Monday, March 19, 2007
Laughing Can Hurt Your Voice
In over 20 years of singing I've never lost my voice, even though I sang for hours on end, sometimes 5 or 6 nights a week. I teach people how to get over bad habits and use their voices correctly to keep the voice healthy and strong.
Today while recording I got into a laughing spree with my co-writer Norman Thalheimer. We often get into these laughing jags while we're working together. I laughed so hard that my stomach was hurting, I started coughing, and when we finally stopped laughing, my voice was rouch and squeaky! I have never hurt my voice before, and this was weird and scary. I sang a bit more, but evidently I had irritated my vocal cords because I couldn't really control my voice.
I stopped singing and realized that I had to rest my voice. Tonight and tomorrow I'm not going to talk at all so that my vocal cords can recover.
This is very important for everybody: NO LOUD LAUGHING! Be very careful with your voice no matter what you do. Control coughing; no yelling. Your voice is your instrument and you've got to honor it. I have no idea why my voice was affected today because I've never, ever been hoarse before, but this reminded me that I need to stay aware of how I'm using my voice no matter what I do. Although I've always had a wonderfully healthy singing voice, I've got to watch laughing too loudly! So be aware and guard that voice!
Friday, March 16, 2007
Chanting For Stress Relief
There's something very powerful about chanting in unison; the vibrations are incredible and wonderfully healing.
Dr. Ranjie Singe, author of the book Powerful Self-Healing Techniques, found that chanting causes the release of the hormone melatonin. In many studies, low melatonin levels have been shown to lead to depression, anxiety, and insomnia. Years ago, Dr. Herbert Benson of Harvard Medical School observed that chanting helps to cause reduction of heart beat, brain waves and respiration - also known as the “relaxation response.”
On an energetic level, Dr. David Shananoff-Khalsa has found that reciting some specific sacred mantras enables the tongue to stimulate the acupuncture meridians inside the mouth balancing the flow of chi through the body - especially the pineal gland - thus helping the body to relieve stress.
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Allergies and Voice
Here's some interesting information from the NYU Voice Center about allergies and voice:
Clinically, in our experience, although there are no obvious changes in the larynx due to allergy, there are some changes in the throat and nose, which affect the voice. Allergy causes swelling of nasal tissues, which can alter the voice. Additionally, allergy can increase nasal drainage and lead to frequent throat clearing, which may irritate the vocal cords. It is therefore important to include allergy as a consideration in evaluating patients with hoarseness.
That being said, the majority of patients that have been told they have hoarseness due to allergy (symptoms such as mucus in their throat, frequent throat clearing, a lump in the throat), actually have silent, undiagnosed acid reflux disease. A proper evaluation of the hoarseness is necessary to distinguish the different potential causes of their hoarseness.
Monday, March 05, 2007
Yahoo's Singing News Anchor
Another news "innovation,"
Canada's Naked News
Yahoo News announced a new video project designed to leave people tapping their feet as they take in current events. Named "Odd News Underground," the show will feature a journalist-cum-crooner who will sing the news, reports AdWeek.
The singing anchor is the first venture from Yahoo News since the last year's launch of The Hot Zone With Kevin Sites, which chronicles the correspondent's travels to war-torn areas around the globe.
Yahoo declined to identify the warbler/wag, but sources said the performer is not an unknown and has experience as a reporter and musician. The venture is expected to be on the lighter side, so ditties about Iraq aren't to be expected.
Thursday, March 01, 2007
Life Lessons
The difference between school and life? In school, you're taught a lesson and then given a test. In life, you're given a test that teaches you a lesson.
Tom Bodett
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
Dolphin Assisted Therapy
Here's an excerpt from a great article by Robert Wolff that talks about the healing power of dolphins. I've often thought that these creatures were much wiser than us, and science is just beginning to discover that to be true!
What Is It About Dolphins?
One of the more popular theories is that the dolphin's use of sonar and echolocation produces changes in a person's body tissue and cell structure. Similar to the effect of music therapy, some researchers have suggested that the sounds dolphins emit through their whistles and clicks help produce these changes.Indeed, some individuals swimming with dolphins have reported actually sensing that they were being scanned. They say the echolocation resonated in their bones as they felt it pass through their bodies, producing a tingling sensation.
