I am a trans ally and I admire many talented trans woman in the arts, and I have to admit this is a topic that I knew nothing about and was always curious about. Thank you so for this video, this is so interesting. I am so glad that I get to see this aspect of your transition into your true self. Personally I am ND and after a life of subconscious masking I am now in the process to unmask myself and I know it's sometimes a matter of practice to just... be who you are! Openly and for the whole to see and hear :) Thank you for showing us these videos, I love them.
I'm so looking forward to hearing you discover your voice. It's exciting. As a trans man, my voice alone is heard as masculine about 70% of the time. It's actually *less* than it was a few years ago, I think because I live alone with my cats and rarely actually talk aloud to others. And when I talk to my cats, I speak more high pitched. However, when I consciously relax, I naturally pitch my voice lower. (For trans men, hormones can lower our voice--but I've not been able to take T for medical reasons.) I've also consciously adopted more masculine speech patterns (grammar, sentence structure, vocabulary), which I started doing decades before I realized I'm trans--because when I was in college I read that masculine speech was respected and trusted by more people. (Which, in my experience is true, but damn, is that a messed up cultural experience of misogyny.)
Thank you for sharing your experience, Willow! I've been following your channel for some time and hearing the change, and you explain this in such an understandable way with grace makes me feel so happy for you. Wishing you all the best on the rest of this voice journey!
In the beginning I was like "that's a bit different of her normal voice" and along the video you explained that you're constantly adjusting the pitch and resonance and it actually walked to the voice I was expecting from your other recent videos. Anyway, I feel so happy and comfortable watching your videos, specially this one. It brings me a feeling that life is light and beautiful. AND (last thing) your nails are so PRETTY, don't know why but it brings me peace 😂. Love you, babe 🥰
This process is so awesome to me, it's so cool! I know as the speaker you're able to catch all the little imperfections, but as a listener I am just so happy to hear you speak and I don't catch the details, so I hope know you sound amazing!!!
It's always wonderful when someone shares their journey in this very real way. For allies, like myself, it can help clarify both your struggles and the ways we can offer support. My favorite UA-camrs are always the ones who, while sharing their love for a particular topic, also share who they are. Thanks for letting your teacher come out while you share your truths and you teach us more of what life in your shoes is like. I was especially fascinated by the difference between the American and English voice and wish I had a better ear for hearing that difference. Hugs, and don't be too hard on yourself, you have a lovely voice!
This is very interesting, I had no idea the work that really went into voice training. It's incredible how far you've come in such a short time. I've always loved your voice, and your way of speaking. It's now great to see this new found confidence you have in finding your voice, I've noticed the energy shift. You've worked so hard and your voice sounds soooo lovely. Thank you for sharing this process.
I subscribe to many “book” channels and watch everything either on subtitle or reading along with the transcript since my husband is retired now and ALWAYS HOME! I subscribed because you reminded me of myself as a younger woman; smart, sassy and the same glasses! Haha! And very pretty! I’ve not been able to hear your voice yet but I never knew you were trans. I do know you are awesome!!! And best of all…uniquely yourself. Love to you younger me!!
Wow, that is an amazing compliment! The concept of “passing” is controversial in trans circles. The idea that we shouldn’t have to blend in with the rest of society. But at the same time, I can’t deny that you saying you didn’t even know I was trans gives me an enormous amount of pride and satisfaction. Thank you!
This is so interesting- thank you for sharing this part of your transition! I love that professional trans voice trainers exist (I had no idea) and that you are developing a voice that is authentic to you. Great video!! ❤❤
Thank you for sharing your experiences. I find this fascinating, as I also studied theater and voice, but, aside from that somewhat academic standpoint, I also find it inspiring. By sharing this, you are giving people who want to be the best allies they can be (like me) valuable knowledge and insight, and, even more importantly, I have no doubt you are providing a great deal of comfort and inspiration to people who are on their own journeys to their true selves. It may not be my place to say it, but I have been watching your channel for a few years now, and I'm very proud of you and happy for you.
I'm so happy for you that you have found this new fitting voice. Thanks for the detailed explanation. That was really interesting and instructive. Best wishes from Germany!
I'm a grad student training to become an SLP (SLT on your side of the pond), and gender-affirming voice therapy is a hugely growing part of our field! An SLP in my state recently started a voice clinic that offers "voice scholarships" to people who can't afford the process on their own. I think this will become more and more accessible for those who want it in the coming years ❤ Also, we use the rainbow passage for literally everything in our field and I could probably recite it in my sleep, lol.
