Very well said! I don't hear alot of people talking about this and it was actually a recent conversation at my house so this is right on time for us! Will share with the husband because we have things like this in my system and your video will add alot to our talk about it! Your message on how it doesn't change anything regarding validity needs to be heard! Thank you so much for making a great video Isaac!! And I'm sorry you came back to rubbish in the world 😞
Oh my, I had an alter with a southern accent, she has since spontaneously integrated, but my husband almost wouldn't talk to her because she sounded "uneducated" to him. It was quite invalidating for her. It really sucked. There were other complications with them....and it really hurt her. Thank you so much for this video.
I was dormant (only for a few months) and returned amidst this pandemic and it has been incredibly surreal, and I'm grateful for my headmates keeping things together while I was MIA. I feel for y'all. -Sage
Also, thank you on behalf of my headmate Cole, who struggles a lot with his accent being completely unfamiliar to the body, and results in a lot of verbal stumbling.
We deal with this as well. With our British Alters. One of them is "Standard London" and "Cockney" and Southern London. And they sound a bit off sometimes.
It is odd how different languages use different muscles in the face, so that sometimes the body doesn't have the muscle memory for the language or accent so it sounds different. I am hearing impaired and I can read lips. I can tell if someone is British or English by the way their mouth moves to say certain words and I am nearly always right. (I say that because I can't guarantee, though I have not yet been wrong........emphasis on yet, because I won't pretend that I will always be right) Anyway, that is my hypothesis on why accents sound different inside than out.
@@thesparksystem5959 They do! And how frustrating for them. Accent dysphoria. I think that has to be a thing. I speak French and it certainly uses different muscles. Our poor alters who have to share a body that doesn't match who they are.
Very well said! I don't hear alot of people talking about this and it was actually a recent conversation at my house so this is right on time for us! Will share with the husband because we have things like this in my system and your video will add alot to our talk about it! Your message on how it doesn't change anything regarding validity needs to be heard! Thank you so much for making a great video Isaac!! And I'm sorry you came back to rubbish in the world 😞
Thank you so much! I'm so glad you found the video helpful 💖💖💖
Oh my, I had an alter with a southern accent, she has since spontaneously integrated, but my husband almost wouldn't talk to her because she sounded "uneducated" to him. It was quite invalidating for her. It really sucked. There were other complications with them....and it really hurt her.
Thank you so much for this video.
I was dormant (only for a few months) and returned amidst this pandemic and it has been incredibly surreal, and I'm grateful for my headmates keeping things together while I was MIA. I feel for y'all. -Sage
Also, thank you on behalf of my headmate Cole, who struggles a lot with his accent being completely unfamiliar to the body, and results in a lot of verbal stumbling.
I hope you're holding up okay! And I'm really glad you found the video helpful 😊💜
A one of our alters has a thick Scottish accent and when they front the accent the body produces is so funny - lex
Thanks my system needed this
I'm glad we could help 😊
This is so fascinating! We have alters with different accents too but we're not all close enough to do a video.
We deal with this as well. With our British Alters. One of them is "Standard London" and "Cockney" and Southern London. And they sound a bit off sometimes.
It is odd how different languages use different muscles in the face, so that sometimes the body doesn't have the muscle memory for the language or accent so it sounds different.
I am hearing impaired and I can read lips. I can tell if someone is British or English by the way their mouth moves to say certain words and I am nearly always right. (I say that because I can't guarantee, though I have not yet been wrong........emphasis on yet, because I won't pretend that I will always be right)
Anyway, that is my hypothesis on why accents sound different inside than out.
Yeah this makes total sense :)) i think that's why certain accents come out strange when alters front
@@thesparksystem5959 They do! And how frustrating for them. Accent dysphoria. I think that has to be a thing. I speak French and it certainly uses different muscles. Our poor alters who have to share a body that doesn't match who they are.
OMG our alters have this same issue!
New subscriber 🧡