تدريب Shadowing: English Listening Practice Podcast C1 - تعلم التحدث بالإنجليزية مع YouTube

C1
So would you rather have absolute freedom with all the responsibility or absolute chaos with the people you love?
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So would you rather have absolute freedom with all the responsibility or absolute chaos with the people you love?
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Oh, wow.
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That is the ultimate travel dilemma, isn't it?
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Right.
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It really is.
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Because when we pack our bags,
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we aren't just deciding where to go.
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We're deciding who we want to be.
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I love that way of putting it.
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Yeah.
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So welcome to this English learning podcast for a daily life,
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real conversation and easy listening practice.
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Today, we are taking a deep dive into the complex emotions and daily situations of travel.
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We are indeed.
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It's a huge topic.
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Exactly.
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And within the next chunk of time,
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we're going to explore the debate between solo and family trips.
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And here's the best part.
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We will master exactly 10 important vocabulary points along the way.
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10 points.
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That is a solid mission for today.
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Yep.
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And to you, the learner joining us,
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whether you have recently caught the travel bug,
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which is, you know, that sudden overwhelming desire to explore the world,
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or you just want to level up your conversational skills,
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this is for you.
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Absolutely.
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We really encourage you to practice speaking these phrases out loud today.
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Yeah, say them to a partner or even an AI language partner.
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Just get your mouth moving.
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So let's start with the solo trip, right?
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It's the gold standard of independence.
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It is.
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But be warned, that level of freedom comes with a hidden cost.
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Are you ready?
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Oh, I am more than ready.
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Let's get into it.
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We are starting with solo travel because it really represents that glittering ideal of freedom.
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Just you, a backpack, and the open road.
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Exactly.
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Which brings us perfectly to our first vocabulary point today.
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Point number one, spontaneous.
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Spontaneous.
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That's a great word.
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Right.
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In simple terms, this means doing things naturally,
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like without planning them in advance.
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You wake up, you feel like taking a train to a neighboring town just to find a bakery,
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and you just do it.
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And what is fascinating about being spontaneous is what it actually does to your brain.
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Wait, really?
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There's a brain science thing here.
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Oh, yeah.
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It is believed by travel experts that when you do things without a script,
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your brain releases a rush of dopamine.
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Oh, wow.
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Yeah, because there is no committee to consult.
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You don't have to ask five other people if they are hungry yet.
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You are completely untethered.
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Okay, well, let me push back on this romantic idea of being completely untethered for a second.
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Sure, go ahead.
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Which actually brings up our second vocabulary point, itinerary.
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An itinerary is your travel plan,
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like your schedule, your flights, hotel bookings, all that.
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Right, the master plan.
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Yeah, and some people have an itinerary that is completely color-coded,
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but on a solo trip,
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people say you can just throw the itinerary right out the window.
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They do say that.
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But isn't a completely loose itinerary actually just an invitation to get totally lost?
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Like, if I am in a foreign country without a plan,
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I'm not feeling free.
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I am feeling panicked.
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That is a very fair challenge.
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Yes, the panic is real.
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See?
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Thank you.
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Well, let's take a real-world example.
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Say we have a traveler.
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Let's call her Anna.
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If Anna throws away her itinerary,
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getting completely lost is almost guaranteed.
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Oh, boy.
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She will end up at the wrong train station,
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staring at a board full of delayed buses, menus she doesn't understand.
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And her MAP app is spinning,
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and her phone is at 4% battery.
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Yes.
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That is literally my nightmare.
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You are entirely on your own.
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It is terrifying initially, but the magic happens in the resolution when you were forced to figure it out yourself.
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Because you have no other choice.
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Exactly.
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When you finally asked a stranger for directions or decipher that train schedule,
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you rewire your brain's threat response system.
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Oh, that makes sense.
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You build something psychologists call quiet confidence.
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It isn't loud bravery.
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It is just the internal realization that you can handle adult problems without the training wheels.
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I love that.
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Quiet confidence.
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It's like you survive the 4% battery incident and suddenly you can conquer the world.
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Precisely.
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But hold on, because life is never that simple, is it?
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Yeah.
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Let's introduce point number three, be torn between.
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Ah, yes.
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A very common feeling.
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Right.
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To be torn between means wanting two different things and finding it really hard to choose.
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You are in an emotional tug of war.
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It is believed that this is the most universal solo travel experience.
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You are on top of a mountain looking at a beautiful sunset.
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Sounds perfect.
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It is, but you wanted the peaceful solo hike,