This was such an informative video! I am a cis female with a naturally deep voice. I get mistaken for a man over the phone or in fast-food drive-thru lines all the time. I never thought much about why that is, but hearing you explain all the different resonances and breathiness described in more feminized voices explains why I get mistaken for a male in out-of-sight situations. I really appreciate you talking about this process and the concentration and practice it takes. Wishing you a smooth road ahead as you find your true voice.
This is a genuinely fascinating area of the use and evolution of individual voices. You're doing really well, Willow. I wish you every success in getting the voice you desire, at all times.
This is fascinating! I'm a woman and have a very low voice, on the phone if I talk to anyone who doesn't know me they 100% assume I'm a man. I confess that that is useful at times. But I don't like to be called sir to my face which has happened many times. I've been a singer my entire life, starting at age 8, I was an alto until age 25 or so, since then a 2nd tenor/baritone. I understand how you are changing your voice and I have to say that your progress is remarkable! You have been working very hard - well done! I've considered working to raise my pitch but tbh at 67 I'm too lazy. 🤣🤣 love your channel. 😍😍
I’ve been listening to your voice change over the last couple of months, and wow, you’re doing tremendously! If I didn’t know, I’d absolutely think you were AFAB! Congratulations, Willow, it’s been a privilege to come along with you on this journey. ❤
wow this is so interesting! find it so cool that they structure it as a whole course. it's amazing what resources there are for the community these days ❤
Thank you for opening up to us. I sometimes feel I am a different person when I speak English. But not only how my voice sounds. For 22 years of my life I used only my middle name while I lived in Romania, but because British people struglle with it, I am using my first name mostly... So I feel I have almost two identities
I think it sounds more natural as you go, I suppose the tricky part is when you put on speed you can't concentrate on all the things you have to do. You already did amazing. ❤
Wow. That was so interesting. Voices have so much impact, but I haven't really thought about them in so much detail. It's making me think about all the assumptions we make when we hear others talk.😮
You sound awesome! I don't know you but I am so happy for you! Also, I have a friend who is a transgirl and she uses those two different voices to be the best DM ever, lol
First of all, your voice sounds amazing, I loved hearing your progress and the confidence in yourself and how you sound is so joyful to see! And second, what an amazingly educational video! As a non-binary person with tons of voice problems throughout my life (I can injure my voice just my laughing a bit too long and loud😂) this video gave me soooo much food for thought. I find myself getting a lot of gender euphoria whenever I realise I sound a bit more to the masculine side. I guess voice training can also work for voice masculinisation without hormones, I never thought of that. I’ll also add an interesting anecdote - I sound so much more masculine when speaking in English (my second language) than in Polish - no idea why but it’s fascinating to think about in relation to all the knowledge that you shared here. My brain will be on it for days now🤯 Thank you so much for talking about this and sharing the knowledge!
yeah, "heat from fire fire from heat" came from transvoicelessons, I think it was to help dial in on certain resonance and vowel onsets or something along those lines. Yeah based on my speech pathologist, feels like emphasizing nasality and resonance is the safer way to start, because as you're doing that, you can kinda... let that pitch slide up and down but even if it goes down a ways, you're still getting good practice, but doing those tends to pull the pitch up anyways while you learn more granular control.
I think you have a fascinating voice. It’s is much like Abigail Thorn‘s voice. I love the way you form your words. You are so easy to listen to. Thanks for a fun and informative video. 🫶🏾🌻🦋
so you're telling me testosterone will make your voice irreparably deeper but estrogen doesn't make it higher???? how's that fair???? 😭 abigail's transition was so shocking because of how masculine she presented beforehand. i had a huuuuuge crush on her. then she transitioned and i realized.... oh.... i am bisexual LOL 😅 her coming out video was so god damn impressive, i think about it all the time. anyways, this video was very informative! looking forward to more!
