An Exploration of Multilinguals Voice-Hearing Experiences
Rachel Rowan Olive, Jean-Marc Dewaele*
Birkbeck, University of London
Abstract
Research on multilinguals voice-hearing, sometimes termed auditory-verbal hallucinations, is
dominated by psychiatrists reports, skewing toward etic over emic approaches. Most also predates developments in both voice-hearing and multilingualism research which highlight the
complexity and dynamic nature of both phenomena and shows little cross-fertilisation between
the two fields. This paper sits within this gap, presenting results from an in-depth interview
study with ten UK-resident multilingual voice-hearers analysed via constructionist reflexive
thematic analysis. A high proportion of participants described hearing voices they did not
(fully) understand, challenging the dominance of the hypothesis that voice-hearing originates
from misattributed inner speech. This set of experiences is presented along a spectrum with a
complex array of associated emotions and subtle experiential distinctions. The relationship
between language experiences, voices languages, and associated emotions was similarly
complex and individual: participants described voices both reflecting and distorting or shifting
the contexts, domains, interlocutors and feelings associated with their various languages. This
has implications for therapeutic and peer support for those who are distressed by their voices,
as well as opening up new avenues in voice-hearing phenomenology and aetiology.
Introduction
Between 5 and 15% of adults may hear voices others do not hear, called auditory-verbal
hallucinations (AVHs) in clinical contexts (Understanding Voices, 2020). Globally,
multilingualism is increasing yet awareness about multilingualism is still rather limited in
voice-hearing is sparse,
psychotherapy (Costa, 2020). Also, recent research on
with earlier work being methodologically flawed, racist and using an etic1 approach exclusively
(Lukianowicz, 1962), in contrast with work adopting an emic2 approach and highlighting
own narratives (e.g., Romme et al., 2009). The early papers often take the form
voiceof
reports on their patients and neglecting the experiences of voice-hearers who
never encounter psychiatric services (non-clinical voice-hearers), who may make up to 1% of
the population (Understanding Voices, 2020).
Perceptions of voice-hearers and ways to investigate voice-hearing have been changing thanks
to the Hearing Voices Movement (HVM), an international movement comprising local,
national, and international networks of voice-hearers and allies (Hearing Voices Networks)
which has highlighted voiceaccounts of their own experiences. HVM asserts that
voice-hearing is a meaningful experience emotionally and psychologically (Hearing Voices
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Rachel Rowan Olive. Email: rachelrowanolive@gmail.com.
1 Etic analyses use of carefully defined and relatively stable concepts from the analytic
language of the social sciences (Pike, 1954). It allows comparative research across
languages and cultures.
2 In emic analyses, researchers incorporate the participants
perspectives and
interpretations of behaviour, events, and situations using the participants language
(Pike, 1954).
*
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Network England, 2021). Voice-hearers offer peer support, sharing experiences in an ethos of
solidarity (Corstens et al., 2014; Schaefer et al., 2021). The HVM has pushed individual
meaning-making and the dynamic relationship between hearer and voice to the fore of (some)
clinical practice and research (e.g., Steel et al., 2019; 2020). An emphasis on living well in the
presence or absence of voices contrasts with clinical approaches equating voice cessation with
recovery (Escher & Romme, 2012; Higgs, 2020; Longden et al., 2018).
Very few authors of voice-hearing studies that involved multilingual participants have made a
link with modern concepts in multilingualism research like multicompetence (Cook, 2016) or
the Complementarity Principle (Grosjean, 2012). We argue that using these lenses would allow
fresh perspectives on multilingual voice-hearing.
We define multilinguals as first language(s) users (any language(s) acquired before age 3) (L1
users) or foreign language users (LX users) who know two or more languages at various levels
of proficiency including only receptive knowledge of a language and/or heavily attired
(forgotten) L1s or LXs (Dewaele, 2018).
Approaches to Voice Hearing
Voice-hearing has been approached from multiple clinical and non-clinical perspectives.
Historically it has been associated with schizophrenia or schizophrenia-spectrum diagnoses,
which were often inclusion criteria for voice-hearing studies (McCarthy-Jones et al., 2014).
Voice-hearing research therefore bears
imprint; even non-medical
understandings of voice-hearing may be partially defined by opposition to it (Woods, 2013).
With time it has taken on racialised dimensions, becoming a vehicle for and symbol of
institutionalised racism (Fernando, 2017a, b; Metzl, 2009). Schizophrenia is disproportionately
diagnosed with among Black Caribbean and Black African groups in the UK (Fearon et al.,
2006), who are more likely to experience forced treatment (Degnan et al., 2018).
Voice-hearing has been approached from multiple perspectives beyond the diagnostic.
However, no single psychological or psychiatric model has yet explained the range of voicehearing experiences described in phenomenological literature (Upthegrove et al., 2016). This
range is enormous: voices may sound like they come from outside or inside the head; sing,
speak, or simply feel present; sound like acquaintances, friends, enemies, or strangers, chorus
or individual; and vary wildly in content, utterance structure, and tone (McCarthy-Jones et al,
2014).
Consequently McCarthy-Jones et al (2014) propose different subtypes of voice-hearing,
sharing partial causes but with distinct associated mechanisms as well. However, they also note
this risks emphasising differences between types at the expense of seeing similarities. Such
similarities are emphasised in dimensional approaches to voice-hearing which also see voicehearing as part of the wider continuum of human experience, the boundaries between clinical
and non-clinical voice-hearing being unclear (Upthegrove et al, 2016). Waters and
(2017) review found that many voice-hearing features were found across
neurological and psychiatric diagnoses. More than half of features were shared between nonclinical and clinical groups.
One dominant cognitive model of voice-hearing has been that voices are misattributed inner
speech (McCarthy-Jones et al., 2013), i.e., that voices are thoughts mistakenly believed to
originate externally (Frith, 1988, cited in Upthegrove et al., 2016). McCarthy-Jones et al (2014)
suggest misattributed inner speech may be one voice-hearing subtype, itself comprising a range
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of experiences. Inner speech in turn may be conceptualised as part of the working memory
mechanism and/or as related to sociocultural theorist
work (Alderson-Day &
Fernyhough, 2015). Fernyhough (2004) proposed condensed and expanded forms, the latter
possessing more external-speech-like phonological and pragmatic features. A broad definition
is adopted here: any thoughts with some verbal quality, i.e., condensed or expanded; consistent
with Vygotskyan and/or working memory models.
