Ologies with Alie Ward - Laryngology Part 2 (VOICE BOXES) with Ronda Alexander
Episode Date: February 1, 2023Part 2 is here! Pull up a seat for singing techniques, baby talk, baritones, whistle notes, stroke recovery, vibrato, Julie Andrews, crying jags, throat singing, accents and much more with your new fa...vorite Laryngologist, Dr. Ronda Alexander. We just… we love her so much. Listen to Laryngology Part 1 here Follow Dr. Alexander on Instagram and TwitterA donation went to Myeloma.org and to the Laryngology Education Foundation Health Equity Grant via this linkMore episode sources and linksOther episodes you may enjoy: ADHD Part 1 & Part 2, Phonology (LINGUISTICS), Rhinology (NOSES), Neuroendocrinology (SEX & GENDER), Gynecology (NETHER HEATH), Urology (CROTCH PARTS, Phallology (PENISES), Eschatology (THE APOCALYPSE), Hematology (BLOOD)Sponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, masks, totes!Follow @Ologies on Twitter and InstagramFollow @AlieWard on Twitter and InstagramEditing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio Productions, Jarrett Sleeper of MindJam Media, and Mark David ChristensonTranscripts by Emily White of The WordaryWebsite by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick ThorburnHPV Vaccine Ditty Remix on SHORT Notice by the Extremely Talented Jason Scardamalia
Transcript
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Oh, hi, hi.
So it's still that bobby pin under the couch cushion.
It's Allie Ward.
We're back with part two of Laryngology.
So if you are tuning in without part one, I don't know what to tell you, go to part
one, and then we'll see you in like an hour for this follow-up, featuring wall-to-wall
questions from folks supporting the show at patreon.com slash ideologies.
Also thank you to everyone who writes the show and leaves reviews.
I do read them all.
Here's a little fresh proof.
Thank you, K. Ted Mobd, who left the review.
Been listening since 2019, and it's still my favorite podcast.
You've been with me through college, pandemic, and now through every relocation and long-distance
flight.
Honored to be jammed in your ears.
Thank you, K. Ted Mobd, for that.
Okay, let's move on.
Part two.
Thank you to everyone also who let me know while some docs may say like, eh, to the HPV
vaccine after the age of 26, you can still request it and probably get it by, and probably
get it covered by insurance much later in life than that if you want.
So talk to your doctor.
You totally have my blessing.
Also those beats were made by Jason Skardimalia.
Thank you for making those.
That was amazing.
Okay, so get yourself a cup of warm tap water and let's hear your questions.
As I say them with my mouth, we'll cover whistle tones, Mariah, damage to your voice
box, the lowest voices, throat singing, perfect pitch, stress and voice cracks, and more with
surgeon, MD, Icon, and your new favorite laryngologist, Dr. Rhonda Alexander.
Okay, let's start your questions with Gigi and first time question asker, Chris.
What the heck is going on when people sing in the whistle register?
I need to know everything.
Please and thanks.
Okay, I have these on my phone.
So many.
Eric Kay wants to know, is it possible to make a sound outside of the human hearing
range?
Would we know?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Do we need like a bat detector?
So we could detect that with specialized audio equipment.
I don't think we've ever tried.
I don't know.
I'll look it up.
Maybe ultrasonic.
Who knows?
Okay, so I checked into this and according to one BBC report, we can hear frequencies
up to 20 kilohertz, but most human beings cannot shriek higher than three kilohertz
unless you're Mariah Carey singing her 1991 ear splitting single Emotions.
So good.
So that was from the 1991 VMAs, which experts say was her highest recorded note at a G sharp
seven, I think, which would be 3.3 kilohertz.
Is that like dolphin range?
Almost.
I checked in and those marine mammal friends of ours can whistle at 3.5 to 10 kilohertz.
And actually in looking that range up, I stumbled across an absolute Venn diagram of this aside,
which was a 2021 TikTok of Mariah in the ocean singing a whistle tone to a dolphin who seems
to react with some kind of surprise.
Seekly I shouldn't anthropomorphize, but speaking dolphin Mariah and setting world records.
But then along came Georgia Brown, which is a stage name for an Italian Brazilian singer
who was able to best Mariah and hit a G 10 note.
So I'm going to play it.
If you have really sensitive ears, just turn down your volume for a second or skip ahead
15 seconds because it is bonkers.
So that would be around a 5.5 kilohertz like mid dolphin range.
So if you're carpooling with dolphins, they loved it.
But those are the highest of highs.
There's got to be a low.
There is, and its name is Tim.
Tim Storms, an American country crooner can sing eight octaves below the lowest piano
key, making a sound that is less than a single hertz, 0.189 hertz to be exact.
So we can't even hear it, but we can feel the vibrations.
And of course, I don't have a recording of that because again, we can't hear it.
Here's an example of Tim's just casual, everyday, non-record breaking singing.
One of the top comments on that YouTube video is, thanks, this dislodged my kidney stones.
Now of course, our hearing can change over time, but what happens to our voices over
the whole course of our lives?
So many of you had this question, including Virginia Bruce, Hannah Laefam, Lana Schuster,
Celia Bell, Andrea Crane, Meredith Snowlander, first-time question askers, Laura Rosa, and
Coco Ansozo.
And Courtney Kay wanted to know, are there strategies to prevent our voices from aging?
So to reduce the impact of aging on the voice, stay hydrated, take good care of your voice.
Again, those three rules, no cell phone outdoors, no yelling, no whispering.
And if your voice is in trouble for more than about 10 days to two weeks, come see somebody
who can talk to you about options.
I need a doctor.