Yeah it’s because T causes your vocal chords to lengthen and that makes for a deeper voice. Trans men’s vocal chords stretch on testosterone, but trans women’s can’t shrink back 🙄
I’m a speech and language therapist, but I work in a totally different area in children’s disabilities. I’ve always been curious about voice work in trans voice training. Thank you so much for this very detailed overview! Also I love the rainbow passage, never heard of that before. How great is it that it’s about rainbows? 🌈 #lgbtq
I'm yet to go on HRT but I have appointments scheduled after Christmas for it. I've been developing my voice on my own over the last year mainly by talking to my dog in a cute and feminine voice every day. I think making your voice more breathy is incorrect because it sounds forced like you're voice acting. What I do is speak not with my throat like men do but with my tone coming from my upper respiratory. You call it nasal but its not quite there its behind the nose up in the head. I also use phone calls and meeting strangers who dont know my voice to practice every day. I think my tone of voice or way i speak has always been feminine my whole life, for example I always stressed the S sound like women do. Im also American so you said that helps lol. My regular non trained voice was never as deep as your dead voice.
Oh, interesting! So if there's difference between British and USAmerican English vocalization (outside of accent) then I wonder if someone who has English as their second language but decide to voice train in English, would they have to have some lessons in their first language as well or would it be transferable? Especially considering sounds that English doesn't have.
It makes such a difference. It amazes me how people spend $$$s chisselling their faces and other parts of their body but do nothing about their baritone voice. Nothing will clock you more than sounding like a man no matter what people tell you.
Hm... I hadn't encountered the term "open quotient" before, so I'll have to poke at that. The more "breathy" feminine voice seems to be just one of the options, though. Lots of women also use a lot of vocal fry, which seems to be kind of at the other end of an axis from "breathy". Personally, though I'm still a ways off from where I want to be, I'm finding that being toward the vocal fry end is easier to achieve and more appealling to me. I don't think I'd want to go all-out for extreme vocal fry--I don't want to be a Kardashian--but to me Jamie Clayton is a good model. What she's doing sounds good to me and feels achievable...
Personally, I'm also going with an intuitive and very gradual approach. I don't do separate voice training. I talk to myself and the cats. _A lot._ I don't practice a feminine voice or switch between doing one voice and another, I just gradually push my voice toward where I want it to be. I have no idea if any of this is a good idea, it's just the path my mind happens to take. A fun side effect is I guess I'm halfway to where I want to be, but already I can't do my old voice. I haven't deliberately done it in about six months. I just tried for a minute, out of curiosity, and I can't find it. I can lower my voice, sure, but it sounds super weird and cartoony. I would have to dig up an old audio recording to find out if it's even in the ballpark.
Facinating👍❤️❤️ Still say hearing your voice doing audio book narrations would be awesome ❤❤. Your knowledge of voice manipulation and acting experience would bring an amazing talent to audiobooks. Maybe some $$$. Just a thought. So enjoy you❤❤
Great video and very helpful, but I wish you didn't feel the need to make fun of some random trans person's "cringey" failure at voice at the very end. We're all in this together, and deathly afraid of being that cringey trans person doing it wrong. There's already way too much of that "pick me" punching down in the trans community. If I want that, I just need to tab over to Reddit Yes, you don't want to learn bad habits, but why does teaching these lessons always have to be at the cost of some random trans person's dignity
Hi Willow! Thank you so much for this inspirational video - your female voice is lovely and I'm sure you will be getting 'madamed' more often now! I've just downloaded 'Voice Tools' - it's such fun and a massive help on my MTF journey. Ms Sasha Miché 💖🏳⚧
I am a trans ally and I admire many talented trans woman in the arts, and I have to admit this is a topic that I knew nothing about and was always curious about. Thank you so for this video, this is so interesting. I am so glad that I get to see this aspect of your transition into your true self. Personally I am ND and after a life of subconscious masking I am now in the process to unmask myself and I know it's sometimes a matter of practice to just... be who you are! Openly and for the whole to see and hear :) Thank you for showing us these videos, I love them.
I'm so looking forward to hearing you discover your voice. It's exciting.
As a trans man, my voice alone is heard as masculine about 70% of the time. It's actually *less* than it was a few years ago, I think because I live alone with my cats and rarely actually talk aloud to others. And when I talk to my cats, I speak more high pitched.
However, when I consciously relax, I naturally pitch my voice lower. (For trans men, hormones can lower our voice--but I've not been able to take T for medical reasons.)
I've also consciously adopted more masculine speech patterns (grammar, sentence structure, vocabulary), which I started doing decades before I realized I'm trans--because when I was in college I read that masculine speech was respected and trusted by more people. (Which, in my experience is true, but damn, is that a messed up cultural experience of misogyny.)