Upthegrove et al (2016) describe two further cognitive models of voice-hearing: memorybased approaches and sensory processing error approaches. These also view voice-hearing as
misinterpretation: of intrusive (frequently traumatic) memories recalled out of context, or of
external stimuli respectively.
To some extent, the HVM referenced above sits outside aetiological models, although traumabased understandings of voice-hearing are sometimes considered an HVM core principle
(Styron et al., 2017). Overall, the HVM is pluralistic, stating,
Voices is a relatively
common diverse human experience that has many different
(Hearing Voices Network
England, 2021). Waddingham (2020), chair of HVNE, adopts this pluralistic approach in work
focused on understanding and supporting voice-hearers, highlighting the relationship between
hearer and voice; this was influential in formulating the research question below, which aimed
to explore the range of voice-hearing experiences listed above in a multilingual context.
Voice-Hearing and Multilingualism
A systematic search for existing work on multilingual voice-hearers was carried out and
yielded a single recent reference. Hadden et al.
study of 37 Welsh-English bilingual
voice-hearers is the only relevant peer-reviewed study published in the last 15 years. The
authors collected quantitative data to test the voices-as-inner-speech hypothesis: if voices are
voices should share language-history-related
misattributed inner speech,
correlates with multilingual inner speech. This was defined as correlations of inner speech and
languages with: early acquisition, higher proficiency, greater frequency of day-to-day
use. The results were broadly consistent with the voices-as-inner-speech hypothesis.
However,
inner speech language use is more complex than hypothesised. Inner
speech language use can be affected by: acquisition and use context, and
network size (Dewaele, 2015; Guerrero, 2018); degree of L1-LX difference (Resnik, 2021);
topic or function (Hammer, 2017; 2019); and emotionality, with emotional LX inner speech
taking longer to develop (Dewaele, 2015; Guerrero, 2018). Leung and Dewaele (2021) found
that
(2012) Complementarity Principle, according to which
language
preferences differ according to situations, interlocutors, and purposes, applies also to inner
speech. Some studies, like Hadden et al. (2020) controlled the language profiles of participants.
Others used information on acquisition context, language-specific multilingual social
networks, and frequency of LX use. Such broad measures inevitably imply low levels of
granularity, though some studies complemented the quantitative data with more in-depth
qualitative data gathered through interviews (Dewaele, 2013).
One of the striking findings in Hadden et al (2020) was just how dynamic hearer-voice
language use were. Interviews revealed that voices can change their
relationships and
languages in ways perceived as strategic.
Okulate and
(2003) interviewed 99 Nigerian in-patient voice-hearers. Participants spoke
English alongside Hausa, Ibo, Yoruba, Efik, and other unnamed local languages. Fifteen
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voices spoke only English; 56 only a local language. Forty-one
voices spoke English and a local language. The authors likened the experience to dreaming in
terms of greater likelihood of L1 prominence, arguing voice-hearing, like dreams, reflects
internal worlds. However, they present no data on language occurrences in
dreams.
multi
Dreams have long been considered analogous to voice-hearing, sharing phenomenological and
neural features (Waters et al., 2016). They can show auditory features present in voice-hearing
but not inner speech, such as speech the dreamer does not understand (Fosse & Larøi, 2020).
Age of onset of acquisition can affect dream language selection in interaction with proficiency
(Schrauf, 2009) and dominance (Ardila et al., 2019). However, proficiency is not a prerequisite
for LX appearance (Sicard & de Bot, 2013). Dream language is typically appropriate to withindream context (Foulkes et al., 1993). Grosjean (2012) argued that the Complementarity
Principle applies to dream-language:
language use reflects different
acquisition in different domains with different people, serving different functions.
Multilinguals dream in different languages depending on dream content and interlocutors
(Grosjean, 2012). However, dream research is notoriously challenging due to recall difficulties
(Sicard & de Bot, 2013), making detailed comparison with voice-hearing almost impossible.
Multilingual Voice Hearers
Six mid-to-late twentieth century papers presented primary research on multilinguals voicehearing, although one reported on a single patient s specific adverse drug reaction (Laski &
Taleporos, 1977). Two are referenced in other papers but unavailable online: Schaechter (1964,
cited in Herbert, 1984) describing Australian immigrant voice-hearers; Dores et al (1972, cited
in Herbert, 1984) mentioning bilingual French-Wolof voice-hearing. An abstract from
conference proceedings of the International Neuropsychological Society (Schindler et al.,
1987) details a study of 19 English-Spanish bilingual voice-hearers showing a correlation with
between voices language and self-reported inner speech language, but no further details were
available online. One study fell just outside the period: Zulueta et al (2001) who focused on
psychosis assessment, but mentioned several multilingual voice-hearers in her sample. One
participant heard voices in Portuguese, English and an unnamed African language ; and two
only in their L1s.
Ethical and Methodological
Multilingual Voice-Hearing
Issues in Earlier
Research on
Early publications in this area are often ethically and methodologically problematic.
Lukianowicz (1962) reported on 14 patients he treated in Austria and the UK over 22 years.
He subdivided them into European and non-European groups, postulating distinct causes of
psychosis entailing racist assumptions about non-Europeans. These pervade his analysis:
main causative factor in [a sub-group of non-European patients] was the sudden impact of an
unfamiliar culture and a strange, restless, highly mechanized civilization upon subjects
(Lukianowicz, 1962, p. 275). He interpreted
belonging to a more primitive
multilingual voice-hearers as primitive non-Europeans, distressed by a sophisticated society,
unconsciously enacting this conflict. Lukianowicz did not describe selection criteria. These
cases may have been cherrypicked from a large pool to fit existing assumptions: later research
suggests his parallels between (his perception of) his
life experiences and the
languages of their voices are oversimplified as well as underpinned by racism.
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Lucianowicz argued that multilingual voice-hearing reflected
language experiences:
protective L1 voices; threatening Lx voices; the reverse where the home country has associated
trauma, e.g., for political refugees.
(1971, p.1391) racism is even more apparent than
referring to his
Black patients as
and their language as
He concluded that
patients with schizophrenia only hear L1 voices, not citing Lukianowicz. He distinguishes
(balanced or highly proficient multilinguals) and
(later and/or
between
less proficient multilinguals). His conclusions apply only to the former, but have nevertheless
been disproved (Wang et al., 1998).