Monday, February 26, 2007
Safeguard your voice from winter air
If you live in a cold, winter climate, make sure you safeguard your voice throughout the winter. Avoid directly breathing in the cold air by covering your mouth with a scarf. Drink plenty of warm liquids to keep your vocal cords hydrated.
Try my Viva La Voice Tonic Recipe for winter, or 'singer's throat'. It's great for warming and hydrating the voice; wards off colds; clears the system and boosts the immune system! Try it, it's fantastic!
Breathing in cold air dries out the vocal cords and can cause a scratchy, rough sounding voice. Be kind to your voice this winter!
Sunday, February 25, 2007
Givingness
"Givingness is the nature of God, and It gives to us from pure Love. Because our nature is the nature of God, it is also our nature to be giving, to be generous. Giving comes from the heart, not from a sense of obligation or duty. The gifts that mean the most are the gifts that are you - your attention, your love, your smile. This is easy when you come from your authentic self - the Divine at your core.
Remember that you are the gift, and make your giving your joy.Remember that you are the Light, and your light makes a difference to me, and to each other, and to the world."
Guest Writer: Rev. Diane Russell
Staff Minister, Bonita Church of Religious Science
Saturday, February 24, 2007
Sound Therapy - Hope For Tinnitus Sufferers
Low Pitch Therapy for ‘ringing in the Ears’
UC Irvine researchers have found a treatment for tinnitus, the hearing damage loud music can cause.
Fan-Gang Zeng and colleagues have identified an effective way to treat the symptoms of tinnitus, a form of hearing damage typically marked by high-pitched ringing that torments more than 60 million Americans.
The researchers found that a low-pitched sound applied by a simple MP3 player suppressed and provided temporary relief from the high-pitch ringing tone associated with the disorder.
Tinnitus is caused by injury, infection or the repeated bombast of loud sound, and can appear in one or both ears. It’s no coincidence that many rock musicians, and their fans, suffer from it. Although known for its high-pitched ringing, tinnitus is an internal noise that varies in its pitch and frequency. Some treatments exist, but none are consistently effective.
Zeng presented his study Feb. 13 at the Middle Winter Research Conference for Otolaryngology in Denver.
“Tinnitus is one of the most common hearing disorders in the world, but very little is understood about why it occurs or how to treat it,” said Zeng, a professor of otolaryngology, biomedical engineering, cognitive sciences, and anatomy and neurobiology.
“We are very pleased and surprised by the success of this therapy, and hopefully with further testing it will provide needed relief to the millions who suffer from tinnitus.”
At first, Zeng thought of treating the tinnitus with a high-pitched sound, a method called masking that is sometimes used in tinnitus therapy attempts. But he ruled out that option because of the severity of the patient's tinnitus, so an opposite approach was explored, which provided unexpectedly effective results.
After making many adjustments, the researchers created a low-pitched, pulsing sound -- described as a “calming, pleasant tone” of 40 to 100 hertz of frequency --which, when applied to the patient through a regular MP3 player, suppressed the high-pitched ringing after about 90 seconds and provided what the patient described as a high-level of continued relief.
Zeng's patient programs the low-pitched sound through his cochlear implant, and Zeng is currently studying how to apply this treatment for people who do not use any hearing-aid devices. Since a cochlear implant replaces the damaged mechanism in the ear that stimulates the auditory nerve, Zeng believes that a properly pitched acoustic sound will have the same effect on tinnitus for someone who does not use a hearing device.
Dr. Hamid Djalilian, a UCI physician who treats hearing disorders, points out that a custom sound can be created for the patients, who then can download it into their personal MP3 player and use it when they need relief.
“The treatment, though, does not represent a cure,” Zeng said. “This low-pitch therapeutic approach is only effective while being applied to the ear, after which the ringing can return. But it underscores the need to customize stimulation for tinnitus suppression and suggests that balanced stimulation, rather than masking, is the brain mechanism underlying this surprising finding.”
