviewed, and carried far enough in advance that I wasn’t solving basic problems in real time. That preparation kept my attention free to listen and adjust as needed. Flexibility, in that sense, wasn’t spontaneous—it was made possible by having already done what was in my control.

This way of working assumes a certain responsibility. Internal reactions still register, and experience brings an awareness that how one carries themselves affects the room. The discipline lies in noticing those reactions without letting them dictate response, allowing choice to remain intact even when moments are charged.

After the final reading, there was a clear sense that the work had reached a place where it was complete. The attention I had been bringing was no longer sharpening anything; it could release without diminishing the work.

Another line from Epictetus came to mind then:
“Be mostly silent, or speak only what is necessary, and in few words.”
The value, in that moment, was not in further expression, but in allowing what had already been established to stand on its own.

Afterward

Preparation made steadiness possible. Listening kept the focus on the task rather than on reaction. Not every impulse needed to be answered, and not every moment needed to be taken personally.

Staying oriented to the work allowed energy to be used where it mattered and released when it no longer did. There comes a point when adding more is not only unnecessary, but counterproductive.

Related Posts:

Weekly Voice Insights #61 – Listening Before Leading: The Discipline of Perception   This piece explores how listening and orientation establish steadiness before action is taken. It focuses on perceiving what a situation requires rather than intervening prematurely. https://dyavwithelias.blogspot.com/2025/10/weekly-voice-insight-61-listening.html

Weekly Voice Insights #62 – Resetting the Breath When Frustration Rises -An examination of how breath creates space between impulse and response. The post looks at how physical awareness supports judgment and restraint when conditions are charged. https://dyavwithelias.blogspot.com/2025/10/weekly-voice-insight-62-resetting.html

Weekly Voice Insights #72 – An Intention, Lived and Practiced- A reflection on sustaining intention through preparation and follow-through. It considers how clarity established early carries forward without needing reinforcement later. https://dyavwithelias.blogspot.com/2025/12/weekly-voice-insights-72-intention.html

Further Resource:

Atul Gawande – Personal Best (The New Yorker)
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/10/03/personal-best

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Weekly Voice Insights #73 -Master More.        Speak Less.

Breath, listening, and working inside an unfinished process


Me as Samuel Ireland — keeper of relics, believer in words, and father caught in a very human story.

I’m in rehearsals this week for a new musical workshop, The Willing, a piece inspired by the historical episode surrounding the Shakespeare forgeries attributed to William Henry Ireland and the role his father, Samuel Ireland, played in that story. I’m portraying Samuel, which is one of the reasons I was drawn to the project. There’s something compelling about stepping into a real historical figure, especially one caught between belief, reputation, and the desire for something to be true.

The work itself is still forming. The music is changing. Text is being adjusted. Decisions are happening in real time, often while we’re on our feet.

That kind of process is genuinely exciting. It’s also very different from most of my professional life in opera, where the music has been settled for centuries. In those rooms, the ground is already solid when you arrive. Your task is interpretation, not construction.

Here, adaptability matters just as much as preparation. The question that keeps circling for me is how to stay steady while things are still changing, and how not to let that sense of unfinishedness take over the body.

That question keeps bringing me back to breath.

In everyday speech, most of us take enough air to get through what we need to say. But when the situation asks for more clarity, more projection, or more weight, the breath we rely on often reflects something else entirely. It reflects whatever intention is present just before we speak, whether we’re aware of it or not.

If the unspoken thought before an entrance is something like, “I’m not quite sure what’s coming next,” the breath often mirrors that uncertainty. It narrows. It arrives cautiously. It carries exactly the amount of energy that intention has already supplied.

This is where Stoic practice and voice work begin to overlap for me.

I recently came across a Stoic sequence summarized by the acronym STOIC, and I’ve found myself thinking about it during this rehearsal process, especially because of how early breath appears in the sequence:

S — Stop. Pause the impulse.
T — Take three breaths.
O — Observe what’s happening without judging it.
I — Interpret the story you may be telling yourself.
C — Choose how to respond.

What interests me here is the placement of breath. It appears before explanation, before correction, and before action. It’s the point where restraint becomes something physical rather than theoretical.

In my own work, this same logic lives inside what I call Developing Your Authentic Voice, which follows a simple path: Intention, Breath, Tone, and Connection. I use these as practical tools for understanding how sound becomes individualized, through physical, observable choices that one person makes differently from another.