Herbert (1984) interviewed 12 American voice-hearers, mostly early bilinguals. He confirmed
pattern of hearing
voices in languages associated with support and
voices in languages associated with rejection or persecution. Several
experiences complicate
patterns, but were broadly integrated into a similar
overall narrative. Herbert, like the clinical case reports, presented no
quotations
or own interpretations of their experiences.
Malo Ocejo et al. (1991) presented four L1 Basque patients hearing Spanish voices despite
being Basque-language-dominant. One reported thinking in Basque but hearing Spanish
language did not match inner speech language. Two heard Spanish voices
voices, i.e.
despite limited Spanish proficiency. All learned Spanish at school.
Finally, Wang et al (1998) reported on 6 immigrant patients diagnosed with schizophrenia in
the USA. Two patients reported voices in two languages, two largely in L1 but with occasional
L2 (English) voices, one only in English (L3), and one only in Cantonese (L1). The authors
argued that the voices reflected their
thought-language, and were appropriate to the
voice reflected an American figure, the voice spoke English; when
content: when a
they represented ghosts from Hong Kong, they spoke Cantonese. This is greater detail on the
content-language relationship than earlier papers but they do not probe the
emotionality.
Apart from Herbert (1984), Zulueta et al (2001) and Hadden et al (2020), all primary research
above was conducted on clinical voice-hearers by treating clinicians. Patients may respond
differently in such contexts due to the power dynamics involved (Rose et al., 2003). Clinical
notes, like research interview transcriptions and interpretations, are representations entailing
information-recording decisions. These encode
ideologies as much as
&
2013).
experiences and may be error-prone
A literature base reliant on clinical reports where most authors report on rather than quoting
their participants, without acknowledging their own subjectivity or relational power dynamics,
is problematic. It may explain the skew towards etic approaches (outsider perspective of a
phenomenon aimed at objective documentation, using the language of social sciences) over
emic ones (focused on understanding a phenomenon from the
point of view, using
their own words) (Mostowlansky & Rota, 2020). While etic research is relatively homogeneous
in its ontological and epistemological assumptions, emic research is much more heterogeneous
(Markee, 2013). Indeed, etic and quantitative research is more unified in terms of its goals and
statistical procedures than emic and qualitative research where the
perspective
can be interpreted in many more different ways.
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Lack of interest in voiceown understandings of the experience is a key HVM critique
of psychiatric voice-hearing approaches (Styron et al., 2017). It could also reflect a historic
testimonial injustice, the injustice of disbelief based on speaker identity (Fricker, 2007). Here,
psychiatric patients are considered less reliable witnesses than their psychiatrists, whose
objectivity is rarely questioned. For example, Paradis (2008), summarising literature on
multilingualism and voice-hearing, wrote:
validity of self-reports of the language of
hallucinations by patients may be questionable, but probably no more so than the report of
(Paradis, 2008, p. 203).
hallucinations in the first
Not-Understood Voices
There is no single term for voice-hearing the hearer does not (fully) understand. Jones and
Luhrmann (2016, p. 199) called it
garbled
may also
mean a voice not heard but felt (Open Minded Online, 2019), similar to experiences termed
elsewhere (Alderson-Day et al, 2022, p.1). Okulate and Jones (2003) referenced
foreign-language voices without clarifying whether they are foreign to voice-hearer or
researcher. This terminology variation made a systematic literature review impossible, but the
phenomenon may be fairly common: Jones and Luhrmann reported 17.5% of participants heard
garbled voices. Three participants in Sadh et al. (2020) HN group reported voices in
languages they did not know. Herbert (1984) described one participant hearing German voices
which she did not understand. Schaechter (1964, cited in Herbert, 1984) described 16 of 32
non-English-speaking migrants to Australia hearing English voices. This is another underresearched area, entering the literature around the edges of multilingual voice-hearing research.
-understood
is coined for this range of experiences.
Multilingualism and Emotion
Voices may express emotion-laden content (c.f., discussion of
versus
voices
language preferences
above). It is thus important to focus also on the research of
for expressing emotions. It is common for multilinguals to prefer their L1 for expressing their
emotions (Dewaele, 2013). Emotions may feel different in different languages because
languages acquired earlier, and in naturalistic rather than classroom contexts, become more
embodied: they are integrated with emotional and sensory experiences linked with
autobiographical memories (Dewaele, 2022). LXs, on the other hand, typically feel more
disembodied, more detached,
As a result, multilinguals may switch between their
languages for emotion regulation, particularly in therapeutic contexts, where an LX may create
enough distance from traumatic memories to verbalise them (Cook & Dewaele, 2021; Rolland,
2019; Rolland et al., 2020a). The idea that all languages of the multilingual need to be
(2012) concept of multicompetence, defined as
knowledge
considered is linked to
(p. 1). Cook (2012)
of more than one language in the same mind or the same
points out that
-competence
involves the whole mind of the speaker, not simply
their first language (L1) or their
(p. 1). Dewaele (2016) argues that the acquisition of
emotional geography as much as their linguistic systems.
new languages affects
The acquisition of new emotion concepts as a result of acculturation can affect existing
pragmatic norms and emotion concepts, which can lead to a blending of categories in the first
and foreign language, and which can accompany a change in emotional fit from one language
and culture to another (Zhou et al., 2021).
What this literature review has shown is that, on the one hand, most voice-hearing researchers
have treated multilingualism as largely irrelevant and/or a much simpler phenomenon than
recent research suggests, with some of the older studies suffering from methodological flaws
and racist views from the clinician-researchers. These studies focus on clinical voice-hearers
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and typically adopt etic perspectives. In other words, the researchers were largely uninterested
in hearing
voices about their emotional experiences, let alone about the fact that
these voices were multilingual. Moreover, the authors show very little awareness of research
outside psychiatry. Even work within or inspired by the HVM has tended to gloss over the
multilingualism (e.g., Romme et al, 2009). On the other hand,
complexity of voicemultilingualism researchers had dealt with language preferences for the communication of
emotions, including dreaming and inner speech, and language preferences in the therapeutic
context but nobody has investigated the experiences of multilingual voice-hearers. The present
study proposes to do just that.
Research Questions
The following research question was formulated: How do UK-resident multilingual voicehearers describe voices language(s) affecting the hearers relationships with and feelings about
their voices?