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and at the exact same time,
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you were torn between that freedom and wanting your best friend standing next to you to share it.
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Oh, yeah, that emotional tug of war.
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And it gets so much heavier when the sun goes down, doesn't it?
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The evening shift changes everything.
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Right.
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During the day, that quiet confidence is your superpower.
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But what happens when the sun goes down and that beautiful silence turns into something a little darker?
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Well, humans are fundamentally social creatures.
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During the daytime, the world is a playground.
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Museums, busy streets.
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Lots of distractions.
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Exactly.
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But when evening comes, the cafes turn into intimate candlelit dinners.
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Which introduces vocabulary point number four, isolating.
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Isolating.
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That is a heavy word.
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It is.
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And it's crucial to understand that isolating is very different from simply being alone.
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Being alone can be peaceful,
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but feeling isolated means feeling alone in a deeply uncomfortable, lonely way.
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Right.
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A great way to understand this is to think about a radio.
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Okay, a radio.
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Yeah.
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Solo travel isolation isn't just a quiet room.
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It is like being in a crowded laughing room where everyone else is tuned into the exact same radio frequency.
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And your radio is broken.
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Exactly.
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You can clearly see the connection happening around you,
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but you cannot tune into it.
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That is the perfect metaphor.
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It's like a movie scene.
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You're the cool traveler writing in a journal,
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but by the third night, that cinematic illusion shatters.
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Reality sets in.
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Yeah, you look around at families laughing and you're just looking at your drink like,
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poor little glass of juice.
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It's just you and me carrying the whole conversation.
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That is when you start to feel lost in translation.
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Yes.
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When you can't understand the language or how to connect,
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you feel completely cut off.
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It is painful, but it serves a biological purpose.
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It is believed that this discomfort is incredibly honest.
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Your brain is performing a social audit.
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Wait, a social audit?
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What does that mean?
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It teaches you exactly what kind of warmth and company you actually miss.
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You realize, oh, wow, I actually miss my annoying brother.
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Huh.
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That is a phenomenal way to look at it.
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The loneliness is a tool.
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Exactly.
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Now, before we pivot from that quiet,
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isolating table, for one, over to the complete opposites,
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I want to pause for a second.
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Listener, if you are enjoying this deep dive into real-world English,
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please take a second to like,
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share, and subscribe right now.
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Yes, please do.
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Your support really helps us.
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It really does.
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So, if the quiet of solo travel can feel isolating,
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what happens when you add six hungry relatives and one rental car?
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Oh, we go from silence to absolute chaos.
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Yes.
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Welcome to the family trip.
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And this brings up phrases that are absolutely vital for social settings.
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Let's introduce point number five, compromise.
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And point number six, negotiate.
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Very important words for group travel.
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Super important.
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A compromise is a middle solution where everyone gives up a little.
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And to negotiate means discussing carefully to reach an agreement.
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Because you are no longer managing a solo experience,
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you are managing a collective ecosystem.
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A collective ecosystem.
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Sounds like marine biology.
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Well, think about it.
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Six different people means six different blood sugar levels and social batteries.
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One person wakes up at 6 a.m with maximum energy.
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And another person's brain doesn't turn on until noon.
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But wait, I have to interject.
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You call it negotiating, but trying to decide where to eat with six hungry people isn't a negotiation.
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It's an international crisis.
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It certainly feels like a crisis.
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And this is exactly why every group develops a travel manager.
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Let's call him Jake.
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Oh, boy.
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Yes.
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The classic travel manager the person who suddenly becomes very powerful at the airport yelling,
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passport, bag, water, move.
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Jake takes control because chaos threatens the itinerary.
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Right.
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But to survive the travel manager,
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the group has to use vocabulary point number seven, considerate.
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Being considerate means actively thinking about other people's needs.
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Which ties into point number eight, cater to.
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To cater to someone means providing what they need or adjusting to suit them.
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Give me an example of how catering to works in the real world.
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Sure.
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Let's say you are traveling with an older parent who needs to sit down.
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Jake wants to rush to the next museum.
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But you must cater to the person with the lowest physical limit.
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So you have to stop and sit on a bench,
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which probably drives Jake crazy.
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At first, yes.
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But here is the fascinating twist.
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Group travel forces deceleration.
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You slow down.
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Oh, I see.
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And while you are sitting on that bench catering to someone else,
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you start watching the locals.
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Those slower moments almost always become the most meaningful.
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Wow, but what about the arguments?
