We have all been there: you open your mouth to speak, and nothing comes out but a squeak or a raspy croak.

Laryngitis is often treated as a minor inconvenience—a valid excuse to skip a phone call or stay quiet during a meeting. But physiologically, it is a significant trauma to your vocal instrument. When your voice box (larynx) is inflamed, it doesn't just "turn down the volume"; it fundamentally changes the physics of how you produce sound.

Here is the breakdown of what is happening to your cords and how to navigate the silence.

1. The Physics: What Happens Inside?