Friday, February 23, 2007
Music Education Improves IQ
Drumming increases heart rate and blood flow just like an aerobic exercise. The process of drumming engages both the linear, (rational left brain) and the creative, (intuitive right brain). It slows the brain waves to around 8 cycles per second, the exact frequency of the earth.
Improved IQ scores can now officially be added to the growing list of benefits from playing drums. A recent study shows that playing the drums or other percussion instruments actually improves IQ scores of children.
While previous studies have hinted that musical training improves a child’s literacy and math skills, this is the first time that a study has shown that one’s intelligence level can be improved by drumming…
Among the other benefits of playing the drums are improved musical coordination and brain activity; physical therapy, and stress relief; improved social skills such as team work, self-esteem, discipline, improved abstract thought processes, a tool for creative expression, a balance for internal energy, life long enrichment, a great mood lifter, physical fitness, responsibility and a fun alternative to other less productive activities.
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Stanford Symposium - Brainwave Entrainment
Read about results from a recent symposium at Stanford:
Rhythmic music may change brain function and treat a range of neurological conditions, including attention deficit disorder and depression, suggested scientists who gathered with ethnomusicologists and musicians at Stanford's Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics May 13. The diverse group came together for the one-day symposium, "Brainwave Entrainment to External Rhythmic Stimuli: Interdisciplinary Research and Clinical Perspectives," to share ideas that push the boundaries of our understanding of the human musical experience.
Musicians and mystics have long recognized the power of rhythmic music. Ritual drumming and rhythmic prayer are found in cultures throughout the world and are used in religious ceremonies to induce trance states. But since the counterculture movement of the 1960s, scientists have shied away from investigating the almost mystical implications of musical rhythm, said symposium organizer Gabe Turow, a visiting scholar in the Department of Music.
"There is a growing body of neuroscientists who support the theory that if there's a physical correlate of conscious experience, it has to be happening in the brainwaves. It seems to be the only thing in your head that changes rapidly enough to explain real-time changes in consciousness," Turow said.
Music with a strong beat stimulates the brain and ultimately causes brainwaves to resonate in time with the rhythm, research has shown. Slow beats encourage the slow brainwaves that are associated with hypnotic or meditative states. Faster beats may encourage more alert and concentrated thinking.
Studies of rhythms and the brain have shown that a combination of rhythmic light and sound stimulation has the greatest effect on brainwave frequency, although sound alone can change brain activity. This helps explain the significance of rhythmic sound in religious ceremonies.
Harold Russell, a clinical psychologist and adjunct research professor in the Department of Gerontology and Health Promotion at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, used rhythmic light and sound stimulation to treat ADD (attention deficit disorder) in elementary and middle school boys. His studies found that rhythmic stimuli that sped up brainwaves in subjects increased concentration in ways similar to ADD medications such as Ritalin and Adderall. Following a series of 20-minute treatment sessions administered over several months, the children made lasting gains in concentration and performance on IQ tests and had a notable reduction in behavioral problems compared to the control group, Russell said.
"For most of us, the brain is locked into a particular level of functioning," the psychologist said. "If we ultimately speed up or slow down the brainwave activity, then it becomes much easier for the brain to shift its speed as needed."
Russell, whose study was funded by the U.S. Department of Education and included 40 experimental subjects, hopes to earn approval from the Food and Drug Administration to use the brainwave entrainment device as a treatment for ADD. The device uses an EEG to read brainwaves and then presents rhythmic light and sound stimuli through special eyeglasses and headphones at a slightly higher frequency than the brain's natural rhythm.
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
Music Therapy for Sensory Integration Dysfunction (SID)
Music-centered therapy helps sensitive children
Linda Jo Scott
For the Enquirer
Melanie Grafft knew her 9-year-old son Josh was a sensitive child even before he was born.
"I used to hold earphones over my belly and play music for him," she said. "When I played a certain Mozart overture, he would instantly start kicking and moving around. And after he was born, he would get fussy right away if I played that particular piece."
