Your Voice—Elevated
Many of us hate the sound of our own voice.
The elevated pitch, the unsettling discrepancy in timbre.
It makes us cringe, this disconnect between the "skull voice" (as I've decided to call it bc that sounds cool and hardcore 💀) and the watered down version that reaches others' ears.
"Do I *really* sound like that?"
My own speech, when not conducted through my skull, seems to me thin, wan, and dull. Compared to the rich, full internal audio, I sound perpetually underwhelmed by whatever I am saying.
Something similar can happen in writing.
Those strong mental connections and crystal-clear insights easily crumble or cloud up on the page. This occasionally happens even to professional writers, so if you haven't put in career-level writing reps—don't worry.
Good ghostwriters can bridge that gap, bringing out your most robust (/hardcore 💀 ) writing *skull voice.*
That's because we writers spend a *lot* of time in our own heads: reading, writing, editing, revising, listening to feedback about our work.
We've fine-tuned the literary acoustics. We know what makes writing reverberate from within.
Bone-level.
This lends us the intuitive ability to listen deeper. To hear the true *internal* voice of an author—that deeper resonance behind the words spoken and recorded—then bring *that* voice to the page.
"That sounds *exactly* like me" ranks among my favorite author compliments.
With a ghostwriter, you can share your connections and insights with the world, as originally conceived and intended—only amplified, ringing out from every page.
You’ve Got a Book in You. Let’s Get it Out.