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Just Like A Bird
It's s a soft, flowing warm-up designed to help you stretch your voice, release tension, and reconnect with ease—especially helpful after rest or sickness
This exercise will help you improve:
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Tension Release
Letting go of vocal and body tension gently and naturally
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Smooth Register Transitions
Gliding between chest and head voice without breaks or strain
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Vocal Stretching
Expanding your range and flexibility with light, upward movement
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Breath Connection
Engaging soft breath support and airflow without pushing
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Relaxed Onset
Starting each note smoothly, without harsh attack or tightness
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Body–Voice Awareness
Building mindful coordination between how you feel and how you sound

How to Practice:
Choose your range:
This exercise now covers a bigger range! You don’t need to sing every part — just choose the section that feels good for you.
You can start later or finish earlier — totally up to you.
If you feel ready, try going a little higher each day to gently stretch your head voice.
Keep it super soft
This one’s all about being gentle. Don’t try to sing loud or perfect—just keep your voice light and easy, almost like a little sigh.
Let it flow
You don’t need to “nail” every note. Think more about letting the sound glide and stretch. Like a little vocal morning yoga.
No pressure to sound pretty
Seriously—don’t worry if it’s a bit shaky or breathy. You’re just giving your voice space to wake up.
Let your breath carry the sound
Take a chill breath in, and then let the sound ride on top of it. No need to push. Just float it out.
Use the vowels “Ha” or “Ho”
These help keep the sound relaxed and open. If your throat feels tight, try switching between the two and notice which one feels easier.
✨ Optional tip: Try adding some gentle body movement—walk around the room, roll your shoulders, or stretch your neck a bit. It helps your whole system release, not just your voice.




