Your Chronicle Download

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Mario Davis

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Aug 4, 2024, 4:57:29 PM8/4/24
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Welcometo the Your Chronicle Wiki!We're a collaborative community website about Your Chronicle that anyone, including you, can build and expand. Wikis like this one depend on readers getting involved and adding content. Click the "ADD NEW PAGE" or "EDIT" button at the top of any page to get started!

For the first bit of the game you can pretty much just follow the beginners guide which is found by going into the other tab and press help section. However, the help section does not say how to get materials,.


Most of the Materials are gained after talking to specific persons, conversations usually are unlocked through dungeons. So if you get stuck, try to do each and any dungeon, quest or conversation possible. Even a new familiar/beast can unlock new tasks or conversations, so just try to summon every possible beast in the dungeons you can enter.


Community Founders: Write a good and paragraph-length description for your welcome section about your topic. Let your readers know what your topic is about and add some general information about it. Then you should visit the admin dashboard for more tips.


The rich text element allows you to create and format headings, paragraphs, blockquotes, images, and video all in one place instead of having to add and format them individually. Just double-click and easily create content.


A rich text element can be used with static or dynamic content. For static content, just drop it into any page and begin editing. For dynamic content, add a rich text field to any collection and then connect a rich text element to that field in the settings panel. !


There's someone less qualified than you living the life you want simply because they took action and you didn't. Dopamine from information gathering is a dangerous drug. Get your dopamine from action.


Delayed gratification is the key to the life of your dreams. Everything you want in life is on the other side of something that sucks. That suck might be 100 workouts. That suck might be 100 bland meals. That suck might be 100 hours of focused work. The best things in life require upfront pain. Embrace the suck.


The regret from inaction is always more painful than the regret from action. So take that leap, do that thing that scares the hell out of you. You get one shot at this. At the end of your days, you'll regret the things you didn't do much more than the things you did.


PSA: You don't have to say YES to every single social gathering and event you get invited to. Every single time you say YES to something you don't really want to do, you're saying NO to yourself. Embrace the power of NO.


Don't do it the "right" way, do it your way. When you start something new, everyone will want to give you advice on the "right" way to do it. They will give you their maps for the terrain. Take their maps, but don't rely on them. Instead, use them to create your own.


It was tempting to make that level a priority. He finds the work so, so easy. He is a lovely character, a happy little trier, approaching each day with a smile on his face. He deals well with pressure. And he certainly has the gaits to compete.


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My experience with my voice before hormone replacement therapy (pre-HRT) felt treacherous: although I liked its tonality, it was also my main source of misgendering. As I considered the effects of undertaking HRT, I was excited to smooth out the lows and complete my otherwise good passing.


It is important to understand what is going on. To keep it simple, vocal cords are folded tissue in the throat that change with breathing and muscle contraction. Sound is emitted through the oscillation of the cords. This is how we talk in our everyday life. With a mix of diaphragmatic breathing, muscle control and placement, singing can be achieved.


In the case of masculinization hormone replacement therapy, the hormone that is prescribed is testosterone. It can be administered via injection, which is the fastest way of absorbing large amounts of the hormone, or via patches or topical gels. As most people want to see results quickly, injection tends to be the method of choice. This means that changes that would take place over several years of puberty get shortened to a few months.


Testosterone thickens the vocal cords. The impact is a permanent deepening of the pitch of the voice. Studies have shown that on average, it is a change of 6.4 semitones. It also enlarges the larynx, also called the voice box, and changes its placement. This process usually takes place during the first three to nine month range of hormone replacement therapy via injection, usually peaking around six months. Higher amounts of administered testosterone will cause more significant drops in pitch, while smaller amounts will lead to a more gradual change.


It is usually recommended for transgender singers who want to maintain their vocal ability to choose lower amounts of prescribed testosterone, as agreed with the healthcare professional. This will cause smaller breaks into the deepening process, and more time to accompany the change with technique.


Personally, I had grown really comfortable singing with my pre-T voice. Although my tone was a bit airy and light, I could still comfortably mimic male tenor vocalists, which I emulated happily. But I was looking forward to expanding my deeper vocal range, and found myself appreciating baritone vocalists a lot more as my first shot consultation approached.


That process lasted a bit longer than what my endocrinologist had originally predicted. My voice dropped drastically between my second and fifth month, then gradually until my eight month. We expected around the sixth month mark to be the final voice. The first phase had the more pronounced changes, particularly in regards to strain and hoarseness. After the peak at six months, it was more so noticing that my ability to hit a high note had become more limited, and that I felt most comfortable speaking deeper.


As I had promised myself, I shyly began to sing again, after the first six months. I was walking into completely uncharted territory. At first, I had to take breaks at regular intervals, because my voice still got tired quickly. I made sure to drink lots of fluids before and after singing, to calm it down. I also used humming as an easier entry into vocalizing, and tried to grow familiar with different placements.


Without a doubt, the hardest part of this process was adjusting the voice I heard in my head to the one I spoke with. That little voice you use to read, or write, or practice what you will say to your crush reflected my old voice. That included singing as well; all my reference points were based on a voice I no longer had. I had to reunite both voices to be able to project what I imagined outwards. That took practice. It took actively learning my new voice.

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