The Voice Game

9th December 2024
Article
4 min read

In this extract from A Writer's Journal Workbook, author Lucy van Smit invites you to find your voice by following four steps.

AWJW

STEP ONE:
Learn to appreciate your own voice. Our voices are often lively and engaged when we talk, but when we come to use our voice for writing we get hung
up on the idea of writing ‘properly’ and all the energy goes out of our words. There’s a story of a prison whose inmates wrote vivid, funny letters to the writing tutor, begging for a place on his workshop. But in class, the life went out of their writing. And nothing the tutor said could persuade the prisoners to value how they spoke in real life and to use their authentic voices in their writing.

In Nomadland – an Oscar-winning film based on a book about transients or travellers – the ‘actors’ were mostly real people, and they couldn’t believe
that their voices or their stories mattered. Your voice and your stories matter. Grab your phone and record your natural speaking voice. Play it back and
listen to it. How do you sound? Do you sound different to the voice you hear in your head? Does it make you cringe? Or do you like the sound of your voice?
 

STEP TWO:
Record your conversations with other people. Just leave your phone on record, with their permission, as you and your flatmates or your family cook
and eat dinner.


STEP THREE:
Record your voice when you speak to your mother or a sibling on the phone.

STEP FOUR:
Go for a walk and listen to your recordings. Familiarise yourself with how you speak. Be curious, not judgemental. What do you notice?

• Do you interrupt or get interrupted? Do you ever get told to be quiet?

• Do you complain a lot, or nag? Or apologise too much?

• Were you told to be ‘good’ when you were younger?
 

WORKSHOP YOURSELF
What did you notice about yourself and your voice from the recordings?

Writing stage
Areas of interest

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