My Story 2. The First Time I Found My Voice

Something stirred in the summer of 1968, though I didn’t recognize it as change at the time. Earlier in that year I learned why I struggle in school to read.  I was dyslexic.

 

My father enrolled me in a communication class through the Church of Scientology. It was hard. Distressing. Emotionally confronting in ways I didn’t yet have language for. My confidence was fragile, my sense of right and wrong felt skewed, and I didn’t trust myself in the world. Still, that class became the event that quietly changed my life. That and how to read as a dyslexic.

I had to pay for half of it myself. My father paid the other half.

I was worth every penny.

At the time, I didn’t see it that way. I only knew it pushed me beyond my comfort zone. It forced me to speak. To listen. To remain present instead of disappearing. What I couldn’t know then was that this was my salvation—the first real interruption of the belief that I was meant to stay silent.

That class taught me how to communicate. More than that, it taught me how profound it is simply to exist comfortably while speaking. The value of that lesson wouldn’t fully register until much later in my life, but its impact was immediate.

For the first time, I began to talk to the kids in my class.

These were the same kids I had gone to school with since third grade. The same kids who had tormented me for years. They didn’t know how to respond to this version of me. Honestly, neither did I. But I didn’t back down. I kept showing up. I kept talking.

And somehow, it worked.

My new communication skills were already working for me before I understood what they were. I began watching other kids closely—studying how they acted, how they responded, how they fit together. I had been made aware that my own behavior had often been awkward, even off-putting, and I wanted to learn. I was educating myself in how to exist among my classmates.

I wasn’t very successful at first.

Real progress didn’t come until high school, when I became best friends with Colleen Taylor. She helped me tremendously. Through her, I learned how to be more social, how to read situations, and how to soften without disappearing. As I improved, I began making more friends—but only one-on-one.

Groups were still terrifying.

In group situations, I froze. I turned red. I felt painfully self-conscious. I believe this came from being teased almost exclusively by groups, not individuals. One-on-one felt manageable. Groups felt unsafe.

With Colleen by my side, I could socialize. Without her, I felt abandoned and scared. Kids would still pick at me in subtle ways, and the old fear rushed back in. I avoided social situations unless I had Colleen—or another close friend, Janice Pando—with me.

It felt good to finally be part of a group, even if I couldn’t yet stand there alone.

I made progress. Real progress. I did almost everything with Colleen—together and in groups. She was my bridge. My safety. My proof that I could belong.

I wasn’t fully free yet.
But I was no longer silent.
And for the first time, my voice had a place to land.

Published by Paris Humble

Greetings, I am Paris Humble, daughter of Jim V. Humble the creator of MMS/ Chlorine Dioxide and all its 29 years if Health Restoration for billions, through grassroots phenomenon. I have picked up the ball where my father left off to continue his legacy and to continue to make his work available to the public who are looking for viable answers for their health. For years I’ve been quietly developing something that lights my soul on fire every single time I step onto the floor: Ecstatic Dancie – Joy Rhythm. “Dancie” is the word I coined for all of you who feel this special magic with me – because once you learn Joy Rhythm, you’re never just a “dancer” again… you’re a Dancie, a carrier of pure, contagious joy. What makes Joy Rhythm so different (and why I know it’s meant for the whole world) is that it works everywhere. You can take it to a nightclub, a wedding, a festival, a living-room gathering, or a sacred circle under the stars… and within minutes you own that floor with total confidence, zero judgment, and a smile that won’t quit. It’s simple, it’s freeing, and it instantly turns strangers into family. This is my new mission – the one my heart has been whispering ever since I was a little girl dancing life with my Dad. I’m writing my second book right now (the first one after carrying Dad’s torch) and it’s all about birthing Ecstatic Dancie Inner National – a worldwide movement of Joy Rhythm circles where families, friends, and total strangers come together in safe, loving, non-judgmental spaces to move, to laugh, to share, to connect soul-to-soul, and to remember who we really are underneath all the noise. Imagine: Joy Rhythm communities popping up in every city, every village, every country – no alcohol, no ego, no performance pressure – just pure music, movement, eye contact, and heart explosions. A global family reunion happening every week, everywhere. That’s the vision Dad taught me to dream big enough to hold real health, real freedom, real connection. So, if your body is already swaying just reading this… welcome home, Dancie. The floor is calling, and together we’re going to dance the whole world awake. I can’t wait to move with you – wherever you are. All my love and freefoot joy, Paris Humble Ecstatic Dancie Inner National – Joy Rhythm Revolution

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