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You might think solo trips give you the best memories,
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but wait until you hear why family arguments actually make the best stories.
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It comes down to shared history.
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When you are alone, your memories are like a private journal.
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Quiet memories.
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But a family trip is a loud shared story.
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It's arguing for 40 minutes about which train to take,
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only to realize Jake was holding the map upside down the entire time.
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Exactly.
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And in the moment, it is miserable.
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Your bodies are flooded with cortisol.
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But 10 years later, you are laughing about the upside down map.
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Why is that?
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Because when you finally figure it out together,
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the relief releases dopamine and oxytocin.
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Overcoming the obstacle literally bonds you.
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The adversity becomes the glue.
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The adversity becomes the glue.
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Brilliant.
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But sometimes you don't want the stress of planning at all.
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Which brings us to point number nine, tag along.
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A great phrase.
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To tag along means joining someone else's plan without organizing it yourself.
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You just say, hey, I'm just here to tag along.
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Just tell me what time to be in the lobby.
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It is the ultimate way to get the shared history without the cortisol spike.
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Exactly.
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Now, listener, we have covered so much emotional ground,
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but the most valuable thing you can do right now is actively practice.
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We need to solidify these pathways in the brain.
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Yep.
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So now it's your turn to speak out loud with us.
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We are going to do a rapid-fire practice for these nine words.
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I will describe a situation,
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you identify the word, and we will say it slowly for the listener to practice.
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I am ready.
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Bring on the scenarios.
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Okay, situation one.
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You wake up, you don't have a plan,
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and you just let the day happen.
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That is being spontaneous.
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Listener, practice with us.
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Spontaneous.
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Nice.
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Sentence.
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We took a spontaneous walk.
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Situation two.
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Jake has a color-coded schedule of the trip.
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That is an itinerary.
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Say it slowly.
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Itin-ray.
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Sentence.
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Let's check the itinerary.
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Situation three, you want the beach and the mountains and you cannot decide.
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You are torn between, say it out loud, be torn between.
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I am torn between the pasta and the pizza.
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Situation four, you are in a crowded restaurant alone and you feel a heavy loneliness.
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That is isolating, practice it, isolating.
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Eating by yourself can feel isolating.
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Situation five, you want Italian,
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your friend wants sushi, so you find a place that has both.
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You reach a compromise, speak it with me, compromise.
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We made a compromise.
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Situation six.
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You are discussing a taxi fare to get a fair price.
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You negotiate.
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Say it clearly.
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Negotiate.
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We had to negotiate the price.
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Situation seven.
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You hold the door open because someone has heavy bags.
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You are considerate.
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Let's practice.
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Consider eight.
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It is considerate to hold the door.
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Situation eight.
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Your dad's knees hurt so the group slows down for him.
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You cater to him.
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Say it out loud, cater to.
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This restaurant can cater to allergies.
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And finally, situation nine.
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Your friends plan to hike and you just want to follow them.
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You tag along.
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Speak it with us.
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Tag along.
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Do you mind if I tag along?
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Outstanding work, listener.
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Yes, great job.
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We've given you nine important points today,
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but we promised you ten.
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Stay with us because the final word is our special bonus that holds the true secret to travel.
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We explored unscripted freedom and bonded chaos,
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but neither extreme is healthy forever,
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which is why our tenth bonus word is strike a balance.
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Strike a balance.
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Finding the healthy middle point.
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You don't have to choose just one type of travel forever.
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You just need to know if your heart needs peace or people right now.
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That is so true.
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So to wrap up, we want to leave you with a final thought to mull over.
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Next time you pack a bag,
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ask yourself, do you want to find out who you are
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when you are alone or who you are when you are together?
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Wow, that is the real question.
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Well, thank you for joining us today.
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Please write, I am consistent in the comment box below so we know you made it to the end.
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Showing up is how progress is made.
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And please leave us some feedback.
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Which kind of topic you want next video.
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Yes, tell us.
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And hey, if you like this video and if you want to read article about English,
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go in the description box there.
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I have provided a link.
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If you will subscribe once,
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you will receive a free article in your email for free every time.
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It is a fantastic resource.
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Absolutely.
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If you enjoyed this podcast,
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there are many more podcasts on my channel.
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Go check them out and binge watch your favorites.
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See you next time.