Josh's sensitivity was not limited to music, however. As a toddler, he hated wearing certain socks. He hated loud noises, such as sirens on fire engines. He couldn't stand for people to put their hands - or anything else - too close to his eyes. He couldn't stand to have tags on his clothing.
Even certain foods, such as mashed potatoes, mushrooms and other pizza toppings not only didn't taste good, they didn't feel good in his mouth.
When these extreme responses began to interfere with Josh's progress in school, his parents decided it was time to get some professional help and took him to the Children's Therapy Center of Battle Creek, where he was diagnosed with what is called Sensory Integration Dysfunction, or SID.
According to Teri Allen, clinical director of the Children's Therapy Center, SID "encompasses a constellation of behaviors that are seen when a child is inadequately putting together information from the senses."
According to Allen, one of the most helpful treatments for Josh - and for most children with SID - is listening to what is called "spectrally-activated music," which, she explained, "forces the ear to work differently."
Again, Josh's mother noticed a difference in his mood after he listened to particular music.
Josh also did extensive work on the Interactive Metronome, a computer-based exercise program to help a child match given rhythms.
"We try to give a child 20,000 repetitions over the course of many weeks, and afterwards we can see definite changes in their brains through various tests," Allen said.
As is often the result of the various kinds of therapy and supervised play in the clinic's colorful playroom, Josh's reading skills and handwriting improved, and since his therapy ended in May after almost a year, he has been less affected by how things sound or feel.
"Josh is a great kid with many strengths and talents," Allen said. "He was very motivated to succeed with the Interactive Metronome portion of his therapy allowing him to make significant gains. Once his sensory integration and coordination improved, he was more successful in all areas of his life."
Josh's grandmother, Janet Wigant, who lives next door to him and sees him every day, said therapy has helped Josh a lot.
"He isn't as angry as he used to be, and it's helped him in his school work," she noted. "I actually see a difference in his whole personality."
Wigant said as she looked back, she realized that Josh's mother, Melanie, suffered from some of the same problems as a child.
"Now that I know what Josh has gone through, I can look back at how loud noises, and having people touching her and not having her shoes and socks on, just right bothered Melanie as a child."
Josh's younger sister, Avrie, 5, is showing some of the same sensitivity, Melanie said, but not to the same extent as Josh.
These days, Josh is a happy, successful third-grader at Beadle Lake Elementary School.
"I miss it," he said of his days at the center. "I especially liked the playroom where I could play on the pirate ship and jump off the zip line onto the mat.
"And I got to get out of school 20 minutes early," he added with a smile.
"There are probably many children out there with similar problems, and nobody recognizes it," Wigant said. "I'm just thankful that Josh's mother had the foresight to recognize it and do something about it."
Linda Jo Scott is a freelance reporter.
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Curing Vocal Nodules Naturally!
Did you know that my nodes were cured simply by learning to use my voice correctly?
Read 'My Story' to see how improper voice instruction almost ruined my voice, until I found a teacher who saved my career by teaching me the right way to sing! If you're having vocal problems; have continued discomfort or sore throat when you sing, then do yourself a favor before you get nodes, and LEARN TO SING CORRECTLY! Once I learned the method that is the basis for my Integrated Voice technique, I never had a vocal problem again, and I've been singing for 20+ years.
If you're having challenges with your voice, email me and I'll personally answer any question you may have.
Here's the article from Celia Cooper, PHd that will give you some basic insight:
Vocal Fold Nodules and Polyps
What are vocal fold nodules and polyps?
Vocal fold nodules are benign growths on both vocal folds that are caused by vocal abuse.
Over time, repeated misuse of the vocal folds results in soft, swollen spots on each vocal fold that develop into harder, callus-like growths.The nodules will become larger and more stiff the longer the vocal abuse continues.
Polyps , on the other hand, can take a number of forms and are sometimes caused by vocal abuse. Polyps appear on either one or both of the vocal folds and appear as a swelling or bump (like a nodule), a stalk-like growth, or a blister-like lesion. Most polyps are larger than nodules and may be called by other names, such as polypoid degeneration or Reinke's edema.