I really love this question, Delaney, Jen A., Greg Wallach, Bennett Gerber, Jade Walker,
wanted to know in Jade's words, voice breaks, what are they?
And Bennett asked, why does my voice still crack?
And then also, Jen A. and Delaney wanted to know, why does being nervous make our voices
shake?
Like when you watch a TED talk and you can tell someone's nervous and a little warbly,
what's happening when our voice cracks?
Okay.
So there's two different kinds of cracks that I'm hearing in these questions.
One is the crack that happens when you haven't made the switch from your chest voice to your
head voice or the falsetto.
So if you're trying to sing with full power at a note that's outside of what your voice
box is physically able to do, it's going to say no.
It's going to sit down like an angry dog and say no.
And that's when you get the, huh, while you're trying to sing.
Now the effect that you see when someone's doing a public speaking event, when they're
having nerves, that's coming from adrenaline or epinephrine that's coursing through the
body because all of our threats are now mental and psychological, largely instead of physical.
Our body perceives danger the same way.
So there's no difference between, I'm about to be interviewed by Ally Ward and I'm being
chased by a tiger, right?
So your body's nervous system, again, that sympathetic nervous system is like, all right
gang, we're in danger, everybody get pumped, let's do it, kidneys shut off, blood vessels
to the outside parts, clamp down, we don't want to bleed to death, heart, let's go to
the big muscles in the close part of the arm and in the leg because we're either going
to run or we're going to kick a double S, right?
And so that adrenaline feeling is going to make your voice box just a little bit shakier
because your breathing is more erratic also.
And that's the power.
There you go.
The lesson stuck.
And then is there anything a person can do?
What I did before you came was I sat still and I did some breathing exercises to help
myself settle in.
One of them is box breathing.
I love this one very much where you pick the number and you count in breath, hold, out
breath, hold for whatever that number is.
So in the beginning I usually start with like a three count and then as I get more relaxed
I can get to a five count because I can hold my breath that long and those breath holdings
are going to activate the balancing system, the parasympathetic system to calm you down.
So deep breathing does work neurologically.
It does.
Yeah.
Like if you are freaking out a little bit, it seems so difficult to sit down and have
a deep breath even though you know it's going to help.
Same thing is like if you're depressed, if you can get up and walk, it's probably going
to make you feel better.
Yeah.
But you're like, oh, it's the hardest.
Yeah.
The activation energy to do the thing is the hardest part.
Activation energy, executive function, anyone?
So we have a three part series on ADHD from February 2022 with Dr. Russell Brand.
Come again?
Oh my God.
What the fuck?
Russell Brand is not his name.
His name is Russell Barkley.
Russell Brand is the British guy with the hair that looks like it smells like Nag Champa
who was married to Katy Perry.
Not an evil version, but just, you know, Russell Barkley.
I had to go step out of the audio booth and look that up on my phone.
I've recently given up caffeine.
Let's get back to it.
Like I was saying, we have a three part series on ADHD from February 22 for you.
And yes, I will link that in the show notes to make it easier because I get it.
I see you.
I'm one of you.
Speaking of, patron Jasmine Quasa asked, why can I always tell the other person on the
line is also black like me?
I know that race is a construct with no biological basis and that accents and dialects are the
things that can be reliably associated with race.
And I know that this is a sticky question.
They write, but is there something about ancestral origin that can affect the quality
of the voice just like the eye shape and hair textures and how they vary across the planet?
So I looked into this and I found a few papers such as, do African Americans really have
lower voices, pitch, gender and ethnicity in Memphis?
And another one titled, variation in global and intonational pitch settings among black
and white speakers of Southern American English.
Guess who wrote them?
None other than 2018, funology guest Dr. Nicole Holliday, who has been on the show and whom
we love.
So one of the points that she makes in her research is that AAVE, African American Vernacular
English sees more pitch variation.
And I texted Dr. Alexander between the part one and the part two episodes about this question.
And she said, sometimes we are tricked.
These intonations and flavors in the voice are learned.
And often we put on the affectations.
We think that the audience or other person will connect to best.
She continued, I've had at least three accents throughout my life, but I've been the same
person the whole time.
And she ended that with a heart emoji because she's the best.
Also we have a melanology episode coming up about race and biology and skin pigment and
so much good stuff with Dr. Tina Lassisi.
So that's coming out in a few weeks.
So hang on tight for that because we'll address that very question.
And on the note of pitch being acquired or biological, Spex Owl and Tristan DeBrunner
asked about the sociology between fem and mask voices.
And Gabe Neuth said, sometimes someone speaks and I'm surprised by the way their voice sounds.
So I often wonder why I even had that expectation in the first place.
They were not alone.
R.J.
Deutsch said, ask about gay voice.
Please and thank you.
And Elijah said also mommy voice.
Is it really an evolutionary thing that sparked human language, you know, speaking in a register
that's higher?
Red Cedar also said, I've heard rumors that some deep voice guys are totally faking it
and that the gay voice might be more natural.
Do you ever have patients who are trying to modify the way they sound for cultural reasons?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And overall the umbrella term for that is affectations.
And so the quote, gay voice is about signaling in grouping when you're with your people.
Right?
And to find your people and it can be a way of determining very quickly who is for or
not for you with all of the vocal affectations.
And so if you are a vocal fry kind of a talker, people who are irritated are going to, they're
going to gravitate away from you and you're going to keep people around you who are your
in group.
If you need the, or if you're, if you're putting on or exaggerating the, the gay voice as people
do call it, that also signals, this is who I am.
I'm comfortable with who I am.
And if you're not, that is your problem, not mine.
And we just had that Theranos where that's an affectation, the, the documentary exposed.
