This is how to permanently deepen your voice

7evenvox22

7evenvox22

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Introduction:

Everyone knows the usual ways to get a deeper voice, run steroids, smoke a pack a day, or just age into it. But there are a few less talked-about methods that might achieve similar effects through different mechanisms.

These aren’t guaranteed, and obviously, there’s some risk involved. But if you’re willing to experiment and understand how the vocal cords actually work, it’s interesting to see how they can be remodeled over time.


Tumblr luqm1wxawQ1qhlhj1o1 500





1. whispering

Whispering puts a unique strain on the vocal cords compared to normal speech or singing. It stresses the superficial layers of the vocal folds rather than the deeper muscular ones.

If you intentionally whisper for an extended period of months, it could lead to micro-trauma and slight thickening of the folds during healing. That thickening could give a raspier, deeper tone once recovered.

It’s basically controlled overuse, mild inflammation, collagen buildup, and denser tissue over time.


Tumblr mznh6u9xhV1sdoygto1 500





2. vocal cord overuse

similar concept, but more aggressive. If you overuse your voice by yelling or screaming daily, you create repeated stress cycles on the cords. With recovery and collagen support, the tissue can come back slightly thicker or stiffer, just like muscle fibers adapting to stress.

Pair this with 10-20g collagen daily to support tissue repair and amino acid intake (glycine, proline, hydroxylysine) for proper regeneration.

It’s not exactly healthy, but theoretically, it could remodel the cords permanently.


Screaming crazy





3. low-frequency vibration therapy

This one’s more theoretical but probably the most interesting. The idea is that low-frequency mechanical stimulation could induce hypertrophy of the vocal cords, similar to how muscles respond to vibration training.

using a massage gun held gently against the larynx (around the Adam’s apple) for around 15 minutes a day, while producing a low growling sound, might amplify that effect. The vibration could promote localized blood flow, fibroblast activity, and gradual tissue densification.

Over time, the cords could become heavier and vibrate slower meaning a lower pitch.


Images





Important:

These methods are theoretical. They could work, or they could just wreck your voice permanently. I can’t say for sure either way.

5bd12c07





Summary:

- whispering: stresses superficial cord layers, which in turn leads to potential thickening
- overuse + collagen: induces healing and remodeling cycles
- vibration therapy: may stimulate hypertrophy and densification







Thank you for reading

This one was a bit more on the experimental side, but I still thought it’d be interesting to dive into. If you’ve got your own theories or experiences with stuff like this, feel free to share them. Really appreciate everyone who’s been reading and supporting the threads lately means a lot. I’ll keep dropping more topics like this soon, so if you enjoyed it, bookmark it. keeps me motivated to keep writing these.

Keyaan john wick
 
Last edited:
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During puberty my voice broke incorrectly and was incredibly squeaky. The doctor told me to make sounds like d and strain my vocal cords, he also told me to lower my Adam's apple (I don't know how it works, but just google it).
Anyway, my voice is normal now and there are no problems. I don’t know whether these exercises helped or not
 
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Reactions: 7evenvox22
Luckily I don’t need ts cuz I sound like corpse
 
  • JFL
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Thread Song:




Introduction:

Everyone knows the usual ways to get a deeper voice, run steroids, smoke a pack a day, or just age into it. But there are a few less talked-about methods that might achieve similar effects through different mechanisms.

These aren’t guaranteed, and obviously, there’s some risk involved. But if you’re willing to experiment and understand how the vocal cords actually work, it’s interesting to see how they can be remodeled over time.


View attachment 4331171




1. whispering

Whispering puts a unique strain on the vocal cords compared to normal speech or singing. It stresses the superficial layers of the vocal folds rather than the deeper muscular ones.

If you intentionally whisper for an extended period of months, it could lead to micro-trauma and slight thickening of the folds during healing. That thickening could give a raspier, deeper tone once recovered.

It’s basically controlled overuse, mild inflammation, collagen buildup, and denser tissue over time.


