When you smile, it makes the corners of your mouth go wide. And and the reason it sounds nasal is because the sound is supposed to go and flood into the mouth and then bounce into the cheeks. But when you go wide and your teeth come close together, cause you're smiling, sound hits the teeth, does not bound through the cheeks, and then goes a little bit more towards nasal. I want to dispel the myth about being louder as being bad. So people are afraid of volume. What they need to understand is volume is one of the main components in the sounds of confidence. If you don't sound loud enough, strong enough, thick enough, they don't think you're

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