That wasn't her voice.
She was up there on the dead stages and such talk at all like this.
And then when you catch her aside question, she would talk in her more natural voice,
but there are connotations of power, vulnerability, in group belonging, all of which can be signaled
with the voice.
And so we're all doing it.
My voice that I'm talking with to you now signals in group to the family I was born
into because this is around where my mom talked.
And so like this is what I grew up hearing as a woman's voice.
And so when mine comes out this way, that's fine.
Now sometimes maybe if I'm a little excited or if we're having a very femi time, my pitch
might go up a little bit and I might be talking up here, but this is my relaxed register right
here.
I probably even did it during this recording when you listen back, you're going to have
to hear it.
Yeah.
Like a range of your own pitch is also normal because the voice is an emotional experience
also.
And so yeah, when I'm super excited, when, when my Mets are killing it and we make the
playoffs, my pitch goes a little higher, I get excited.
And when things are a little, yeah, maybe, maybe I'm a little bit down here when I'm
giving maybe some disappointing news or I don't want to talk about the thing.
I might be down here, but that entire range is natural for me.
If it's taking a lot of work, I wouldn't recommend it because again, then you're putting too
much tension on the voice box.
If you ever feel pain either in the neck or in the throat when you're speaking, that's
an indication for a medical exam immediately.
What about baby talk?
When we see something cute, why, why does it go up so many octaves and is attached with
violence called cute aggression?
Yes.
So that I think is more cultural.
It's not physiological, but gosh darn it.
If babies don't respond to those high pitches, gosh darn it if they don't love it.
And so we do it more.
And just a side note.
We side noted about this in the toothology or squid episode with Dr. Sarah McNulty.
But if something adorable makes you want to destroy a vase or kick your couch, this is
indeed what Yale researchers have studied and dubbed cute aggression.
And one hypothesis is that the brain simply cannot deal with that much positive stimulation
at once and turn some of it into the opposite, like a negative emotion, which for most people
ends up being aggression or screaming or squealing or slapping themselves about the
face.
But what if you squeal in the presence of a baby?
Do they like it?
I don't know.
I asked the fourth dimension called the internet and it pointed me toward the 2017 current
biology study titled, mothers consistently alter their unique vocal fingerprints when
communicating with infants.
And yes, parents raise the pitch of their voice around babies across so many cultures
and languages, even monkeys do it.
And scientists think that the exaggerated speech patterns can maybe help babies pick
up on communication faster.
But I also think that when we see something cute, what happens is there's a variety of
ghosts in the room who also see the cute thing.
And since they can get away with a lot of weird shit, the ghosts experience that cute
aggression and then they try to choke us.
And then it compresses our resonators and our larynx, making us squeal.
And that theory isn't proven, but it is correct.
So patrons Sidoni S. and Maddie East wanted to know, if you're with a child, why your
voice might sound different to you?
And the reason is because it is different.
Have you ever seen a pregnant person's feet?
A lot of the body swells up and the vocal cords just do not have a get out of swelling
free pass here, folks.
So that's what's going on.
Wacky, huh?
Now Earl of Grammlekin and patron David wanted to know in David's words, am I correct that
some health issues can be diagnosed by speech?
If so, how does that work?
Dr. Alexander, that's how.
So there are signs that we can hear in the voice.
There's a certain category of neurologic voice disorders that are attached to things
that go throughout the whole body.
Among them includes like Parkinson's disease.
The Parkinson's voice tends to be very low in volume, so very quiet and also a little
bit garbled or jumbled because they're not moving their lips and face as well.
Their resonators and articulators as well.
So sometimes we can get an inkling that way.
There are some autoimmune diseases that show up in the voice box because they make deposits
or changes in the shape of the voice box or even narrow part of the breathing passage.
So that'll give us a hint.
And then there are also some nerve diseases of the voice box themselves that I can, those
of us who are experienced with it, we can begin to diagnose it just on the story and
listening to the person's voice, which is one of the tensions of having a voice practice
is the person's coming to me with a voice problem or a concern and then I ask them to
talk.
And so they often will come with a family member who wants to talk for them and I have
to tell them, I know this is a loving attempt to make this easier for them, but me hearing
their voice is a part of my diagnostic process.
And so as much as you can tell me your story and when you cannot anymore, we'll go to your
reliable loving helper and I always frame them that way as a support.
Like I know you're not trying to ruin this, but when they can't tell their own story,
we will absolutely come to you and I will come to you for any details you think they
missed because the sick person is going to miss things pretty often.
So yeah, we have to hear the voice to diagnose the voice.
But let's move on to something more critical.
Like when your roommate goes to Spain for three weeks and comes back with an accent.
Patrons Amy Vagallan, Savannah McGuire, Eva Schaefer, Jesse Hurlbert and Jacqueline Pushman
asked in Jacqueline's words, do accents have an impact on voice boxes or the other way
around?
So a lot of people asked about accents and what do they have an impact on voice boxes
or do they play a role or is that completely just affectation and that is something our
brain is doing.
So that's going to be articulators again, the way that we sound, the way that we shape
the sound with our mouth, throat, lips, tongue teeth, accents are particularly lips, tongue
teeth and it has to do with the fact that when you're young and learning language, your
primary language or languages that you get when you're a kid, train how your mouth, lips,
tongue and teeth move when you're making language.
And so if there are some sounds that if you never practiced doing them, it's harder for
you to do it when you're an adult.
Oh, for sure.
Yeah.
So many folks.
I will list them inside.
Here we go.
A.P.