View attachment 4331180




2. vocal cord overuse

similar concept, but more aggressive. If you overuse your voice by yelling or screaming daily, you create repeated stress cycles on the cords. With recovery and collagen support, the tissue can come back slightly thicker or stiffer, just like muscle fibers adapting to stress.

Pair this with 10-20g collagen daily to support tissue repair and amino acid intake (glycine, proline, hydroxylysine) for proper regeneration.

It’s not exactly healthy, but theoretically, it could remodel the cords permanently.


View attachment 4331191




3. low-frequency vibration therapy

This one’s more theoretical but probably the most interesting. The idea is that low-frequency mechanical stimulation could induce hypertrophy of the vocal cords, similar to how muscles respond to vibration training.

using a massage gun held gently against the larynx (around the Adam’s apple) for around 15 minutes a day, while producing a low growling sound, might amplify that effect. The vibration could promote localized blood flow, fibroblast activity, and gradual tissue densification.

Over time, the cords could become heavier and vibrate slower meaning a lower pitch.


View attachment 4331195




Important:

These methods are theoretical. They could work, or they could just wreck your voice permanently. I can’t say for sure either way.

View attachment 4331202




Summary:

- whispering: stresses superficial cord layers, which in turn leads to potential thickening
- overuse + collagen: induces healing and remodeling cycles
- vibration therapy: may stimulate hypertrophy and densification







Thank you for reading

This one was a bit more on the experimental side, but I still thought it’d be interesting to dive into. If you’ve got your own theories or experiences with stuff like this, feel free to share them. Really appreciate everyone who’s been reading and supporting the threads lately means a lot. I’ll keep dropping more topics like this soon, so if you enjoyed it, bookmark it. keeps me motivated to keep writing these.

View attachment 4331211

Is the last one on vibration therapy really legit though? I made a similar post not long ago mentioning these methods from a TikTok post I saw and was particularly interested in this one. One person mentioned it was cope in that thread seemed pretty knowledgeable not sure though
 
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Test deepens your voice
 
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google says damaging cords makes your voice higher, but also says smoking makes your deeper so... is smoking straight tobacco a valid looksmax
 
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Is the last one on vibration therapy really legit though? I made a similar post not long ago mentioning these methods from a TikTok post I saw and was particularly interested in this one. One person mentioned it was cope in that thread seemed pretty knowledgeable not sure though
it’s legit to a point, just heavily overstated online.
low-frequency vibration does stimulate blood flow and fibroblast activity, which helps tissue remodel over time.
if done gently and consistently, it could slightly densify the folds and make them vibrate slower that’s where the deeper tone comes from.
you just need to be careful not to overdo it since the larynx is delicate.
 
so many steps instead of just admitting testosterone causes a deeper voice
 
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During puberty my voice broke incorrectly and was incredibly squeaky. The doctor told me to make sounds like d and strain my vocal cords, he also told me to lower my Adam's apple (I don't know how it works, but just google it).
Anyway, my voice is normal now and there are no problems. I don’t know whether these exercises helped or not
those sounds engage the deeper vocal fold layers and stretch coordination between pitch control and resonance.
lowering the larynx trains relaxed voicing too, which helps the cords vibrate slower and fuller instead of tight and high-pitched.
probably a mix of natural maturation and the exercises reinforcing proper muscle use.
either way, glad it evened out.
 
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those sounds engage the deeper vocal fold layers and stretch coordination between pitch control and resonance.
lowering the larynx trains relaxed voicing too, which helps the cords vibrate slower and fuller instead of tight and high-pitched.
probably a mix of natural maturation and the exercises reinforcing proper muscle use.
either way, glad it evened out.
How does one lower the larynx?
 
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You can check non-surgical techniques which are used by FtM trans.
 
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How does one lower the larynx?
by exaggerating yawning or slow sighing.
also, humming deeply while keeping the back of your tongue relaxed.
over time it teaches your muscles to hold a lower resting position even when speaking.
just don’t force it too hard, tension kills resonance and defeats the point.
 
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