Weekly Voice Insights #91 — Freedom and Self-Command
Greek Glossary
• ἐλεύθερος (eleutheros): freedom, free person
• κρατέω (krateō): to have power over, to master
• δεσπότης (despotēs): master, one who governs
• ἐπιθυμία (epithymia): desire, impulse
There is a tendency to think of freedom as the removal of limits, obligations, or resistance. Epictetus asks us to look at freedom from the inside first. Freedom begins with the ability to govern one’s own responses. The question is not simply whether a person is unrestricted, but whether they are governed by deliberate judgment or by impulse, reaction, and habit.
This idea becomes especially practical in communication. Under pressure, the voice often reveals what is governing the speaker in that moment: urgency, approval-seeking, frustration, hesitation, fear, or clarity of intention. Many vocal habits happen automatically long before we consciously notice them.
ἐλεύθερος (eleutheros): Freedom, Free Person
Freedom can sound abstract until it is connected to daily choices. The ability to decide what deserves attention, what skills deserve practice, and what kind of work corresponds to one’s values is a genuine form of independence.
Disciplined effort can also become a form of freedom. It gives a person space to practice, improve slowly, and direct attention toward meaningful work instead of being pulled constantly into distraction.
In voice work, people sometimes assume freedom means speaking spontaneously without structure or preparation. Yet many speakers actually become more free through repetition and deliberate practice. Familiarity reduces hesitation. Technique becomes useful when the speaker knows what they mean to say. It gives them more ways to express the thought clearly for the listener. A prepared speaker often has greater flexibility than one relying only on instinct.
κρατέω (krateō): To Have Power Over, To Master
The word κρατέω suggests command or mastery, though not necessarily domination in a harsh sense. It suggests the kind of steadiness that lets a person choose a response rather than be pulled into one.
Many speaking habits feel automatic at first. We may rush through our own explanation, and while listening, feel the urge to interrupt before the other person has finished speaking. Practice begins to slow these patterns down enough for observation.I have been noticing this in my own practice. Repetition itself becomes part of mastery. Even something as simple as recording TikTok videos starts to reduce hesitation over time. The repeated act begins to show which habits need attention.
In speaking, mastery is often less dramatic than people imagine. Sometimes it appears as the ability to complete a sentence calmly, remain grounded during disagreement, or resist the urge to over-explain.
δεσπότης (despotēs): Master, One Who Governs
This word immediately brought back a memory from high school choir: Master of Human Destiny, Am I. The phrase stayed with me over the years because it raised a large question in simple language: what determines the direction of a person’s life?
Epictetus continually returns to the distinction between what governs us internally and what governs us externally. Circumstances may press on us, but our repeated habits of response still determine much of what others hear.
In communication, the question is often simple: what is directing the speaker at the moment of speech? Urgency may make the explanation come out too quickly. Fear may alter the breathing pattern. The speaker may jump into the next statement before finishing the previous one. In either case, the voice begins to follow the pressure of the moment rather than the speaker’s intention.
The goal is not rigid control. It is greater awareness of what is directing the response before the response is spoken aloud.
ἐπιθυμία (epithymia): Desire, Impulse
Impulse often arrives quickly. Sometimes it appears as irritation, defensiveness, or the sudden urge to respond immediately. The physical sensation can happen almost before the conscious thought is fully formed.This week I reflected on how anger can rise “in the blink of an eye.” That phrase carries a musical association for me. In Handel’s Messiah, the baritone sings of being changed “in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye,” and that image helped me think about how suddenly the body can react before judgment has time to enter. When that happens in speech, the breath may feel higher in the body. The vowels have less room, and the sentence can become crowded before the point has landed.
Because we have been speaking all our lives, it is easy to assume the process will take care of itself. The challenge is learning to identify what actually needs practice before the crucial moment arrives.They emerge from reacting too quickly to an impression or emotional spark before there has been time to evaluate it clearly.
Voice practice can help interrupt this cycle. The speaker stays with the word long enough for the idea to finish. A pause before responding or a fuller breath can create enough space for judgment to return before impulse fully takes over.The discipline Epictetus describes is not perfection. It is the gradual development of greater self-command through repeated practice and observation. Freedom, in this sense, comes from active practice. It develops as we return to the same question again and again: what is necessary here, and what is my intention before I speak? The breath before speaking gives the speaker a practical moment to remember what needs to be said before the sentence begins.
🔹 Inner Check-In
- What habits most quickly take control of your voice under pressure?
- Where do impulse or urgency interrupt clarity in communication?
- What speaking behaviors become easier to access through deliberate repetition?
- What would greater self-command sound like in your everyday conversations?






