What Causes My
Voice to Change?
At
puberty, guys' bodies begin producing a lot of the hormonetestosterone (pronounced:
tes-tahs-tuh-rone),
which causes changes in several parts of the body, including the voice. For
starters, a guy's larynx (pronounced: lar-inks),
also known as the voice box, grows bigger.
The larynx,
which is located in the throat at the top of the trachea(pronounced: tray-kee-ah)
or windpipe, is like a hollow tube about 2 inches (5 centimeters) high. The
larynx is responsible for creating the sound of your voice.
Stretched
across your larynx are two muscles, your vocal cords, which are kind of
like rubber bands. When you breathe, your vocal cords relax against the walls
of the larynx and completely open to allow air to get in and out of your lungs.
When you speak, though, your vocal cords close together by stretching across
the larynx. Air from your lungs is then forced out between your vocal cords,
causing them to vibrate and produce the tone of your voice.
When
you lower your voice, your vocal cords are relaxed and more floppy. When you
make your voice higher, your vocal cords tighten. (You can notice this
difference in how they feel as you adjust your speech.)
As
your larynx grows, your vocal cords grow longer and thicker. Also, your facial
bones begin to grow. Cavities in the sinuses, the nose, and the back of the
throat grow bigger, creating more space in the face that gives your voice more
room to echo. All of these factors cause your voice to get deeper.
Think
of a guitar. When a thin string is plucked, it vibrates and produces a
high-sounding tone. When a thicker string is plucked, it sounds much deeper
when it vibrates. That's kind of what happens to your voice. Before your growth
spurt, your larynx is relatively small and your vocal cords are relatively
thin. So your voice is high and kid-like. But as bones, cartilage, and vocal
cords grow, your voice starts to sound like an adult's.
Along
with all the other changes in your body, you might notice that your throat area
looks a little different. For guys, when the larynx grows bigger, it tilts to a
different angle inside the neck. Part of it sticks out in the part of the neck
at the front of the throat and forms the Adam's apple. For girls, the larynx
also grows bigger but not as much as a guy's. That's why girls don't have
Adam's apples.