Working in a room where the material is still evolving has made that sequence feel especially relevant. When the music isn’t settled yet, it’s easy to feel pulled outward, to narrate what’s happening, or to comment on what might need to change. What has been more useful for me is returning to something quieter and more disciplined.

I’ve been reminding myself of a short phrase I use as a self check-in, especially when I feel the urge to verbalize every thought that comes into my head:

Master more. Speak less.

For me, that isn’t about withholding sound or participation. It’s a reminder to stay with what I’ve been given to do, to focus on mastering the task at hand, and to listen. “Speak less” already carries that implication. Listening is part of the discipline.

Not every reaction needs commentary. Not every thought needs to be voiced. In a room where work is still forming, there’s value in letting the work speak first.

I see a related pattern often in voice work. It’s easy to demonstrate a supported sound and have someone reproduce it successfully in the moment. They can imitate the volume, the energy, even the shape of the sound. But unless they become aware of what shifted in their body—how the breath behaved, where effort released—that sound doesn’t become dependable. It remains something borrowed.

The same thing happens in rehearsal and in speaking situations. If the physical act of delivery hasn’t been practiced without emotional charge, then whatever emotion is present in the moment will take the lead. Sometimes that emotion is excitement. Sometimes it’s uncertainty. Either way, the breath reflects it long before the voice does.

What’s been most helpful for me this week is returning again and again to the sequence itself. Intention first. Breath next. Tone follows. Connection comes last. When that order is respected, even briefly, the ground feels steadier, regardless of how much around me is still taking shape.

Working on a piece that’s still forming has clarified that for me. The music may not be settled yet, but the body can be. The breath can be. That steadiness doesn’t come from reassurance or external confirmation. It comes from familiarity with the physical act of delivery before emotion rushes in to fill the gaps.

This week’s rehearsals lead directly into public readings of The Willing, happening over coming weekend. The piece will be presented as a workshop reading, with the material still in motion and the audience invited into that process.

Reading dates:
Saturday, January 10 at 7:00 PM
Sunday, January 11 at 2:00 PM
Monday, January 12 at 7:00 PM

Location:
Depot Theater
506 W. Michigan Street

The readings are pay what you will, and open to anyone curious about new work being built in real time.

I’ve included the flyer below for details on how to reserve seats.



Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Weekly Voice Insights #72 – An Intention, Lived and Practiced

A year after naming the intention


                                                                            Still here.

Last year’s New Year post focused on intention and breath. I wrote about watching Maria Callas prepare for the Habanera and paying attention to what she did before a single sound came out—how deliberately she arrived in the moment, and how much was already decided before the voice was ever heard (Weekly Voice Insight #20 – Breathing with Intention). The preparation, the breath, and the clarity behind the sound were doing real work.

Those observations never depended on singing a famous aria. The same elements are available in any situation where the voice carries weight—teaching, leading, responding, or choosing how to enter a conversation.

This year feels different. It’s good to be able to say that I stayed with that intention across the year.

For me, that intention took the form of the Epictetus reflection journal. Not as a loose idea, but as a commitment to build something carefully and see it through. Staying with it asked for steadiness and attention to how small decisions accumulate over time.

The work began with curating fifty-two quotes. Epictetus offers no shortage of strong material, but not every passage works for weekly reflection. Some quotes overlapped too much. Others were compelling but didn’t invite daily use. Choosing one quote per week meant setting many good ones aside and trusting the structure that emerged.

From the beginning, it mattered to me that the reader could see the source material clearly. I wanted these quotes presented as close to their original form as possible, not adapted to fit a modern lens. Even on their own, they carry weight. I return to them often, sometimes realizing only afterward how directly a line applies to something I’m dealing with that day.

That’s also why each entry includes a Greek glossary. This wasn’t about being academic. It was about showing what words Epictetus actually used and how much meaning lives inside them. Translation choices influence understanding, and I wanted that depth to be visible on the page.

Each quote then opens into an ancient insight, placing the passage back into its Stoic context. That section helps clarify what the text is addressing without turning it into instruction.

The Voice in Practice section is where the material moves through my own lens. This is where intention, breath, tone, and connection show up as things you can notice and work with in real time. These are observable behaviors and vocal choices, not abstractions.

The reflection prompts are there to make the work individual. They invite the reader to notice how these ideas show up in their own experience, however they use their voice. Singing and performing are part of that world, but so are teaching, leadership, interviews, and everyday conversations. The journal was always meant to speak to general voice use, not a single discipline.

