Weekly Voice Insights #90 — Speaking Without Chasing Approval
“Release the need to worry about others’ opinions.”— Based on Enchiridion 1 & 13
Greek Glossary
- δόξα (dóxa): opinion, reputation, belief
- ἐξουσία (exousía): what’s within your control or power
- ἐπιμέλεια (epiméleia): care, disciplined attention
- ἐλευθερία (eleuthería): independence of judgment
δόξα : Speaking to Prove Rather Than to Listen
δόξα refers to opinion, reputation, or belief. In this reflection, it points to the pressure that enters when we begin tracking how we are being received. The issue is not only whether someone approves or disapproves. It is how quickly the mind can begin working around that imagined response.
That can happen silently while we are waiting to speak. Another person is talking, but inwardly we are already preparing the answer, defending our point, or trying to show what we know. The body may still look attentive, yet the attention has moved away from listening. The sentence we are forming inside begins to compete with the person in front of us.
This is one way approval-seeking can enter communication. It may not look like insecurity. It may look like knowledge, urgency, or the need to correct a false impression. When we hear excessive negative talk, for example, we may feel the pull to respond quickly, especially if we believe another view needs to be named. That response may be valid. The question is whether we are speaking from intention or reacting to the opinion already moving through the room.
A practical check is simple: am I listening, or am I getting ready to prove something? That question can return the speaker to the breath and to the actual exchange. It gives the voice a clearer task. Instead of reaching for approval or recognition, the speaker can listen long enough to choose the next sentence.
ἐξουσία : What Is Still in Your Control
ἐξουσία refers to what is within one’s control or power. Epictetus begins there because worry often grows from confusing what belongs to us with what does not. Other people’s reactions are never fully ours to manage. What remains ours is where we place attention and what we do next.
That does not mean we ignore possible obstacles. It is wise to think ahead. It is useful to prepare for the moments when the room may not respond easily. The problem begins when preparation becomes a constant flow of thoughts that crowds out more productive action. At that point, the mind is no longer preparing. It is circling.
In speaking, this distinction matters. We cannot control whether every listener agrees. We can take a breath before entering. We can complete the first sentence. We can notice when we are adding words after the point has already landed. These are small choices, but they are real ones.
“What is in my control?” is not an abstract Stoic question here. It is a speaking question. It asks: What can I do with this breath and this sentence? That shift does not remove every concern, but it gives the speaker somewhere concrete to stand.
ἐπιμέλεια : Let Your Actions Reflect Your Beliefs
ἐπιμέλεια means care or disciplined attention. It is a useful word because intention does not become visible through intention alone. It becomes visible through repeated action. Let your actions reflect your beliefs. Let the way you speak reflect what you have chosen to give attention to.
This is where the breath becomes practical. Every breath can reflect intention, but only if the speaker notices how it is being used. A rushed breath may reveal the pressure to answer too quickly. A held breath may show that the body is bracing before the thought has begun. A breath that supports one complete idea gives the speaker time to say what is meant without crowding the sentence.
Disciplined action also interrupts worry. We do not always stop worry by arguing with it. Sometimes we stop it by returning to the next useful act: listen to the end of the question, then speak one thought clearly. The discipline works because it can be repeated.
This is especially important when motivation is unreliable. Some days motivation is there. Some days it is not. Disciplined attention gives the speaker a way to continue. It gives the voice a structure when the mind is noisy.
ἐλευθερία : Freedom to Stay With Your Intention
ἐλευθερία refers to freedom or independence of judgment. In this context, it is the freedom to speak without handing the center of the moment over to someone else’s opinion. It is the freedom to act from the intention you have chosen, even when the room does not meet us with easy agreement.
There is something practical in the phrase, “I am happy and free because I am me.” It does not need to be inflated. It can be read simply as a way of saying: this is still my life to act from. I am making progress in my life, singing and speaking. I have work I can return to, and choices that are still mine.
That kind of freedom does not remove the need for skill. It actually depends on skill. A speaker who can notice breath and complete one thought has more room to choose the next response. The voice becomes less driven by inner chatter and more available to the task.
Freedom, then, is not separate from discipline. It grows through the actions that keep attention available. When we stop chasing approval, we have more energy for the work itself: listening well enough to choose the next sentence and continuing to make progress.
Inner Check-In
• Where do you start editing yourself while another person is still speaking?
• What happens to your breath when you begin preparing a response instead of listening?
• What part of your next sentence is still within your control?
• What repeated action helps you return to your intention when the mind gets noisy?






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