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Few experiences are as universally uncomfortable as hearing your own recorded voice. You press play, expecting something familiar, and instead you’re met with a sound that feels alien—higher, thinner, or more awkward than the voice you hear in your head every day. The reaction is often immediate and visceral: cringing, laughing nervously, or insisting that the recording must be wrong. Yet the recording is accurate. So why does it feel so wrong?
By Thomas Smith5
44 ratings
Few experiences are as universally uncomfortable as hearing your own recorded voice. You press play, expecting something familiar, and instead you’re met with a sound that feels alien—higher, thinner, or more awkward than the voice you hear in your head every day. The reaction is often immediate and visceral: cringing, laughing nervously, or insisting that the recording must be wrong. Yet the recording is accurate. So why does it feel so wrong?

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