What will my voice sound like if I have nodules or polyps?
Nodules and polyps cause similar symptoms and include:
* Hoarseness
* Breathiness
* A "rough" voice
* A "scratchy" voice
* Harshness
* Shooting pain from ear to ear
* A "lump in the throat" sensation
* Neck pain
* Decreased pitch range
* Voice and body fatigue
What causes nodules and polyps?
Nodules are most frequently caused by vocal abuse or misuse. Polyps may be caused by prolonged vocal abuse, but may also occur after a single, traumatic event to the vocal folds, such as yelling at a concert.Long-term cigarette smoking, hypothyroidism, and gastroesophageal reflux may also cause polyp formation. Vocal abuse takes many forms and includes:
* Allergies
* Smoking
* "Type A" personality (person who is often tense or anxious)
* Singing
* Coaching
* Cheerleading
* Talking loudly
* Drinking caffeine and alcohol (dries out the throat and vocal folds)
It has been noted that, for unknown reasons, vocal nodules occur more frequently in women between the ages of 20 and 50.
How are nodules and polyps diagnosed?
If you have experienced a hoarse voice for more than 2 to 3 weeks, you should see a physician. A thorough voice evaluation should include a physician's examination, preferably by an otolaryngologist, who specializes in voice, a voice evaluation by a speech-language pathologist, and possibly a neurological examination. The voice team will assess vocal quality, pitch, loudness, ability to sustain voicing, and other characteristics of the voice. An instrumental examination may take place, which involves inserting an endoscope into the mouth or nose to look at the vocal folds and larynx in general. A stroboscope (flashing light) may be used to watch the vocal folds as they move.
What can be done to get rid of nodules and polyps?
Nodules and polyps may be treated medically, surgically, and/or behaviorally. Surgical intervention involves removing the nodule or polyp from the vocal fold. This approach only occurs when the nodules or polyps are very large or have existed for a long time and is rare for children. Contributing medical problems may be treated to reduce their impact on the vocal folds. This includes treatment for gastroesophageal reflux, allergies and thyroid problems. Medical intervention to stop smoking or to control stress is sometimes warranted.
Voice therapy involves teaching good vocal hygiene, eliminating vocal abuses, and direct voice treatment to alter pitch, loudness, or breath support for good voicing.Stress reduction techniques and relaxation exercises are often taught, as well.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Adapted from text developed in 2001 by Celia Hooper, PhD, CCC-SLP
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
Voice and Hypnosis
With hypnosis, the voice is used to put the participant into a deep, restful state.
Here's Mr. Perkin's brief history of hypnosis:
Back in ancient Egypt, hypnosis was called "healing sleep." The subject was really awake but with eyes closed and listening to a person's voice. Healing sleep was used to help people get over illnesses and mental anguish.
In the late 1700s, Fran Anton Mesmer, an Austrian, observed a Catholic Priest laying hands on a parishioner to overcome healing. Mesmer thought what was realy going on was that the person was surrounded by a magnetic field and that the Priest was sending out magnetism and that God was not really intervening in the process.
Mesmer thought that if he would use 2 large metal rods, he could create the same kind of magnetism that would help patients overcome their illnesses.
In 1792, Benjamin Franklin from the US, was called to Paris, France to observe Mesmer working on patients using the magnetized rods.
Franklin concluded that the people were using their own minds to cure themselves of illnesses. They were using their own imaginations.
This is what a hypnotist really does. He helps people use their own minds to fix what is wrong with them.
find more at: wayneperkins.blogspot.com
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
Music Therapy for Dogs!
By Renee at smalldogsparadise.com
Bare in mind, many grooming salons these days don't operate the same way as those from the 80's or 90's. Then, groomers would just groom the dogs and the job is complete.
Nowadays many grooming salons offer spa treatments and rejuvenation and music therapy for pampered pooches.These luxury sessions are not cheap. If you operate an upscale grooming salon in urban areas (i.e. Tokyo or New York), your customers are expected to pay anywhere from $100 to $200 for a complete doggie "makeover." I kid you not!