Methodology
We adopted what Braun and Clarke (2021, p. 39) term a big Q Qualitative approach. Such
research is guided not by reproducibility and generalisability, but by: trustworthiness
(methodological transparency, laying out theoretical assumptions and demonstrating their
application); and transferability (specifying study context, participants, and circumstances so
that readers can decide which aspects might transfer to others). Research and participant
subjectivity are viewed as both unavoidable and an analytic resource (Braun & Clarke, 2013).
Semi-structured interviews were carried out via telephone or Microsoft Teams, due to the
Covid-19 pandemic. Semi-structured interviews facilitated a deeper dive into
voice-hearing experiences than most existing research, with enough consistency to facilitate
Thematic
pattern-based cross-case analysis. Interviews consisted of demographic
questions; the Language Experiences and Proficiency Questionnaire (LEAP-Q)
(Kaushanskaya et al., 2019; Marian et al., 2007); and an adapted version of the Maastricht
Interview (Corstens et al., 2008).
The Maastricht Interview has been publicised by national HVNs (HVN Aotearoa New Zealand,
2011) and was developed in collaboration with voice-hearers. As such it seemed likely to be
acceptable to participants and provide meaningful initial questions. Adaptations were
theoretically, ethically, and pragmatically motivated. The interview sees voices as a
trauma. Recent voice(Corstens et al., 2008, p. 325) which, when broken, reveals
hearing aetiology work (Luhrmann et al., 2019) shows that while trauma is a significant risk
factor for voice-hearing, a universal cause-effect assumption oversimplifies matters. Moreover,
the idea of breaking through
apparent reality to some truer meaning beneath entails
assumptions about the nature of meaning incompatible with this
constructionist
analytic approach (see below).
Questions on specific childhood traumas were replaced with questions about voices languages
and code-switching; contextual influences on these; and multilingualism-specific coping
strategies. Further changes followed two pilot interviews and ethical feedback regarding
interview length and risk of overwhelming participants. Seven initial draft questions were
removed or merged and one question on inner speech languages was added. See Appendix 1
for the final interview schedule.
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Ethics and Recruitment
This project obtained ethical approval at the
research institution. Ethical decisions
possible histories with institutional power (Rolland
were driven by awareness of
et al., 2020b): for current or former psychiatric patients, being written about may be a loaded
2009). Research interview and psychiatric assessment both involve
experience
surrendering control of life experiences to researcher or clinician for interpretation. In a clinical
context this may risk Mental Health Act detention and/or child removal (Diaz-Caneja &
Johnson, 2004; Jeffery et al., 2013; Seeman, 2011). The first
record of livedexperience mental health advocacy (e.g., Rowan Olive, 2019; 2020a, b) likely encouraged
participants wary of clinician-researchers, but also resulted in a sample high in clinical voicehearers.
The project aimed to maximise
data control, recognising loss of control within
own
the psychiatric system causes iatrogenic trauma: an awareness driven by the first
experience and embeddedness in communities of survivors of such interactions. All
participants could review interview transcripts; comment and/or withdraw data; and/or read the
final report, following Mann (2016). Five opted to read transcripts. None requested edits or
withdrawals. All opted to read the report; high interest in results may reflect a lack of existing
opportunities to discuss related experiences.
Inclusion criteria aimed to capture a range of language and voice-hearing experiences. These
were:
1) UK-resident, comfortable participating in an English-language interview.
2) Hearing voices that others do not hear more than once, ideally within the last year (some
flexibility was applied depending on how well participants felt they recalled the
experience).
3) One or more of:
a. Migrant to the UK from a non-English-speaking country.
b. Hearing voices in more than one language.
c. Hearing voices in an LX.
Interviews were conducted by the first author. Consent was taken in writing or orally (where
orally, audio was recorded). Where consent was given in advance, it was checked verbally at
interview outset, when the researcher assessed capacity for informed consent according to
relevant legislation (Mental Capacity Act 2005 or Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000).
Due to COVID-19, advertising was principally digital, limiting the participant pool. A poster
and participant information sheet was distributed via social media; via email to research and
personal networks; and via four voice-hearing, therapy, and/or lived-experience-led mental
health voluntary sector organisations.
Convenience sampling was supplemented by snowball sampling, with participants encouraged
to circulate details (Robinson, 2014). Participants were all who volunteered and met inclusion
criteria. Purposive sampling aimed specifically at going beyond those Braun and Clarke (2013:
58) term
usual
for research educated, white, middle class, straight people
was limited by financial and practical constraints as a small unfunded project. We aimed for
the accountability to participants necessary (if not sufficient) to render research non-extractive
(Kouritzin and Nakagawa, 2018), within the bounds of a a
dissertation schedule (c.f.
data control and results dissemination above).
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One participant opted out of all demographic questions. Among the nine who responded, the
sample was fairly diverse in age (23-59 years), gender (5 women; 2 non-binary people; 2 men),
sexual orientation (4 heterosexual, 1 bisexual, 1 lesbian, 4 either opted out or described
themselves as
or
and education (ranging from no post-16 education to
PhD). Participants reported psychiatric diagnoses including schizophrenia, borderline
personality disorder, schizoaffective disorder, PTSD; neurodivergent diagnoses such as ADHD
and autism; and epilepsy. Most disclosed multiple diagnoses. However, only two participants
felt their current psychiatric diagnosis fit their experiences well, and two opted not to disclose
theirs. Six participants were white, one described themselves as mixed white and Indian; one
as British Pakistani and one as Arab.
Languages and their
Languages
Table 1 shows
languages and the languages in which they reported hearing voices.
This provides necessary context for the interpretive themes described below.
Table 1.
P
languages and their
L1(s)
languages.