Miranda Halsey-Vincent, Megan Duffy, Arielle Van Sant, Emmett Wald, Shakira Allahi, Julia
Chirka, Mark Hewlett, McCorndog, a Bob's Burgers fan, Eukali Peerless, Dantuin, Rachel Garvey's,
Patty Bergman, Spex Owl, Meredith Snow, Landor Connie Brooks, Julie Spradley and first time
askers, Ashley Rivers, Wendy Sue Grover and Louise Combate.
Want to know what happens when you are losing your voice?
Where does it go?
Rachel asked if it's normal to be hoarse after shouting or cheering at events.
I recently went to Disneyland and screamed my face off and then my episode that came
out that week, I sounded like I was, I should be in the hospital.
That's right.
That's right, young lady.
So when you lose your voice, it is because we have lost the ability for the vocal folds
to do their vibration and that can happen from swelling or from new stiffness from something
like a blood vessel breaking.
So shouting in particular can put blood vessels at risk in the voice box to break.
And when, well, let's talk about the structure of the vocal cords.
So they've got a lining, what we call epithelium.
And then just under that is a special jelly layer called the superficial lamina propria.
And that jelly layer is what lets the skin, the epithelium, the mucosa, the lining vibrate
to make the sound while the rest of the vocal fold is changing positions to breathe and
speak.
This very thin vibration is what's really making the sound.
And so if that gets stiffened by swelling or an injury from a blood vessel being broken
or from chronic aggressive use, then that is, since the vibration is the source of the
voice, part of the source of the voice, when the vibration stops, then you get no sound
or reduced sound or reduced reliability of the sound because they can't do their normal
work.
And so oftentimes I'll think about like, if you buy a very expensive violin and you know
how to play it early well, and then somebody puts a wet paper towel on the strings, it's
not going to sound good.
And that's what happens when we've got a lot of mucus down there or if somebody puts their
hand on the strings, that can be like what the swelling and stiffness are, you're not
going to get good sound of that violin either.
Wow.
And do you think if a person is screaming on a roller coaster or let's say the Mets win,
is there a possibility for like broken blood vessels in there that just need a minute?
Yeah.
This is one of the few times that I do encourage vocal rest when we have a broken blood vessel,
which is you have to just let that, you have to ride that out, ride it out.
And that's real vocal rest, which is like you talk, if it's an emergency, like a kid's
going to get hit by a car or someone's going to get burned by fire.
And for almost everything else, you want to be silent, right?
What about crying?
Patron Delaney asked, when you're about to cry, why does talking or trying to talk open
the floodgates?
And other patrons with this question included our emotionally honest friends, Jen A, Snarky
Mermaid, Multi-987, Connie E. Carringer, Hirfna, and the wonderful Greg Wallach, who asked
about being reclaimed.
Does crying mess up our vocal cords?
So crying itself, no, the sobbing, because the sobbing is a modified cough, and so it's
doing the same trauma to the voice box.
So cry quietly.
Yeah.
I mean, not that we've cried at all the last couple of months.
Not at all.
Not at all.
Even today.
Totally.
It's been a great three years.
Great, great couple years.
We've been doing great.
Yeah.
What about, did I ask you about burping already?
No.
Patron said, Shira Gane wanted to know, why do burps sound the way they do?
It would be nicer to have more of a pleasant sound for off-gassing.
That last part of the question was more of a comment, but I hear you.
Is burping just coming from a completely different passageway, or why are burps so guttural?
So burping is coming from the esophagus and stomach.
So that's air that you shouldn't have swallowed on the first place, making its way out before
it becomes a gaseous emission from below.
Yes.
And so it's socially unacceptable, but better for you than if it makes its way all the way
through and you can get lots of discomfort in the intestines.
And so it's just that air getting organized and sending itself back up.
And it's bypassing the larynx completely because it's a different tube.
So they are neighbors and they share a foyer.
The foyer that they share is the mouth and the upper part of the throat, what we call
the pharynx.
And then they divide into the trachea, which is underneath the larynx and the esophagus,
which is for food stuffs and liquids.
How loud can someone burp?
It's a good question that no one needs to know, but 112 decibels, that's the world record.
Which is about as loud as a rock concert.
And I listened to a recording of that and it made me involuntarily rich.
So I'm not putting it in.
But speaking of which, how does acid reflux mess up your larynx exactly?
Well, your beautiful lips are the doorway to the alimentary canal, which is a long,
fleshy, pool noodle tube that's made up of your esophagus and your stomach, your intestines,
and finally, your beautiful little butthole, which is only one sphincter along that whole
journey.
Did you know your mouth is a sphincter?
And you have them all the way down, like one-way doors.
You have an esophageal sphincter that's a polite barrier between your stomach and your
throat.
And sometimes it's just a little lax directionally.
And your stomach acid does kind of like an unannounced backtrack drop-in to be like,
hi, into your throat.
And your throat is like, no, I don't appreciate the visit.
And it responds with a sore throat and an irritated voice box.
So how do you avoid this?
Experts say don't wear tight clothing.
Maybe consider sleeping in a recliner, which Dr. Alexander has done, and talk to a doc
about some lifestyle or maybe dietary changes too.
But do not suffer within silence.
Now what if one of your lifestyle changes is taking up throat singing, which is using
the vocal cords and the resonator of the larynx and parts of your lips and jaw to produce
a few different notes at a time?
What a hobby.
So many cultures do practice this from parts of Central Asia, like the region north of
Mongolia called Tuva, which has developed this continuous circular breathing to sing
different notes.
It's an art known as Humei, and they developed it to replicate and then pay reverence to
nature.
But there are also groups from Japan and Italy and Peru and India and South Africa, China,
all over that practice throat singing.
There are Alaskan Inuit groups that throat sing to lull their babies to sleep.