With so many dog owners who are willing to spend obscene money on their furry children, it's no wonder many aspiring groomers jump into this bandwagon. I'm not saying money brings all evil intentions; just some will value money over passion.
Monday, February 12, 2007
Jennifer Hudson calls American Idol Abusive
Here's the article:
Jennifer Hudson Calls American Idol Abusive
PEOPLE MAGAZINE
THURSDAY FEBRUARY 01, 2007 08:35 AM EST
Jennifer Hudson has won Golden Globe and SAG awards and is up for an Oscar for her role in Dreamgirls – despite what she describes as an abusive experience on American Idol.
"On American Idol, you go through this mental thing; you've got to get yourself back together. You've been abused, misled and brainwashed to believe whatever they want you to think," Hudson, 25, tells the new issue of Essence.
"You become a character - became the girl in the turkey wrapping." (On one episode, she wore an unflattering outfit that earned that label.) "I just knew I had to sing my way out of it. I don't believe in looking back, and I didn't look back."
Hudson also dismisses rumors that there was tension on the Dreamgirls set between herself and costar Beyoncé Knowles. "We clicked from day one," she says.
She says she, Knowles and their fellow Dreamgirl Anika Noni Rose bonded over the fact that they're all Virgos, and all have a mole in the same spot on the left side of their necks.
"It's amazing to me that God took three different women from three different walks of life and created the Dreamgirls," Hudson says. "We were meant to be together. When you look at us, you see it's all connected. I'm loving Beyoncé."
Knowles has also dismissed feud rumors, telling reporters in December: "It's really unfortunate that everyone is saying I'm jealous of Jennifer. ... Because I'm a star they just automatically assume that I'm not humble enough to sit down and take a back seat, which I am."
Friday, February 09, 2007
Music Therapy for Young Asthmatics
I've been working with clients with asthma for some time. Through singing therapy, (because it involves re-training the breathing mechanism, as well as becoming conscious of how you are breathing),the affect is dramatic!
If you have a question about how singing therapy can help with asthma, please feel free to contact me.
Here's the article:
Music Therapy For Young Asthma Sufferers
WABC By Dr. Jay Adlersberg
(New York-WABC, February 8, 2007) - Using music class to help treat asthmatics.
Asthma strikes children particularly hard in some areas of the Bronx and Brooklyn. Sometimes medications are the only things that keep kids happy in their daily activities. But now, thanks to financial gift from one of the Fathers of Jazz, music may be helping some young asthma sufferers.
It's an outreach program of the Louis Armstrong Center for Music and medicine at Beth Israel Medical Center. Melrose is one of three schools in the city which are part of research to see if tension release using woodwind instruments to teach breathing control and relaxation, with the help of the seashore wave drum and Native American flute, can help in controlling asthma.
"It helps them identify when they having difficulties to use these breathing techniques," said Brian Harris, of Beth Israel Medical Center.
These four young men have been taking these classes once a week for the past six months to a year. Their asthma?
"It has improved, because before I couldn't breathe that good," student Alex Calo said. "But now I have more breath to hold when I'm running and stuff."
"Now I can play more, because I have more breath," 11-year-old student Alex Acosta said. "It's better."
"I could breathe more and it makes me relax," 13-year-old student Frank Maxwell said. "So I can play a lot more than I used to do."
And giving kids back their playtime is news in this city.
The Bronx is a hotbed of asthma. The illness causes more missed days from school and more hospitalizations than any other illness in kids under 14.
The music goes beyond just illness control. As with all music, it's about feelings.
"The music, the relaxation, the tension release and the drums," 13-year-old Carlos Vega said. "You could express your feelings when you're playing it."
Coincidentally, because of an aggressive band program at the school, each of these boys already plays a wind instrument. One plays flute, the others clarinet, trombone and saxophone. No problems learning breathing control for them.
Thursday, February 08, 2007
Singing and 'The Yawn'
In an article by Zainab Al Naji, he states that "when we yawn, yawns consist of an expansion of the chest, descent of the diaphragm and larynx, elevation of the nasal and soft palate, downward and backward movement of the tongue, abduction of the vocal cords, and a wide opening of the mouth."