1
Greek Cypriot
LX(s) in order of
acquisition
(Age at onset of
acquisition/ AoA in years if
available)
English (5)
2
Scots, English
Scottish Gaelic (22)
English, Scots
3
Croatian
English,
Croatian
4
English
English (7),
German,
Spanish
French (secondary school;
receptive knowledge only)
5
Gujarati, English
Gujarati
6
7
English, Levantine
Arabic
Greek
8
Punjabi
9
Tunisian Arabic, French
Hindi (20),
French (reading & writing),
Arabic (reading & writing)
French (10),
Spanish (secondary school)
English (11), Romanian
(15), German (18),
Russian (18)
English (5),
Urdu
English (11), German,
Italian, Russian (secondary
school)
German (7),
English (7),
Swedish,
Norwegian (receptive
knowledge only)
10
Danish
Dominant
language(s)
Language(s) spoken
by voice(s) in approx.
order of frequency
English
English, Greek
Cypriot, Glossolalia
Scots, Scottish Gaelic,
English
English
English
English
English, Unknown
(two distinct unknown
languages)
English, Gujarati,
Hindi
English, Greek
English, French,
Levantine Arabic
English, Greek
English, Punjabi
Punjabi, English
English
Tunisian Arabic,
French, English,
Glossolalia
English, Danish,
formerly German,
Nonverbal voices
English
Not all participants gave precise AoAs or voice language frequencies; the most precise
information given is reported. Glossolalia is listed separately to voices in unknown languages:
P1 and P9 described it as akin to Pentecostal religious experience, an aspect not reported by
others. Nonverbal voices refer to felt-presence-type voices (Open Minded Online, 2019)
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rather than not-understood voices. This table demonstrates that early AoA and dominance are
not prerequisites for a language featuring in a hearer s voices.
Data Analysis
Interviews were analysed using a constructionist form of reflexive thematic analysis (Braun &
Clarke, 2021). Constructionism regards meaning and reality as constructed through language
and social practice, including interview talk (Braun & Clarke, 2021). As such, where space
permits: participant quotations from interviews are provided alongside the prompting question,
to allow consideration of how the question may have shaped the answer; and data ambiguities
are analysed rather than shied away from (Mann, 2011; 2016; Talmy, 2011). Data were too
sensitive to include full transcripts (Mann, 2016). Analysis followed Braun and Clarke s (2013)
six-stage theme development process. Initial transcription and note-making constituted stages
one and two, familiarisation and initial code generation. Codes and comments which could be
grouped around a central idea were then exported into individual tables. For the themes
described below, everything relating to not-understood voices was initially grouped in one
table, and everything referencing relationships between language experiences and voices
languages in another. Stage four, reviewing themes, involved going through these tables and
developing further links and patterns. Stage five, defining and naming themes, involved
arranging these patterns into the metaphors of the spectrum, reflection (the throwing back by a
body or surface of light), and refraction (a change in direction of the wave). The analysis was
an iterative process with some movement back and forth between stages as themes were
refined, until stage six (writing the final report) was completed.
Results
Participants descriptions of their relationships with their voices were interpreted via three
overarching themes within the interpretive frame of metaphors of light (a spectrum of
understanding; reflection and refraction of language experiences).
Reflection is light bouncing off a surface: with smooth, flat surfaces, a clear image appears.
Refraction is light bending passing between media, e.g., air into water. This can distort water
appearing shallower than it really is or cast rainbows from a white beam. Here, reflection
voices directly mirrored language experience(s), for
describes experiences where
example where voices in a specific language spoke about topics and domains in which the
participants typically used that language. Refraction describes experiences where there was a
relationship between language experience and voice-hearing experience, but it was less direct:
something key had changed from the
memory of the original experience, often
introducing a sense of the uncanny. This could relate to one or several aspects of the experience:
a mismatch between the recognised identity of the voice and their language, accent, volume,
or tone; or unexpected elements of the original experience coming to the fore. These were not
always entirely separate, with the same voice(s) sometimes reflecting parts of one language
experience and refracting another. Nor are they perfect metaphors, particularly if their physicsspecific meanings are examined too closely. However, as a metaphorical frame and a starting
point for understanding they highlight the complexity of the relationship between multilingual
experiences and voice-hearing experiences, which as discussed above is under-researched.
Understanding Voices is a Spectrum
The interview schedule contained no questions about participants (in)ability to understand
their voices. However, seven participants described not understanding one or more to some
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25
degree. These experiences can be organised along a spectrum (see Figure 1 below). No
understanding does not signal no meaning or emotionality.
Three participants (P5, P8, P9) reported difficulty writing their L1, but high speaking
proficiency. Two (P5, P8) reported no difficulties understanding any voices. Writing
proficiency appears unnecessary to hear and understand voices in a language.
P6 s experiences demonstrate the variations in both emotionality and nature of notunderstanding. She described two partially-understood voices: a woman s voice, English with
occasional French muttering; and a set of voices she described as like multiple YouTube
channels open simultaneously. Some of these spoke Levantine Arabic, P6 s heavily-attrited
L1. P6 did not consider herself proficient in Arabic or French. Partially understanding French
caused anxiety:
Interviewer: And how does that feel, um, sort of getting part of what she s saying?
P6: Um, I, I feel like it s designed to confuse me.
Interviewer: Ok.
it doesn t feel like she s got good intentions towards me when she does that.
P6: I,
This voice had agency and power,
her speech for impact, seemingly using two
languages maliciously. By contrast, P6 called the partially-understood Arabic voices
four times, relating to feelings of loss:
Interviewer: So what does it mean to you to hear kind of snatches of Arabic and to
understand it? Or to get a [sense of meaning?]
P6: [I find it very] comforting.
really quite comforting. It gives me a link with...
and it gives me a link with her
I find it
My mum died and I miss her terribly.
comforting because
a link to listening to family that I never met
I feel like
it fills in a part of me
missing as well, you know, maybe a part I
discover
comforting actually is the word
use.
fully in this lifetime but you know
(Emphasis added.)
P6 described understanding occasional French words. She recognised similarly few Arabic
words, but sensed meaning beyond them, a difficult experience to articulate:
Interviewer: So do you understand the actual Arabic words or do you just have a sense
of like, knowing what it is that
saying?
think, some of the words I I I
P6: I think it can only be a sense of meaning, I
recognise, some of the words I recognise because I recognise them from the grocers
round the corner from me, and
Jordanian.
So.. I think
more the
say some words which will trigger something so that I can understand
meaning,
almost like
saying words I will recognise, I
know why
the meaning, so
I recognise them, I understand the words, um, um.. Oh
hard to explain, um.
Partial understanding could therefore differ in nature alongside degree, a dimension difficult
to demonstrate in figure 1. The metaphor of the spectrum should be considered a starting point
for representing this range of experiences, while acknowledging that a linear representation
inevitably collapses some qualitative experiential distinctions. Not (fully) understanding voices
marked exclusion or inclusion, empowerment or disempowerment, depending on the hearervoice relationship.
Language and Psychoanalysis, 2022, 11 (1), 16-40.
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Figure 1. Spectrum understanding voices.
Thought, Voice, Memory, Language
The blurred boundaries between distinct experiences implied by the metaphor of the spectrum
also feature to some extent in boundaries between thought, voice, memory, and language.