But unshockingly, they were banned from throat singing by religious colonist missionaries
who thought that the art sounded satanic.
But a few elders preserved the technique and they've been able to pass it along to future
generations.
But many patrons wanted to know what is going on here.
For example, Aaron Gunderson, Chris Curious, Bubbery, Michael McLeod, Sonia Bird, Sarah
King, Emilio Donnelly-Ramos, and Nicole Peruzzi.
And first time question askers, Sherry Denny and Crystal Simons.
So many folks wanted to know about throat singing.
Sarah King says, throat music, tell me how they do it please.
Does it hurt?
Like Tibetan monks and stuff?
Chris Curious asked what's happening in the voice box and my brother-in-law does throat
singing.
Shout out to the lovely and talented Kyle Sleeper of Whitefish Montana.
And he does not sound human when he does it.
What's going on?
So we naturally use our larynx, our true vocal folds, as our vibrator under certain training.
And that's what throat singing is, is very specific training.
They're using other vibrators.
So other parts of the throat are doing more intense vibration than you and I are trained
to do.
And so they're able to make multiple sounds at the same time and also a sound that has
a totally different shape because if you're vibrating some of your resonators instead of
just your primary vibrator, then we get a whole different sound.
So training is key for that.
Yeah.
And that's another one.
I mean, I'm impressed with your brother-in-law because that's another thing where if you
don't get it early, I don't understand how you learn that at like 30.
I asked him for tips and he sent me this video.
The dogs are going crazy, but I think advice would be as you're relaxing and as you're
vibrating your vocal cords down here, it shouldn't hurt if it's less cookie monster, which would
be like, hmm, I'm cookie.
It's less that it's a little bit lower down and it's a little more relaxed.
Also I was like Kyle Sleeper, my brother, can I tell people that you're cool and happen
to be single?
And he said, no.
And then I was like, but all the chites are the best.
And he was like, I mean, so, hmm, Kyle Sleeper on Instagram, just say dad says hi.
Okay.
As long as we are tossing out my recommendations, we're going to hear about a few sponsors
of allergies coming up who make it possible for us to donate to a cause of Dr.
Alexander's choosing.
And that's once again, the Laryngology Education Foundation Health Equity Grant Program, which
supports endeavors that increase understanding and awareness of how racial disparities impact
laryngology and speech language pathology care in the US, specifically for patients
of the Black diaspora, and it supports initiatives that address these disparities in our communities.
So thank you, Dr. Alexander, for doing the show and for pointing us toward the Laryngology
Education Foundation Health Equity Grant Program.
We'll link them in the show notes.
And thank you to these sponsors for making the donation possible.
Okay.
Where were we?
We were throat singing.
So for more throat singing tunes, you can look up performances by Tuvan, throat singing
ensemble, Alash.
You can seek out throat singing groups on whatever your favorite music app is, or you
can buy music by smaller artists on sites like Bandcamp and look for local indigenous
performers that you can support.
So jam it in your brain.
Okay.
More questions.
Christine Parker Graham, Jen Logan, Jesse Rose, Jasmine Quasa, Tanya Emilio, and Leanne
Murray, Leanne Longtime listener, first time question asker.
And as a singer, I'm curious what's actually happening when a vibrato happens and is there
a truth to what their teacher said about always being really hydrated for singers.
Always P clear, sing clear is what they heard, but all these folks wanted to know what is
vibrato.
Yeah.
So vibrato is an additional layer that we put on top where we are gently varying the
resonator.
So that would be like if you had maybe a flexible piano where you could squeeze it in and out,
that would change the frequency in a different way than changing the actual tone that's being
struck.
And so vibrato, you'll see when you watch the voice, the neck of someone who's singing
with vibrato, you'll see the whole voice box moving often.
And so that is doing some subtle changes to the shape of the resonating cavity.
And that's what's changing it.
That's what vibrato comes from.
Being clear is probably a little bit overachieving, but the more hydration that's available in
your body, the more your body can distribute it to the places that need it.
And so I would say definitely drink when you're thirsty, drink a little ahead of being thirsty,
and don't cross your singing teacher.
Can you learn vibrato or is it just like some people can use those muscles, some can't?
Oh, so it's something that can be taught.
In my practice, I spend a lot of time taking my singers out of it because the way that
our machine works to do the imaging of the voice box, we need you to make a single frequency
for the machine to work.
And so they naturally want to give me all of this and really I want this, a flat tone.
And their brains are so focused on making the kind of theatrical sound that lets them
be as long as possible.
I'm like, I don't need it to be that long, but I need you to make one frequency, please,
for this machine to work.
Stay with me, kid.
Yeah.
So a few machines that an ologist of this ilk might employ are video strobo laryngoscopy
or a laryngeal electromyography.
And what they'll do is they'll hook you up to it and then they'll maybe make you pronounce
those words.
And if you can't pronounce them, then they're like, you're normal.
That's those are very big words.
That's not true.
But what if your voice really, though, isn't fine?
We covered gender affirming vocal surgeries and therapies in part one, two, but many
people asked about just repairing vocal cord damage and voice box transplants and just
tune-ups.
So I'm looking at you, Kelsey Simpson, Patrick W.
Shannon Ryan, Emily Okerland, Kathleen Dayling, Jesse Dragon, Courtney Peterson, Don
Ewald, Ellen Vosnance, Kate Clark, Elia Myers, Polina Nacheva, Katie Munez and Patty
Bergman, and first-time question-askers, Adam Silk, Emmett Wald, and Ariana LaRoe, who
asked, voice surgeries, what sort of black magic is that?