Week 1 – Intention. Sample page from the Epictetus reflection journal.

While finishing the blog and working through the journal formatting, I was also preparing Germont for La Traviata. I was thinking about what a father says to a son, and what he says to the woman his son loves. I was thinking about restraint, care, and responsibility, and how those qualities sound when the voice matters. That work lives in the same place as the journal—the preparation before speech, the choice behind the sound, the attention brought to what follows.

Seeing all fifty-two entries laid out in a finished format changed my relationship to the work. It was no longer something I was still adjusting internally or holding open for improvement. It existed as a whole, with its own shape and limits.

Staying with this process all year, without deadlines or external pressure, became the practice itself. The work asked for judgment about when enough was enough and attention to when further revision no longer served clarity. Finishing meant recognizing that the journal had reached a point where it could stand and be used, even as future refinements remain possible.

As the year closes, it feels worth naming the follow-through itself. Something lived across time. An intention kept in view, returned to repeatedly, and brought into form through steady use.

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Weekly Voice Insights #71- What the Voice Serves When Conditions Aren’t Perfect


When the Instrument Isn’t Ideal—and the Intention Is

Over the past several days, I had the privilege of singing a series of concerts in assisted living and healthcare settings. These performances were offered as a gesture of care—for residents, and for the staff who serve them every day.

One of those concerts required a clear-eyed decision.

The keyboard available to us was not the instrument this music was written for. It had fewer keys, and certain passages required adjustment. Linda took time to understand what was possible on that instrument and then made careful decisions so the music could still be offered fully to the room.

See short video here: https://youtu.be/-7U29_xbXS8

What people responded to was not the instrument itself. They responded to the steadiness of the sound and the intention behind it. One woman, in particular, was deeply affected by what she heard. It wasn’t recognition of the piece or familiarity with the style. It was the vibration of the sound itself—the way it met her physically and emotionally. The experience was strong enough that she struggled to speak afterward.

That response is instructive. It reminds us that sound is not abstract. The vibrations we create with our voice carry weight. They move through bodies, not just ears. How we speak and sing has consequence, whether or not the listener has language for it.

That moment also clarified something about connection that’s easy to overlook. We often talk about connection as emotional or interpersonal, but it is also physical. Being in the room matters. Sound moves air, and that movement is felt in the body, not just perceived by the ear. Recordings of great singers and speakers can move us deeply, but they don’t fully carry that bodily experience of shared vibration. In that space, the connection was not symbolic or imagined. It was something the body registered directly.

The final verse of O Holy Night speaks of love practiced, peace carried, and the recognition of shared humanity. It speaks of dignity restored and burdens loosened. In that room, those ideas were not explained. They were encountered through sound.

This experience brings me back to a line from Epictetus, who begins the Enchiridion with a simple distinction:

“Some things are up to us and some things are not.”

The instrument was not up to us. The space was not up to us. What remained ours was judgment, intention, and response.

That way of seeing things aligns closely with the path I return to again and again in my own work: intention, breath, tone, and connection. Intention leads the choice. Breath supports how that choice is carried. Tone gives the sound its weight and clarity. Connection is what happens when those elements are aligned and received by someone else. None of those are guaranteed by circumstances, but all of them are available through attention.

That distinction applies just as much to our own vocal instrument. We don’t choose the voice we were given, and we don’t fully control how it lands. What is ours is the care with which we use it. Intention, attention, and expressiveness are choices. That’s the work I continue to encourage in myself. In everyday communication—outside of performances—we rarely get clear feedback about the effect our voice has. Moments like this offer a physical reminder that how we use our voice carries impact, even when we don’t immediately see it.

I could not have offered this music without Linda. Her judgment at the keyboard made the performance possible. And I could not have offered it in the way I did without the years of work behind my own voice. I am able to express things now that were not available to me before. The evidence for that was not internal. It was in the room.

As this reflection is published on Christmas Eve, I carry these recent experiences into another shared space and another gathered community. The setting is different, but the work is the same. Voice offered with intention, supported by breath, shaped through tone, and attentive to connection becomes part of how people listen, reflect, and feel accompanied. Especially on a day like this, that kind of care matters.

These concerts were a gift—to residents, to staff, and to those of us offering the music. They reaffirm why I continue this work and why attention to voice, vibration, and intention matters. Sound offered with care reaches people in ways explanation never will.