However, here multilingualism could blur or clarify such distinctions.
Some participants described voices developing from thoughts or memories. This process could
involve a transition across languages, or different language combinations. P3 described voicehearing developing from a belief that she could read others thoughts, in the language of the
person concerned, typically Croatian (L1) or English:
Croatian would really come into my, into my mind only when, when somebody from the
Croatian context would message me? Or speak to me. Erm, and then you know obviously I
thought I could read their thoughts in Croatian. (P3)
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However, the voice developing from this belief spoke only English. P3 described both
reading and hearing people s thoughts, highlighting blurred boundaries between a thought
with some auditory qualities and voice-hearing, despite the difference in languages involved.
P8 described a flow from memory to both voice and thought. He reported thinking 90% in
English , but hearing one voice: sometimes it speaks two languages . He described it as
predominantly within the Punjabi, and then sometimes it is in English . The voice and P8 s
own thoughts seemed to have opposite weightings in L1 versus L2 frequency. However,
elsewhere P8 referred to hearing his father s and uncle s plural voices . Against this
ambiguity, P8 was clear about the memories , voices , and thoughts negative content, calling
them negative or negativity 25 times total. He described his trauma causing negativity
both in voice(s) and thoughts:
P8: Do you know what I mean so, I think so if you re consistently getting criticism that
gets internalised, becomes around negativity.
Interviewer: Yep.
P8: And so therefore if I don t hear the voices it s like I m thinking the negativity
because all being, the foundation was set a long time ago and the condition is there.
The similar emotions evoked by both voice and thought, and their shared trauma-based origins,
could make them indistinguishable despite apparently different L1 versus L2 use: the thought
may be the voice, the voice may be the thought
It may be they re saying one thing (P8).
However, sometimes multilingualism clarified the thought/voice boundary, due to differences
in conscious control:
P7: Here because I m exposed daily to English, when I come home I tend to think my
day more in Greek or Romanian.
Interviewer: And do you change that consciously?
P7: Yes.
I: And can you... consciously change the language of the voice at all?
P7: No.
Voices Languages Reflect, but also Refract, Participants Language
Histories
Reflection is light bouncing off a surface: with smooth, flat surfaces, a clear image appears.
Refraction is light bending passing between media, e.g., air into water. This can distort water
appearing shallower or cast rainbows from a white beam. These are helpful metaphors for
the relationship(s) between participants language histories and voices.
P1 described the clearest reflection of language experiences in her voices languages,
quantifying both current language exposure and voices as 80-90% English, 10-20% Greek
Cypriot. Greek Cypriot voices principally concerned family and her parents belief systems,
reflecting language-use context. Voices, present only during crises, reflected triggers in both
language and content:
[W]hen, umm, there was a lot of kind of Greek family involvement and hostility and
and it was too
involvement- over involvement and just a lot of Greek shit going on
much, too much stress, too much gossip, too much, erm, hostility between everybody, yeah,
that kind of kicked off a lot of Greek voices. (P1)
Sometimes languages began featuring in a participant s voices sometime after the relevant
language experience: P10 described one voice acquiring English several years after moving to
the UK. For P7, a shift in the voice s language followed actively trying to change her thoughts
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from Greek to English to learn English faster, causing the addition of English to her voice s
repertoire.
This time-lagged reflection also occurred with not-understood voices. P4 said that her notunderstood voices did not reflect anything in [her] reality at the time. However, elsewhere
she described spending her professional life surrounded by languages she did not speak:
Interviewer: I wondered how you reached that conclusion about what language it might
be?
P4: Um, I suppose because I have um, I ve been lucky to work with people from different
nationalities, particularly when I was doing work at [job location]
before I retired
as [job role] I would also hear people erm speaking in different languages then as well.
I couldn t tell you the logical process of why I thought that it might be Arabic and
why I thought it might be European, it s just, I suppose based on, on the... the people
that I have met through the years and the languages that they speak.
LX exposure can therefore be relevant even when the language is not actually acquired.
Refraction took place when, in transition from external linguistic input to voice-hearing,
hearers linguistic knowledge and memories distorted, or unexpected elements emerged. This
produced mismatches between a voice s perceived identity and their language, tone, or accent,
creating a sense of confusion or the uncanny.
P2 described a demonic gran voice mimicking her late paternal grandmother. This voice
spoke Scots and Gaelic; P2 s grandmother never spoke Gaelic. The voice retained P2 s
grandmother s working-class Scots accent when speaking Gaelic. P2 expressed her confusion
as Fuck knows what s going on there .
P7 described the voice she heard as an androgynous distortion of her own voice:
It would be a bit more, a bit more of a, a lower toned voice, so it it would sound to some
people more masculine, but I can understand that it s
s still, um, very similar to my
voice. But it s a more low-toned voice, so a more angry toned voice. (P7)
Some participants voices accompanied visions. P5 saw people from a workplace he was
bullied out of. His colleagues had spoken English, but in P5 s visions they spoke Gujarati (L1)
and Hindi (L3). He called this disturbing ; the uncanniness was reinforced when the figures
appeared outside his home, visible through the window, but audible as though inside.
However, accompanying this refraction were elements of reflection: P5 recognised influence
from Hindi reality TV in one voice s vocabulary and manner:
So, on [Hindi reality TV] they have lots of arguments and they have lots of kind of, the way
that they speak, and I think some of that has kind of almost influenced the kind of vision that
I get of, of the person speaking in Hindi, because when I m telling them to shut up or I m
trying to respond, they re telling me to shut up and it s, it s a constant kind of barrage. (P5)
These examples of refraction involved a language featuring with a different interlocutor, in a
different context and / or domain of language use to that in which the language was acquired
and regularly used. For P2, Gaelic was transposed from a classroom context to a family one;
for P5, Hindi and Gujarati shifted from family interlocutors and television viewing to appear
in the mouths of workplace interlocutors.
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All participants described some relationship between language experiences and voice-hearing
ones, but these did not necessarily mirror each other. Participants language experiences could,
as they became represented in their voice-hearing, be reflected, refracted, or both.
Discussion
The research question asked how 10 UK-resident multilingual voice-hearers multilingualism
affected voice-hearing experiences. A number of themes were drawn from the analysis of the
interview data.
The Study Sample and Recruitment
As described above, the sample was relatively diverse in age, gender, education, and sexuality.