In plain-speak, simulating the beginning of a yawn simply opens your throat, lowers the larynx, relaxes the tongue, drops the jaw; all of which help to produce a warm, round, open and relaxed tone without any constriction or tension.
It feels good to sing correctly, and this is the best indicator of whether you're employing proper technique or not. If you get hoarse; have an ache in the back of your throat; have to push to get volume; have a tight jaw, or just feel any discomfort at all when you sing - you're doing something wrong.
Conversely, if your voice flows out effortlessly with beauty and ease, with no tension or exertion; if singing is easy and feels good - you're singing correctly! A very easy barometer of your progress!
Watch for Volume One of my "Joyful Singing Series" coming soon! Contact me for more information!
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
Cold Weather Voice Tips - U of Pittsburgh
Upper respiratory infections (URI), rhinitis, sinusitis, pharyngitis, and laryngitis, often affect the vocal cords, causing hoarseness. The best way to prevent URIs from causing a voice problem is to avoid or limit the infections. Preventing URIs can be done by maintaining proper amounts of rest and eating a healthy diet. Good nutrition helps prevent infections and allows the body to fight infections for faster recovery.
URIs frequently are transmitted through young children, especially those in daycare, and by hand-to-hand contact. Thorough and frequent handwashing and avoiding contact with sick children can prevent many winter infections.
Cold weather clothing also can help prevent an infection and other voice problems. Maintaining proper body temperature takes a lot of energy, more if you are not dressed properly for the cold temperature. Seventy-five percent of body temperature loss occurs through the head, so a warm hat can decrease temperature loss and reduce the amount of energy required to keep you warm. This saved energy can be used to fight infection. A scarf is another important way to keep your voice healthy in the winter. Wearing a scarf helps maintain your body temperature, and it can also be used to warm the air you breathe, thus preventing cold air from irritating your larynx (voice box).
HAVE YOU TRIED MY VIVA LA VOICE TONIC RECIPE? IT BOOSTS RESISTANCE!
Tuesday, February 06, 2007
The Aging Voice
The voice tells a lot about a person - their state of health, state of mind, and their relative age.The aging voice is sometimes breathy, scratchy, weak, trembling or rough. As you read the article by Sue Ellen Linville, you'll notice that there's a lot of medical and anatomical jargon that may get a bit deep for you.
In a nutshell, just know that as we age, our parts wear out!!And when the parts wear out, vocal challenges may set it. Ain't aging grand???
There are certain elements of our respiratory system as well as elements of the vocal mechanism that begin to show the wear and tear of age, and you can hear it in the voice.
BUT HERE'S THE GOOD NEWS! Overall good health, a nutritious diet, low levels of stress, exercise and a good mental attitude will help you keep your voice in youthful, top-shape long into your senior years!
This is why exercising your voice is extremely important! In order to keep all the parts of your vocal mechanism working well, you've got to use them correctly and often. My uncle, Dick Palmer, is 81 years old, and just began singing a year ago! He loves it and it proves that a voice doesn't have to disintegrate with age.
Yes, there may be some changes in the voice, but with good vocal health habits, you can maintain your voice into old age.
If you want to keep your voice healthy and youthful, I suggest that you begin doing daily vocal and breathing exercises. This will help TREMENDOUSLY and you'll see a big difference in the tone, clarity and power of your voice.
If you have a question, or want to learn more about how to maintain your voice, please contact me. I will personally answer any question you may have.
Also, try my Viva La Voice Tonic Recipe for a healthy way to maintain your physical and vocal health! All natural and good for you!
Here are some exerpts from an article in the American Speech-Language Hearing Association Journal.
The Aging Voice
cite as:
Linville, S. E. (2004, Oct. 19). The Aging Voice. The ASHA Leader, pp. 12, 21
by Sue Ellen Linville
As the 21st century advances, senior citizens will make up an increasingly large segment of the population. In recognition of that demographic shift, researchers are developing a database of voice features that are characteristic of normal speakers from young adulthood through old age. Such a database would be invaluable to clinicians struggling to differentiate normal vocal changes with aging from pathologic vocal conditions affecting elderly patients.