Thank you for sharing your experience, Willow! I've been following your channel for some time and hearing the change, and you explain this in such an understandable way with grace makes me feel so happy for you. Wishing you all the best on the rest of this voice journey!
In the beginning I was like "that's a bit different of her normal voice" and along the video you explained that you're constantly adjusting the pitch and resonance and it actually walked to the voice I was expecting from your other recent videos. Anyway, I feel so happy and comfortable watching your videos, specially this one. It brings me a feeling that life is light and beautiful. AND (last thing) your nails are so PRETTY, don't know why but it brings me peace 😂. Love you, babe 🥰
I like both your voices but I'm glad you are doing what is right for you. Thank you for explaining your voice training process.
Thank you so much for sharing your journey and this process with us! I learned a lot, and I appreciate you.
This process is so awesome to me, it's so cool! I know as the speaker you're able to catch all the little imperfections, but as a listener I am just so happy to hear you speak and I don't catch the details, so I hope know you sound amazing!!!
I've struggled to maintain a femme voice, but this course will help! Thank you :)
It's always wonderful when someone shares their journey in this very real way. For allies, like myself, it can help clarify both your struggles and the ways we can offer support. My favorite UA-camrs are always the ones who, while sharing their love for a particular topic, also share who they are. Thanks for letting your teacher come out while you share your truths and you teach us more of what life in your shoes is like. I was especially fascinated by the difference between the American and English voice and wish I had a better ear for hearing that difference. Hugs, and don't be too hard on yourself, you have a lovely voice!
This is very interesting, I had no idea the work that really went into voice training. It's incredible how far you've come in such a short time. I've always loved your voice, and your way of speaking. It's now great to see this new found confidence you have in finding your voice, I've noticed the energy shift. You've worked so hard and your voice sounds soooo lovely. Thank you for sharing this process.
I subscribe to many “book” channels and watch everything either on subtitle or reading along with the transcript since my husband is retired now and ALWAYS HOME! I subscribed because you reminded me of myself as a younger woman; smart, sassy and the same glasses! Haha! And very pretty! I’ve not been able to hear your voice yet but I never knew you were trans. I do know you are awesome!!! And best of all…uniquely yourself. Love to you younger me!!
Wow, that is an amazing compliment! The concept of “passing” is controversial in trans circles. The idea that we shouldn’t have to blend in with the rest of society. But at the same time, I can’t deny that you saying you didn’t even know I was trans gives me an enormous amount of pride and satisfaction. Thank you!
You sound great! And you clearly have put so much work into it! ❤ I'm happy for you.
This is so interesting- thank you for sharing this part of your transition! I love that professional trans voice trainers exist (I had no idea) and that you are developing a voice that is authentic to you. Great video!! ❤❤
Thank you for sharing your experiences. I find this fascinating, as I also studied theater and voice, but, aside from that somewhat academic standpoint, I also find it inspiring. By sharing this, you are giving people who want to be the best allies they can be (like me) valuable knowledge and insight, and, even more importantly, I have no doubt you are providing a great deal of comfort and inspiration to people who are on their own journeys to their true selves. It may not be my place to say it, but I have been watching your channel for a few years now, and I'm very proud of you and happy for you.
Thank you so much for all of this, Bobby 💜
I'm so happy for you that you have found this new fitting voice. Thanks for the detailed explanation. That was really interesting and instructive. Best wishes from Germany!
Thank you for sharing your journey, Willow! Sending tons of love and kindness to you!
Interesting and lovely video. Thanks for sharing. I never thought about all the aspects of speech and breathing before!
I'm a grad student training to become an SLP (SLT on your side of the pond), and gender-affirming voice therapy is a hugely growing part of our field! An SLP in my state recently started a voice clinic that offers "voice scholarships" to people who can't afford the process on their own. I think this will become more and more accessible for those who want it in the coming years ❤
Also, we use the rainbow passage for literally everything in our field and I could probably recite it in my sleep, lol.
Omg that’s amazing!!
This was such an informative video! I am a cis female with a naturally deep voice. I get mistaken for a man over the phone or in fast-food drive-thru lines all the time. I never thought much about why that is, but hearing you explain all the different resonances and breathiness described in more feminized voices explains why I get mistaken for a male in out-of-sight situations. I really appreciate you talking about this process and the concentration and practice it takes. Wishing you a smooth road ahead as you find your true voice.