This likely reflected the first
networks within the
space in mental
health, as most participants had some knowledge of the HVM and/or other lived experience
movements in similar spaces. Most participants found the study via social media, where the
as a queer woman, or knew her from shared lived experience advocacy
first author is
roles in local mental health services.
Nor was the research exclusively with white participants. However, no Black African or
Caribbean participants were interviewed, which is a limitation. Many voice-hearing studies
include relatively few Black participants (cf. Woods et al., 2015). This gap therefore reinforces
a problematic status quo, particularly given the disproportionate rates of schizophrenia
diagnoses in Black communities mentioned above.
We chose not to systematically approach community groups or organisations specifically for
marginalised voice-hearers: being unfunded and as such unable to offer compensation to either
participants or organisations, approaching groups and asking for effectively free labour felt
problematic during the first year of Covid-19, when many were busy adapting to survive
(National Survivor User Network, 2020). However, this lack of outreach was itself not an
ethically neutral choice, particularly since working with Black community organisations could
have helped involve Black participants whose voices are not heard here. It would be important
for future research to proactively address this gap.
A Spectrum of Understanding
Voice-hearers described a spectrum of understanding their voices and a complex array of
associated emotions. Boundaries between memories, voices, and inner speech could be blurred
or clarified by multilingualism s role in the experiences. This has implications for subtyping
and psychologically modelling voice-hearing.
While the lack of consistent terminology for not-understood voices made systematically
reviewing previous research impossible, no papers were found discussing the emotionality or
range of not-understood voices. Studying multilingual voice-hearing with participants whose
proficiencies varied opened up a wide range of experiences: each language could potentially
be understood to any degree along the spectrum.
Whatever mechanisms underlie these experiences, an original finding is the variety of emotions
potentially associated with not-understood voices. Individual histories and the specific nature
and degree of not-understanding could affect these.
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This spectrum of understanding challenges the voices-as-inner-speech hypothesis dominance:
inner speech is not experienced as an unknown language. More real-time methods such as
experience sampling employed in some inner speech (Guerrero, 2017) and dream (Foulkes et
al., 1993) research may help explore this further. The fact that some participants reported
understanding voices in languages they could not write, but spoke proficiently, suggests
researchers testing relationships between voices language use and hearers proficiency should
consider analysing written and spoken proficiency separately.
Some participants experiences of voices sometimes being indistinguishable from inner speech
(e.g., P8) potentially support the voices-as-inner-speech hypothesis. However, some
participants voices used different languages to their inner speech. This challenges Hadden et
al. s (2020) argument that if voices represent misattributed inner speech, then voices should be
predicted by the same language history factors. If individuals can experience inner speech
mostly in one language, and voices mostly in another (P8), or their voice can speak one
language despite developing from thoughts experienced in two (P3), then the voices-to-innerspeech relationship may be more complex than this hypothesis allows.
Possibly only some voice-hearing subtypes fit the voices-as-inner-speech hypothesis, as
McCarthy-Jones et al (2014) suggest, which could resolve these apparent contradictions. The
range of not-understood voice-hearing experiences suggests they might integrate into multiple
subtypes. McCarthy-Jones et al. s (2014) subtypes were based on reviewing literature which
under-represents not-understood voices; further study of these, and of the relationship between
multilingual voice-hearers voices and own inner speech, may develop subtyping models.
The range of experiences above strengthens parallels between voice-hearing and dreaming,
where not-understood speech can occur (Fosse & Larøi, 2020), but this may not progress
aetiological study: dreaming and voice-hearing differ in their relationship to regular perception
of the outside world, with which voice-hearing co-occurs and dreaming does not. This, plus
methodological difficulties with dream research (c.f., Sicard & de Bot, 2013), limits
dreaming s usefulness as a model (Waters et al., 2016).
Reflection and Refraction
Participants relationships with their voices and associated emotions showed a range of
interactions between language history and voice-hearing experiences. Some participants
voices reflected their language experiences, sometimes with a time delay. However, more
complex effects occurred, akin to refraction, where voices languages altered language
experiences in unexpected ways.
Hadden et al (2020) found a relationship between Age of onset of acquisition, language
proficiency, and likelihood of a language featuring in a hearer s voices. While this study does
not disprove this at a group level, it demonstrates neither Age of onset of acquisition nor
proficiency is a prerequisite for a language to feature, mirroring Sicard and de Bot s (2013)
dream-related findings.
Literature reviewed above frequently sought patterns whereby language histories and
associated emotions were reflected in voice-hearing experiences, exceptions being Wang et al.
(1998) and Hadden et al. (2020). This study builds on Hadden et al. s qualitative findings,
investigating voice-hearers own perspectives on their experience in greater detail. Refractions
of language experiences, uncanny voice-hearing experiences or mismatches between context
and voices languages are rare in the literature: Wang et al. (1998) argued that voice-hearers
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experience match the experience s internal logic. This fits some but not all participants here.
Some (P2, P5) heard voices of known individuals, speaking languages the real-life analogue
could not. This complicates Grosjean s (2012) Complementarity Principle and further
highlights distinctions between voice-hearing and inner speech. While multilingual voicehearers, like other multilinguals, typically acquire their languages in different domains and
contexts, this is not necessarily reflected in their voices. P2 s Scottish Gaelic was acquired in
a classroom context but heard coming from a voice reminiscent of a family member; P5 s home
and family languages were spoken by voices associated with a workplace context. This differs
from inner speech patterns: for example, students speaking English as an LX adopt academic
inner speech more than general inner speech, reflecting the domain and context of acquisition
(Leung & Dewaele, 2021).
The relationship between multilinguals language experiences and their voice-hearing can be
associated with more multi-faceted emotions than previous research suggests. Aside from
Hadden et al. (2020) and Malo Ocejo (1991), where earlier research reported emotions, it
categorised voices as simply positive or negative (e.g., Lukianowicz, 1962; Herbert, 1984).
Some participants described overwhelming negativity in their voices. However, a range of
other emotions featured: confusion, disturbance, anger, fear, comfort. Multilingualism played
into all of these. As such where voice-hearers seek support for voice-hearing-related distress,
whether psychological, medical, or from HVN peer support groups, it may be worth exploring
how voices languages affect the experience.
Conclusion
This small-scale interview study contributes two new findings to the voice-hearing literature.