Changes in Speech Production Mechanism
The respiratory system changes from young adulthood to old age. In lung tissue, loss of elasticity is considered the most significant change. Other respiratory system changes include stiffening of the thorax and weakening of respiratory muscles. These changes alter lung volumes and respiratory mechanics. While total lung volume remains unchanged in the elderly, vital capacity decreases and residual volume increases. Maximum expiratory flow rate is decreased and lung pressure is decreased. Thus, elderly speakers experience a decline in the amount of air they can move in and out of the lungs and in the efficiency with which they move air.
The larynx also undergoes age-related anatomic changes during adulthood. Glandular changes may cause drying of epithelium, which may increase stiffness of VC cover. Increased cover stiffness could increase instability of vocal fold vibration and raise fundamental frequency (F0) in elderly men.
Some investigators report progressive thickening of the epithelium with aging in both sexes. In males, thickening reportedly is progressive up to age 70, with declines thereafter. In females, thickening is described as progressive, particularly after age 70. Thickening of the laryngeal epithelium may contribute to lowering of fundamental frequency or to increased harshness of voice.
Degenerative changes in the temporomandibular joint are described, along with thinning/loss of elasticity of oral mucosa, declining salivary function, loss of tongue strength, and tooth loss.
Age-Related Voice Changes
Perhaps the voice change that has been investigated most is pitch level. Speaking changes from young adulthood to old age, but the pattern differs according to gender. In women, F0 remains fairly constant until menopause, when a drop occurs (approximately 10 Hz -15 Hz). This drop presumably results from hormonal changes that cause thickening and edema of the laryngeal mucosa. In men, F0 lowers approximately 10 Hz from young adulthood to middle age. The reason for this drop is unclear. After middle age, F0 in men rises substantially (approximately 35 Hz) into advanced old age, reaching the highest level of adulthood.
Tremor and increased hoarseness have been associated with the aged voice. Stability of F0 reportedly declines from young adulthood to old age in both men and women. In men, levels of fundamental frequency standard deviation (F0 SD) more than double between young adulthood and old age. In women, levels jump 71% over a similar period. F0 SD ranges for young and elderly speakers demonstrate little overlap, regardless of gender. In contrast, measures of jitter-the cycle-to-cycle fluctuations in the fundamental period of vocal fold vibration-overlap extensively in young and elderly speakers, especially women.
Amplitude stability also declines with aging, at least in men. Indeed, shimmer, which reflects cycle-to-cycle variation in waveform amplitude, may be a better measure than jitter of chronological aging in men's voices because shimmer levels increase independently of health and fitness variables. Age-related jitter differences disappear if health and fitness are considered.
Another voice quality linked with the aged voice is increased breathiness. While elderly men demonstrate a higher incidence of glottal gap than young men, spectral noise levels do not differ in the two groups. However, spectral noise levels increase in men in poor physiological condition, regardless of age. In contrast to men, both young and elderly women demonstrate a high incidence of glottal gap. However, young women tend to demonstrate posterior chink, while elderly women demonstrate gaps anteriorly in the glottis.
There is acoustic evidence of age-related changes in vocal resonance patterns in both men and women. Lowering of formant frequencies (more pronounced in women) suggests lengthening of the vocal tract. Altered vowel formant frequency patterns (more pronounced in men) suggests centralization of tongue position during vowel production. Altered resonance patterns in elderly speakers may result from growth of the craniofacial skeleton, lowering of the larynx in the neck and/or degenerative changes in oral structures that reduce articulatory precision.
In summary, structural and functional changes occur in the respiratory, phonatory, and supralaryngeal systems with aging. Those changes alter the voice produced by the aged mechanism. Gender differences exist both in the nature and extent of age-related changes.
Sue Ellen Linville is associate professor of speech pathology at Marquette University and the author of Vocal Aging (San Diego: Singular Publishing, 2001). She is an affiliate of Special Interest Division 3, Voice and Voice Disorders. She can be reached at sueellen.linville@marquette.edu.