Thank you, this was so interesting! So happy for you to be finding your true voice.😊
This is a genuinely fascinating area of the use and evolution of individual voices. You're doing really well, Willow. I wish you every success in getting the voice you desire, at all times.
Wow, I've just learned that Seattle Voice Lab is right in my neighborhood. I'm proud of that and proud of you.
Thank you so much for sharing this part of your life ❤
Thank you for sharing your journey.
This is fascinating! I'm a woman and have a very low voice, on the phone if I talk to anyone who doesn't know me they 100% assume I'm a man. I confess that that is useful at times. But I don't like to be called sir to my face which has happened many times. I've been a singer my entire life, starting at age 8, I was an alto until age 25 or so, since then a 2nd tenor/baritone. I understand how you are changing your voice and I have to say that your progress is remarkable! You have been working very hard - well done! I've considered working to raise my pitch but tbh at 67 I'm too lazy. 🤣🤣 love your channel. 😍😍
I’ve been listening to your voice change over the last couple of months, and wow, you’re doing tremendously! If I didn’t know, I’d absolutely think you were AFAB! Congratulations, Willow, it’s been a privilege to come along with you on this journey. ❤
wow this is so interesting! find it so cool that they structure it as a whole course. it's amazing what resources there are for the community these days ❤
The thumbnail for this video is 10/10. And your voice is 12/10 :)
Thank you for opening up to us.
I sometimes feel I am a different person when I speak English. But not only how my voice sounds.
For 22 years of my life I used only my middle name while I lived in Romania, but because British people struglle with it, I am using my first name mostly... So I feel I have almost two identities
Always glad to see you thrive ❤️
I think it sounds more natural as you go, I suppose the tricky part is when you put on speed you can't concentrate on all the things you have to do. You already did amazing. ❤
This was so interesting to learn, thank you for sharing this Willow. I love your voice :)
Wow. That was so interesting. Voices have so much impact, but I haven't really thought about them in so much detail. It's making me think about all the assumptions we make when we hear others talk.😮
You sound awesome! I don't know you but I am so happy for you!
Also, I have a friend who is a transgirl and she uses those two different voices to be the best DM ever, lol
First of all, your voice sounds amazing, I loved hearing your progress and the confidence in yourself and how you sound is so joyful to see! And second, what an amazingly educational video! As a non-binary person with tons of voice problems throughout my life (I can injure my voice just my laughing a bit too long and loud😂) this video gave me soooo much food for thought. I find myself getting a lot of gender euphoria whenever I realise I sound a bit more to the masculine side. I guess voice training can also work for voice masculinisation without hormones, I never thought of that. I’ll also add an interesting anecdote - I sound so much more masculine when speaking in English (my second language) than in Polish - no idea why but it’s fascinating to think about in relation to all the knowledge that you shared here. My brain will be on it for days now🤯 Thank you so much for talking about this and sharing the knowledge!
Hello my fellow Pole👋
yeah, "heat from fire fire from heat" came from transvoicelessons, I think it was to help dial in on certain resonance and vowel onsets or something along those lines.
Yeah based on my speech pathologist, feels like emphasizing nasality and resonance is the safer way to start, because as you're doing that, you can kinda... let that pitch slide up and down but even if it goes down a ways, you're still getting good practice, but doing those tends to pull the pitch up anyways while you learn more granular control.
I think you have a fascinating voice. It’s is much like Abigail Thorn‘s voice. I love the way you form your words. You are so easy to listen to. Thanks for a fun and informative video. 🫶🏾🌻🦋
so you're telling me testosterone will make your voice irreparably deeper but estrogen doesn't make it higher???? how's that fair???? 😭
abigail's transition was so shocking because of how masculine she presented beforehand. i had a huuuuuge crush on her. then she transitioned and i realized.... oh.... i am bisexual LOL 😅 her coming out video was so god damn impressive, i think about it all the time. anyways, this video was very informative! looking forward to more!