Related Posts:

Weekly Voice Insights #60 – Breath, Airflow, and Effort: The Physics Beneath the Voice
https://dyavwithelias.blogspot.com/2025/10/weekly-voice-insight-60-breath-airflow.html

Weekly Voice Insights #68 – What We Wear, What We Feel, and How It Shapes Our Voice
https://dyavwithelias.blogspot.com/2025/12/weekly-voice-insights-68-what-we-wear.html

Weekly Voice Insights #70 – The 6–7 Hour: What the Voice Knows in Transition
https://dyavwithelias.blogspot.com/2025/12/weekly-voice-insights-70-67-hour-what.html

Further Resources:

Epictetus on Control and Choice (Via Stoica) 
https://viastoica.com/10-epictetus-quotes-on-control/

Music, Sound, and Emotional Response (JMIR Mental Health) 
https://mental.jmir.org/2025/1/e69120

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Weekly Voice Insights #70 -The 6–7 Hour: What the Voice Knows in Transition

Using breath and sound to restore coordination in early evening.


What the voice knows in early evening.

There’s a stretch of time in the early evening that many people recognize without needing to name it. The workday has ended, but the evening hasn’t fully arrived, and the body seems to hover between those two states. The pace slows, attention loosens, and voice use often fades unless there’s a clear reason to speak.

Lately, this hour has been showing up more publicly.

What Changes During This Hour 

Short videos circulate of people moving through the space between six and seven—walking, cooking, sitting quietly, doing very little on purpose. For the people watching, the timing makes sense immediately. You can tell where in the day this is without anything being explained.

What shows up most consistently during this window is a change in how things are being used. During this window, the supports that carried breath, posture, and voice earlier in the day begin to drop away, while the body hasn’t yet arrived at rest.

Between Drive and Rest

Early evening sits between two physiological modes. The forward drive that carries the day begins to taper, while the systems that support recovery haven’t fully engaged. That gap appears with remarkable consistency, especially in people who use their voice throughout the day. You hear it immediately when they speak.

Lower Demand, Different Use

By early evening, the demand on the voice is usually lower. The environment is quieter, conversation is reduced, and there’s less need to be audible or to sustain sound. When speech happens under those conditions, it often comes with lower breath pressure and less airflow. Over time, that can shift more of the work onto the vocal folds themselves — what voice teachers often call “talking on the cords” — which helps explain why voices frequently feel more tired later in the evening.

This develops through accumulation rather than any single cause. Nothing dramatic happens all at once. The system settles into a quieter, less coordinated state as the structure of the day falls away.

Why Vibration Matters

When voice use fades, vibration fades with it, and the change is noticeable. Vibration provides direct physical feedback. It lets the body know that air is moving, sound is sustained, and time is unfolding smoothly. When that feedback diminishes, one of the body’s simplest organizing signals drops away. That change often explains why this hour can feel flat or disconnected, even when nothing specific seems wrong.

What People Do Without Thinking

People tend to respond intuitively. They reach out to someone, step outside for a walk, put on music, or sing along with something familiar. Each of these actions brings rhythm, coordinated airflow, vibration, and external pacing back into the system. Action changes how the voice and breath are being used, often before the mind assigns any meaning to the experience.

What I Return To

For me, this is where I turn to something very simple. I’ll do a couple of Farinelli exercises, just enough to reconnect breath across the torso. A comfortable inhale, a brief suspension, and a steady release on an unvoiced “S.” That usually creates enough space to move on.

Here is the video I made showing how I use the Farinelli exercise:
https://youtu.be/wnxbD2Ueuro?si=rb1Fk5XPbYMHaYL8

After that, I’ll start singing. Often it’s Beautiful Dreamer. It’s a tune I return to, and the words matter to me. As I sing, my attention stays with the vowels moving through those words, the vibration carried by sounds that already have meaning.

As that continues, I notice that I begin taking fuller breaths, and then, without planning it, I’m using longer phrases of breath than I had been earlier. I’m not deciding to breathe that way ahead of time. The longer inhales and even longer exhales seem to follow the intention of the words and the sustained vibration they invite. By the time I’m finished, I can tell that something has shifted in my body. The hour feels different than it did when I began.

Every habit and faculty is preserved and increased by corresponding actions. — Epictetus

Weekly Voice Insights #76 – The Shortcut Offering  S hortcuts, Attribution, and Learning A friend recently sent me an ad for a small breathi...