First, not-understood voices are a considerably more complex phenomenon than previous
literature suggests. Second, the relationship between language experience and voices
language(s) is not one of simple reflection, but appears highly individual: neither early Age of
onset of acquisition nor dominance was a prerequisite for voice-hearing in a given language,
and the transition from language experience to voice-hearing experience could distort, refract,
or shift the domains and interlocutors which made up the language acquisition context. These
findings challenge the dominance of misattributed inner speech in voice-hearing aetiology and
open up new ground for future research into prevalence and experiences of both not-understood
voices and multilingual voice-hearing more broadly. The wide variety of experiences and
emotions disclosed by participants suggests this is the tip of a considerable iceberg with
potential implications not just for voice-hearing phenomenology and aetiology but for
therapeutic and peer support for voice-hearers.
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Appendix
relationships with their voices
Bilingual and multilingual voice(Let the participant know that we can pause or stop the interview at any time, there are no
right or wrong answers and we can skip any questions
rather not answer without them
having to give a reason.)
Demographic questions
What is your gender?
How old are you?
Are you trans?
What is your sexual orientation?
What is your ethnicity?
What region of the UK do you live in?
Do you have a mental health diagnosis? (If so, do you think it fits your experiences?)
Are you taking medication for your mental health at the moment?
Are you working, studying or volunteering at the moment?
Do you consider yourself to have a disability?
Do you have a religion or faith?
Language questions: LEAP-Q
http://bilingualism.soc.northwestern.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/LEAPQ2007.doc
Voice-hearing questions
This part of the interview is intended to find out more about the voices you hear and how you
relate to them.
How many voices do you hear? What languages do they speak?
(Which do you hear most / which language do you hear voices in most often? Has the number
of voices and the language(s) they speak changed over time?)
Why do you think you hear voices?
E.g. do you understand them as symptoms of an illness, as a message from someone or
something else (who?), as the result of trauma, as part of yourself, as coming from a good or
bad spirit, as ghosts or angels?
going to ask a set of questions about the voices in each language and your relationship to
them. For each question, try to start with the language with the voices you hear or have
heard most frequently and most recently, and work through to the voice or voices you hear
least and longest ago.
Characteristics of the voices
Tell me about the voices in each language - do they have a name? Age? Gender?
Accent?
How often / how much of the time do you hear these voices?
Where do the voices come from / where are they located? Has this changed over time?
(Do they sound as though they are in your head / coming through your ears / located
somewhere else within your body / coming from somewhere outside your body? Do you
think they come from you or from someone else? Does this differ according to language)
What kinds of things do they say and how do they say them / what is their tone?
Do any of the voices ever switch languages?
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When does each voice do that - for example, is it when it is expressing a particular emotion,
or when you are in a particular place or doing something in particular? Does it change in the
middle of a sentence, utterance or situation, or does it speak one language in particular
contexts? Do you have a sense of why it changes?
Do you ever have a dialogue with these voices or communicate with them at all?
If yes, can you give an example? What language do you speak back in is it always the
same? If no, why do you think that is?
Do you speak out loud or in your mind if you talk to them? How do they react? Have they
always reacted in this way?
Content & relationship to the voices
Do you hear mostly positive / friendly or negative / unfriendly voices in each language?
What do they say or do? Is this the same as when you first heard them?
How would you describe your relationship with your voices?
(Prompts: Powerless / Compliant / Conflict-heavy or antagonistic / Balanced / Distant /
Warm / Playful / Understanding / Fearful / Protective)
Have you always felt this way about these voices? Do you know why?
Do these voices talk about specific subjects or people?
Can you describe them? What do they say? Do these things interest you as well? Do different
languages cover different topics?
Would you miss the voices if you
hear them anymore?
Do any of the voices also have relationships to each other?
E.g. are they friends? Related to each other? Co-existing or in separate universes? Do they
speak to each other - if so in what language?
Think about how you felt about [Lx] when you first heard these voices and how you feel
about [Lx] now. Is it different? Do these voices change how you feel about [Lx]?
(Prompts: if someone speaks Lx to you, how do you feel about them? Has that changed since
you started hearing voices in Lx? Do you want to speak Lx more or less than you used to? If
you have a language you speak but
hear voices in, how do you feel when someone
speaks that language to you?)
Do you experience yourself as thinking in a language?
If so, what proportion of the time do you experience this in each language? Does it feel
qualitatively different to voice-hearing? How?
Triggers
Have you noticed whether these voices tend to be present when you take part in
particular activities or in certain kinds of circumstances, or when you feel certain
emotions? Can you describe what those are?
(If so, what is the language context? Do you relate those to experiences you have had in a
specific language? Follow up if yes: Can you describe how the voices react to your
emotions? Is it helpful or unhelpful? Does it change your emotions?)
Are you hearing any of these voices now?
If so, are they commenting on this interview? What are they saying?
How old were you when you first heard voices? What was happening in your life at the
time and what was your dominant language then?
helpful, I have a list of the kinds of circumstances that other voice hearers say
(Prompt: if
they experienced around the time or just before they first heard voices)
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Coping strategies
Are there specific things that help you cope with hearing voices if / when it is difficult? I
have a list of examples of things other voice hearers have said they sometimes use if that
would be helpful to prompt you.
(Prompt list: Send the voices away / Ignore the voices / Concentrate on listening / Listen
selectively / Think about something else / Make a deal with the voices / Try to limit contact
with the voices / Try to escape the voices / Telephone someone / Visit someone / Distract
yourself / Keep a diary about the voices / Carry out certain rituals/behaviours / Relaxation
exercises like yoga / Medication / Alcohol and drugs / Food)
If so, do you use different coping strategies for different languages, e.g. if you listen to
music, does it make a difference whether the lyrics are in the same or a different language to
the voices?
Support & social network
Could you tell me about any formal support you have or have tried to get with voicehearing? E.g. GP, NHS mental health services, hearing voices groups, charities or peer
support organisations? What do they do to support you?
What language do you get this support in?
Has anyone in any of these services ever asked you about the languages your voices
speak?
If yes, was that helpful? Did they use that information in the way they went on to support
you? If no, would you have liked them to? How do you think it would have made a
difference?
Can you tell me about any informal support you get from family, friends etc with your
voice-hearing - do you have people who know about it, who you talk to about it? If so in
what language?
Is there anything else I
asked about that you think is important to know about
your experience of voice-hearing?
Closing
Check in about how the participant is feeling, and whether they would like a follow-up by
email or phone in a day or two, and/or the list of support and resources on voice hearing.
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