Yeah it’s because T causes your vocal chords to lengthen and that makes for a deeper voice. Trans men’s vocal chords stretch on testosterone, but trans women’s can’t shrink back 🙄
thank you so much, this was an incredibly useful video for me, thank you so much for making it 🙏
I’m a speech and language therapist, but I work in a totally different area in children’s disabilities. I’ve always been curious about voice work in trans voice training. Thank you so much for this very detailed overview! Also I love the rainbow passage, never heard of that before. How great is it that it’s about rainbows? 🌈 #lgbtq
P.s. I also like the book nook on your shelf!
amazed by your ability
to explain complex things,
impressed by the beauty of
your journey to be yourself
and wishing you all the
best, always. 🌹
great video, Willow! keep up the good work!
now this is a video that the trans voice community needs to see. great job
I'm yet to go on HRT but I have appointments scheduled after Christmas for it. I've been developing my voice on my own over the last year mainly by talking to my dog in a cute and feminine voice every day. I think making your voice more breathy is incorrect because it sounds forced like you're voice acting. What I do is speak not with my throat like men do but with my tone coming from my upper respiratory. You call it nasal but its not quite there its behind the nose up in the head. I also use phone calls and meeting strangers who dont know my voice to practice every day. I think my tone of voice or way i speak has always been feminine my whole life, for example I always stressed the S sound like women do. Im also American so you said that helps lol. My regular non trained voice was never as deep as your dead voice.
Oh, interesting! So if there's difference between British and USAmerican English vocalization (outside of accent) then I wonder if someone who has English as their second language but decide to voice train in English, would they have to have some lessons in their first language as well or would it be transferable? Especially considering sounds that English doesn't have.
That’s a great question! I know that when I speak in another language, my voice goes up or down depending on what the language demands 🤷🏻♀️
It makes such a difference. It amazes me how people spend $$$s chisselling their faces and other parts of their body but do nothing about their baritone voice. Nothing will clock you more than sounding like a man no matter what people tell you.
Hm... I hadn't encountered the term "open quotient" before, so I'll have to poke at that. The more "breathy" feminine voice seems to be just one of the options, though. Lots of women also use a lot of vocal fry, which seems to be kind of at the other end of an axis from "breathy". Personally, though I'm still a ways off from where I want to be, I'm finding that being toward the vocal fry end is easier to achieve and more appealling to me. I don't think I'd want to go all-out for extreme vocal fry--I don't want to be a Kardashian--but to me Jamie Clayton is a good model. What she's doing sounds good to me and feels achievable...
Personally, I'm also going with an intuitive and very gradual approach. I don't do separate voice training. I talk to myself and the cats. _A lot._ I don't practice a feminine voice or switch between doing one voice and another, I just gradually push my voice toward where I want it to be. I have no idea if any of this is a good idea, it's just the path my mind happens to take.
A fun side effect is I guess I'm halfway to where I want to be, but already I can't do my old voice. I haven't deliberately done it in about six months. I just tried for a minute, out of curiosity, and I can't find it. I can lower my voice, sure, but it sounds super weird and cartoony. I would have to dig up an old audio recording to find out if it's even in the ballpark.
Facinating👍❤️❤️ Still say hearing your voice doing audio book narrations would be awesome ❤❤. Your knowledge of voice manipulation and acting experience would bring an amazing talent to audiobooks. Maybe some $$$. Just a thought. So enjoy you❤❤
I recorded my first one last year and I’m planning to do more soon :)
@@WillowTalksBooks that is exciting 👍❤️👍 Can’t wait to listen 🎧
Thank you! This was all new info for me.
Respect 💛
Well, from where I am standing it does not look like you are failing at all 😁I think you are a star 🌟And I am happy for you!
Great video and very helpful, but I wish you didn't feel the need to make fun of some random trans person's "cringey" failure at voice at the very end. We're all in this together, and deathly afraid of being that cringey trans person doing it wrong. There's already way too much of that "pick me" punching down in the trans community. If I want that, I just need to tab over to Reddit
Yes, you don't want to learn bad habits, but why does teaching these lessons always have to be at the cost of some random trans person's dignity
Willow you are looking and sounding amazing
You did an awesome job!
I absolutely love your voice, and appreciate you sharing your experiences.
❤❤❤❤❤❤
hi i am janis. i'm a transwoman.
you sound great!
🧡
Oh, your voice is perfect when you laugh 😍
🩷🩵🤍🩵🩷
May God bring you into the right path Amen ❤️🙏🏻
Hi Willow! Thank you so much for this inspirational video - your female voice is lovely and I'm sure you will be getting 'madamed' more often now! I've just downloaded 'Voice Tools' - it's such fun and a massive help on my MTF journey. Ms Sasha Miché 💖🏳⚧
❤❤❤❤❤❤