And in this specific case, I think it would technically be black girl magic, but I'll
let the voice surgeon speak to the other questions.
What about damaging or repairing a voice box?
Kelsey Simpson, host of other people, want to know after being damaged, will your voice
box repair itself or will you just have to live with the damaged forever or are there
surgeries to repair it?
So that very much depends on the nature of the injury.
So if the injury was something like they were in a car accident in the voice box, the
cartilage is actually broken, that's going to need medical help.
If it is a phonotrauma from the way that they use the voice, that can be coached often,
but sometimes there are parts of that that need surgery, so like a cyst or a polyp, we
often will end up needing surgery.
There's a thing called a pseudosist that we will often treat with anti reflux medication
and also good habits against reflux.
Get a recliner guys.
But there also can be injuries from medical care that then we have to come behind
and fix. So breathing tubes in the throat, intubation, sometimes if there's an
emergency, like a car accident or heaven forbid, some kind of medical emergency,
that's what we call out in the field, not in the hospital, not in a doctor's office.
The emergency medical technicians are doing their best.
And so they're just trying to have you alive when you get to us.
And so some of the things that they may do with a breathing tube or a feeding tube may
do some bumps and bruises of the voice box.
And we're here to help rescue that.
So contact your local laryngologist for some help.
And with stroke victims, is it the articulators that need to be retrained or have
lost some of their function?
So often with stroke survivors, it is what we call dysarthria.
So dys means bad or wrong and arthria is shaping.
So they're going to have oftentimes problems moving the lips, tongue, cheeks, face.
And so they're not shaping the sound well.
And so again, the exam is, yes, I'm looking at my patient, but I'm listening equally hard.
Do they have a strong sound, but the shape is garbled?
Or can I just not hear them at all?
And so I have to just sort out, is it a problem in the mouth?
Is it a problem of they lost their dentures?
Because that also not having teeth impacts the way your lips lie.
And that'll change the sound of your speech, but not necessarily the voice.
But then we also examine to see if there are any issues with movement of the voice box itself.
So one or more vocal cords can be paralyzed, but usually not from a stroke
where the person has recovered, because you have to lose a lot of brain
to get a vocal fold, not to move after a stroke.
But we always examine to see what's happening.
And is there a lot of hope in terms of rehabilitation for that?
Or is it a pretty tough road?
So kind of the trajectory of the rehabilitation and recovery
goes along with the brain recovery.
So getting good physical medicine and rehab treatment with physical therapy,
occupational therapy, speech therapy are all going to be important
as the rest of the body and brain recover.
We can additionally get better strength
and also make sure that the lungs are working well and they're well supported
and their breathing is organized.
Let's talk about tone and range.
Some people want to know.
Patron Natalie Prince and first time question asker Hope Shin asked,
in Hope's words, why are some people naturally good at matching
musical pitches, i.e. singing, while others aren't?
And a flock of songbird patrons such as Jade Walker,
Iris Hutchings, Emily Layfield, Quinn Newman and Tristan DeBrunner
wanted to know why it's harder for some folks to carry a tune.
Why why do some people just not have, in Dave Schuster's words,
the balance between innate ability and talent and formal training
when it comes to range and understanding and replicating tone?
There are do some people's resonators just not give them a good idea
of what sound they're making?
Oh, gosh, we can ask my dad.
He's what we call wrong and strong when he's singing.
It's precious now.
But oh, boy, was it embarrassing for about 30 years.
We so it's outside of the field of laryngology,
but there is something in the brain where they're not hearing
what they sound like to the rest of us.
Yeah. And it's not even a matter of just like that tone difference
that, you know, in the temporal bone or around the temporal bone.
They're just not getting it.
And I don't know how they would survive in a language set up that is tonal.
So like, don't be one of these people and be born to a Mandarin speaking
family because you're not going to be able to communicate.
How I didn't even think about how different languages rely on on tone
so much more. Oh, yeah. Wow. Oh, yeah.
So now on to a question that was just swelling up in the back of the throats
of Melanie Lee, McKenna Speed, Celia Bell and me.
What about tonsils?
Allie Paul, first time question asker says, how much do tonsils affect the voice?
Allie's been told I have huge tonsils, but no doctor ever suggested they be removed.
I had mine removed at 26. I'm sorry.
Oh, God, it was the worst thing. It was terrible.
Oh, it was the worst.
And it was a hate crime. It was. Yeah.
I got I thought I was getting better.
And then I ate a piece of chicken, which got lodged in the hole in my throat.
I'm sorry. It was not a good time.
No, yeah, we have pretty high hurdles for adult tonsilectomy.
You really have to earn it because we know it's terrible.
You earned it. No, I didn't.
And so tonsilectomy can affect the voice
because it's changing the shape of your resonator.
Again, like imagine you change the shape of the piano.
It's going to sound different.
So if you have these big lumps in your throat and we take them out,
you have to reorient yourself to how you're shaping your sound
and also it's just really a bad surgery.
Yeah, we don't have a good time doing it.
So that's why if your doctor is like, I don't think you need to tonsilectomy.
It's because it's because we have seen how bad it is.
I like to explain it hurts.
It hurts more than you think.
It hurts in a way that I can't really explain.
Women who have given birth without any medicine.
Tell me tonsilectomy hurts.
Really?
Well, as a person who has not had a baby and isn't going to,
that makes me feel a little bit more like a badass.
Yeah, yeah, tonsilectomy is right up there.
Yeah, I woke up crying like days and weeks into it.
I woke up crying because it was just it like knives.
It was just like I had constant knives.
Yeah, a few people want to know.
Even wants to know what happened to Julie Andrews voice.
I guess she had surgery on her vocal cords.