تنزيل التطبيق

تقييم بالذكاء الاصطناعي لكل جملة تنطقها

TRENDING

الأكثر شعبية

السياق والخلفية

في فيديو "البودكاست لممارسة الاستماع باللغة الإنجليزية C1"، يتم تناول مواضيع معقدة تتعلق بالسفر وتجارب الحياة اليومية. يتحدث المتحدثون عن الاختيارات التي تواجه الأشخاص عند السفر، مثل تحديد ما إذا كانوا يريدون السفر بمفردهم أو مع العائلة. هذه المناقشات تعكس الشعور بالحرية والاستقلالية وكذلك العلاقات العاطفية، مما يجعلها مناسبة جداً لتحسين مهارات المحادثة باللغة الإنجليزية.

أفضل 5 عبارات للتواصل اليومي

  • نحن نستكشف. - تعبير يستخدم لدعوة شخص ما للانضمام إلى مناقشة.
  • مغامرة عفوية. - تعبير يشير إلى اتخاذ قرارات سريعة وغير مخطط لها.
  • خيارات السفر. - عبارة مهمة تُستخدم للإشارة إلى الأنواع المختلفة من الرحلات.
  • شغف السفر. - تعبير يُستخدم لوصف الرغبة القوية في السفر والاستكشاف.
  • الاستقلالية. - عبارة تعبر عن حرية اتخاذ القرارات بمفردك.

دليل خطوة بخطوة لطريقة التظليل

لتتمكن من استيعاب المحتوى وتحسين النطق باللغة الإنجليزية، يمكنك اتباع طريقة التظليل أو shadowspeak بهذه الخطوات:

  1. استمع إلى البودكاست مرة واحدة بالكامل لفهم الموضوع العام وتدفق الحديث.
  2. قم بتكرار العبارات الرئيسية بعد سماعها مباشرة. هذا سيساعد على تحسين النطق باللغة الإنجليزية.
  3. ركز على نبرة الصوت والإيقاع عندما تكرر العبارات. حاول تقليد المتحدثين بأفضل شكل ممكن.
  4. سجل نفسك أثناء ممارسة المحادثة الإنجليزية. استمع إلى نفسك وقارن طرق نطقك بنطق المتحدثين الأصليين.
  5. مارس هذه العبارات مع شريك لغوي أو حتى مع ذكاء اصطناعي. حاول دمج الكلمات والعبارات في محادثاتك اليومية.

استخدام طريقة التظليل في الإنجليزية سيساعدك على تعزيز فهمك للغة وثقتك بنفسك في المحادثات. اجعل ممارسة المحادثة الإنجليزية جزءً من روتينك اليومي لتصل إلى نتائج ملحوظة.

ما هي تقنية التظليل الصوتي؟

التظليل الصوتي (Shadowing) تقنية تعلم لغة مدعومة علمياً، طُورت أصلاً لتدريب المترجمين الفوريين المحترفين. الطريقة بسيطة لكنها قوية: تستمع لصوت إنجليزي أصلي وتكرره فوراً بصوت عالٍ — كظل يتبع المتحدث بتأخير 1-2 ثانية. تُظهر الأبحاث تحسناً كبيراً في دقة النطق والتنغيم والإيقاع وربط الأصوات والاستماع والطلاقة.

اشترِ لنا قهوة