A lot of people want to know about Julie Andrews.
So even asked what happened to Julie Andrews voice?
She had such incredible range.
What went wrong?
They want to know.
And B's knees and first time asker, Sarah Rowe also wanted to know more
about the sound of music and Mary Poppin star and the 1997 vocal cord
surgery she underwent.
So she was doing Victor Victoria on Broadway and had some hoarseness
from just the nonstop shows and had surgery to remove nodules.
She was told she had, although she actually didn't have nodules.
And the needless surgery apparently destroyed her singing voice forever.
It resulted in a malpractice lawsuit to the New York City Hospital
that performed the surgery.
And she's now 87 and she hasn't regained her voice.
But she spoke to Barbara Walters a year or so into losing it.
I went in for a routine procedure that I was told would not be threatening
to my vocal cords and and since then, as you know,
and as everybody's been talking about, I've just been unable to sing.
That's the big question.
Will Julie Andrews be able to sing again?
Well,
I can only say I hope so.
Do you have any thoughts about it?
Thoughts about Dame Julie Andrews.
Number one, she's a queen.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
Everything from Maria to Mary Poppins to the Queen of Genovia.
Full support.
And what happened, we believe, again,
I'm not a privy to her medical care and we respect her privacy.
But any time we operate on the vocal folds, remember, I described that superficial
limb and appropriate, that special jelly layer.
Every time we open it or operate into it, we are increasing the risk that there
could be a scar that develops.
And if you scar or lose that SLP layer, you can't make that vibration.
And that's why she can't sing the way she used to.
But there must be a lot of grief, I imagine.
Yes, you know, singing as her identity.
The voice for me, like the voice is that's our that's our imprint.
That's our that's our real signature these days in particular.
You know who's on the phone without the caller ID.
When you hear them, infants know our voices.
Infants know their mum from what they heard inside.
So much emotion is attached to the voice.
And so that's why even though I do lots of voice surgeries, I don't take it lightly.
Every time we're operating on the voice, we're taking a risk that the voice will
be different in a bad way when we're done.
So we have specialized techniques.
We do things like add injection of liquid to float the lining away from that layer
so that we can operate on it safely and just all kinds of things to protect
that voice because we haven't developed a good replacement for it yet.
Yeah, there's lots of labs that are trying to engineer a replacement for a
superficial lamina propria, but it's just not there yet.
And remember from part one that the superficial lamina
appropriate is that layer right under the moist epithelial tissue and the superficial
lamina propria covers the muscles of the vocal cords.
And you do not want to fuck that up and ruin Julie Andrews life.
No, thank you.
And also from part one, we covered Adam's apples a little in an aside,
but listener Gabe Nooth is not a fan of getting smacked in theirs.
And other folks had questions.
My LeMancad, Ira Gray, Denied DeGernet and Cass all wanted to know,
essentially, like, what's the deal with Adam's apples?
And then last listener question, I realized I got to ask, what about Adam's apples?
Some people want to know, why does it hurt so bad when you get
clothes lined on the Adam's apple?
Like, and then also surgeries for reduction of that.
Does that affect the voice or is that just all kind of a just bulk of cartilage?
So getting a clothesline injury to that area hurts because it's supposed to hurt
because you're not supposed to do that.
No, but it's again, it's that flexible, the soft, the cartilage.
It'll flex, but it can also break.
So if you're having pain, please seek medical attention.
That's number one.
And then when it comes to reducing the prominence of it,
that is a part of our gender affirming surgery protocols that we can do.
We make small incisions up under the chin and we use special instruments to shave
that area down so that it's smoother and easier to either camouflage with makeup
or just not obvious at all.
And we kind of set the surgery up so that we can watch the voice box at the same
time to make sure that we're not entering because it shouldn't affect the voice.
We affect the voice for our fems in other ways with voice rehab or with the endoscopic
through the natural whole surgery to shorten the vocal folds.
But when we're shaving down the Adam's apple, our goal is not to change the voice.
So let's get to a critical question.
Patron Jessica Janssen asked, why can I not sing?
Well, Alexandra Coutul asked, why can't I sing?
Antonio Clark wanted to know, can anyone learn to sing or are some of us just
hopeless cases that should keep it to the shower?
Likewise, Hester Dingle inquired, can one learn to sing nicely?
Or am I forever doomed to sound like a squawking cockatoo?
Grace Srain, Jolin Bloom, Papita Lyti, Scott Glib, Erica Perri-Andry,
Celeste Rousseau and Meredith Snowlander all had similar questions.
But I'm going to put it in the first person because I'm also ashamed and desperate.
Do I have hope as a singer?
My husband got me vocal lessons because we once were in a car on a road trip
and he was like, what's a class you would want to take that scares you?
And I was like, oh, a singing class.
I'm terrified, but I've always wanted to sing.
And because of COVID, I've put it off now for like a year and also because I'm scared.
Do I have hope?
So I would say unequivocally, yes.
OK, appreciate that.
And the reason for that is that singing is not always about what comes out,
but where it's coming from.
So if the sound that comes out of your mouth came from joy in your heart,
then you're already a success.
Thank you. I'm going to form a band with your dad.
It's going to be rough for the rest of us.
We're just going to do it.
It's all the time.
My poor dad.
Other than me and your dad singing, hardest thing about your job, hardest thing
about being a laryngologist, anything, floor is yours.
I would say the hardest things about being a laryngologist include
sometimes having to tell people they have cancer.
Oh, OK. Yeah.
And having a surgical non-success for getting out one of those airway tubes
and just having to tell them flat out what we tried didn't work.
And I'm sorry.
And not so hard, but occasionally hard is that sometimes like medicine is one
of these things where you walk into a room with a stranger and they ask you a
bunch of personal questions and then some of my patients, they tell me really,
really bad truths like about their life or their situation and to be able to balance
like my human heart and give them encouragement and also do the medical
diagnostic work I have to do because sometimes I just want to like go down
the rabbit hole with them, you know, like, whether it's, oh, I'm here because I
survived an abusive situation and I did have an injury to my voice box.
And, you know, what can we do to make it better?
All the way to like, oh, I'm back.
I'm trying to stop smoking, but I'm just out from incarceration.
But I've got this great job and
for me to be able to be present and encouraging and
neutral in their lives and be like, well, thank you for sharing that.
You know, that's not something you can share with everyone.
And I thank you for trusting me with your truth.
It's a real responsibility to be authentically here and present with patients
so they can tell us the truth and we can get to the root of the matter.
So it's sometimes hard, but it's also a privilege to be just that trusted.
It can be tough, but we're trying to show up for our patients as real people.
So sometimes your doc is having a bad day.
Sometimes you're having a bad day.
So we want to offer our patients grace and we hope that you can offer us grace as well.
And, you know, I think sometimes people don't always remember that we may have just
come from a room where we gave super, super discouraging news to someone.
And then we're coming to something that's either good or mildly frustrating.
And we work really hard internally to meet you, where you are, because for you,
whatever we're talking about is serious.
And it doesn't really matter for that encounter that what I just came from.
But your doctor is a person and so they have to make that transition.
So I hope sometimes if we're like five, ten or even 40 minutes late,
that people can understand that sometimes the person with cancer's 20 minute
appointment was not appropriate and I have to stay with them until we get through
what they need to get through so that I can go in and tell you, no,
you don't need a tonselectomy.
Yeah. Yeah.
Oh, that's such a good perspective to give people, especially as, you know,
people who have recently lost people, you know what those appointments are like.
And, you know, I'm so thankful for the other patients who did wait while I was
in a room with my dad, you know, I'm sure you know that too.
What about your favorite thing?
What is it?
What is it that just gets you out of bed?
So top two is taking out someone's tracheostomy tube and they get to have their
natural voice with no yucky appliance, those are their words and restoring
someone's ability to communicate.
So getting them back, their voice,
whether it's with surgery, medicine or rehab in collaboration with my speech
language pathologist, just getting them back, their confidence and their spark.
And I love when I can just be like in the middle of the visit, I'll just go,
do you know how much brighter you are than when you came here the first time?
Do you feel different because I'm I'm experiencing you differently?
And then they go, yeah, yeah.
And just like helping them identify that insight that the work that they invested
in rehabilitating their voice is showing up in their life and the way that they
just generally present.
Well, thank you for using your voice.
I mean, this is a joy.
You are an absolute joy.
I'm using my voice to say, I love you.
I'm so glad that you do what you do.
Well, I am so glad that you do what you do.
You're the best.
Thank you for doing this.
Thank you, Alibor.
David.
So there it is, y'all.
Part two asks smart surgeons,
unsmart questions and follow Dr.
Rhonda Alexander at the links in the show notes on Twitter and Instagram.
There's also a link to the Laryngology Education Foundation Health Equity Grant
program.
We are at Allergies on Instagram and Twitter.
And I'm at Allie Ward with 1L on both.
And I'm on TikTok at Allie underscore
Allergies, if you're into that.
Smologies are shorter, filth-free episodes of the show that are classroom safe.
So you can find those at alleyward.com slash Smologies.
Those are linked in the show notes.
Thank you, Zeke Rodriguez-Thomas and Mercedes-Maitland for editing those.
Allergies Merch is available at allergiesmerch.com.
There are hats, there are shirts, totes, stickers, more.
Thank you to Aaron Talbert for
admitting the Allergies podcast Facebook group with the assist from Pony Dutch
and Shannon Feltis.
Thank you, every person supporting at patreon.com slash Allergies.
Emily White of the Wordery makes professional transcripts.
And Kayla Patton bleeps them.
Those are up at our website, alleyward.com slash Allergies-Extras linked in the show
notes. Noelle Dilworth does all of our scheduling and so much more.
Susan Hale handles the Merch and a million other things.
Kelliard Dwyer works at our website and she can make yours too.
Nick Thorburn wrote and performed the theme music.
Jared Sleeper is both handsome and an assistant editor on this episode.
And huge thanks to Lady of the North, Canadian and lead editor,
Mercedes-Maitland of Maitland Audio, a wonder and a joy she is.
And if you stick around until the end of the episode,
I reward you with a confession.
And this week it's that it's drain, snake and time, people.
It seems like once a year I'd get the rare pleasure of sticking a Velcro
tipped wire that I got for seven dollars down my shower drain and then just
birthing from the muck, something that looks like the child of a squirrel and a
sock covered in hair, a jellyfish made out of hair.
It's disgusting and I love it.
I love it. Let me tell you, let me tell you some.
All right.
I never, ever want you to look up reviews for something called a drain snake or a
drain weasel on, say, Amazon.
Because if you click on those customer ratings and reviews and you scroll down
and then you look at the gallery of customer images,
never do that.
I did it.
I did it because I wanted to see.
I wanted to see what comes out of other people's drains.
I need to see it so gross.
I have a disgusting goblin gene and I just needed to see what else comes out of
people's drains.
It's catharsis and it's horror and it's no longer my secret.
Now you know.
Oh, what?
OK, goodbye.
Sorry.
I'm going to put in a plug to get your
get your HPV vaccine, boy, girl or in between.
Get your HPV vaccine, boy, girl or in between.