تدريب Shadowing: High-Value Hobbies Everyone Should Master, Start Today - تعلم التحدث بالإنجليزية مع YouTube

B2
20 years ago, people had hobbies.
⏸ متوقف مؤقتاً
171 جمل
إذا كانت الجمل قصيرة أو طويلة جدًا، انقر على Edit لتعديلها.
1
20 years ago, people had hobbies.
2
Now they have a screen.
3
The average person now spends 70 hours a week staring at a screen.
4
That's not just wasting time, it's slowly destroying our brain.
5
I went from a homeless teen to an MIT grad to building and advising companies worth billions.
6
Somewhere in that journey, I almost lost every hobby I ever loved.
7
But I also saw a pattern.
8
The most successful people fiercely protect their seemingly useless hobbies.
9
Because that's their best defense against brain rot.
10
In this video, I'll show you why hobbies matter more than ever, how they retrain your brain for success and fulfillment,
11
and share a four-part framework for choosing hobbies that can help you change your life and your career.
12
The first thing we need to understand is that brain rot isn't what you think it is.
13
Our brains are under a two-stage attack.
14
Research from Nielsen reported that Americans spend 70 hours a week consuming media across different screens.
15
That's about 10 hours a day.
16
Our screens have become our full-time employers and they pay us in brain rot.
17
We're all facing the same dangerous challenge and that's
18
because the social media we consume is programmed to give you rapid dopamine hits.
19
Now there are three side effects of social media.
20
First, our brain starts craving more of those hits.
21
So we start needing more hits for the same mental rewards.
22
Second side effect, we start focusing more on sharing versus caring.
23
You go to any concert nowadays or watch the sunset on a beach
24
and you'll see people around you watching it through their phones.
25
We're not enjoying our experiences, we're just camera operators for our followers.
26
And this leads to the most depressing third side effect, anhedonia.
27
It's a clinical term about our inability to feel pleasure from normal things.
28
But that is only the first stage attack.
29
There is an equally alarming second stage attack happening, AI.
30
Social media changes our attention.
31
AI changes our agency.
32
Microsoft just studied over 300 professionals and found something kind of terrifying.
33
When people are overconfident in AI, they basically turn off their own brains.
34
They stop double checking their work and their critical thinking just shuts down.
35
It's like you're sending someone else to the gym and then wondering why your own health isn't improving.
36
AI doesn't outsource your tasks, it outsources your mind, your agency.
37
And in this world of hyper-stimulated junk food, Hobbies are the nutritional meal.
38
So why are your hobbies so important to your brain?
39
I recently recorded a meeting with my team and I was listening to the playback and I was just horrified.
40
My thoughts were jumping around mid-sentence, rambling, I had no coherence.
41
I realized that my brain had become a mirror of my TikTok feed, totally fragmented.
42
Sitting there with my headphone on, I literally yelled at myself and said, come on, stop babbling, get to the actual question.
43
That was a wake-up call.
44
If you don't keep training for focus, you're gonna lose it.
45
Your brain doesn't adapt or grow when you're comfortable.
46
It adapts when reality surprises you.
47
No surprise, no change.
48
So when you're scrolling your feed like a zombie or let AI write your essay or your strategy document, there is no struggle.
49
There is no surprise.
50
There is no discovery, no upgrade.
51
I call it deepfake mastery.
52
It looks great, but it's not real.
53
You know, in medicine, if you put an arm in a cast for six months, the muscle will atrophy.
54
It'll literally degenerate.
55
It'll eat itself.
56
And then when the cast comes off, you're going to need rehab to even open your wrists.
57
Hobbies are your rehab.
58
When you're cooking, you'll make a mess.
59
You'll play an instrument.
60
You'll miss a note.
61
A hobby allows you to struggle, to be surprised.
62
It forces your brain to upgrade.
63
Now, if you're ambitious and you're successful or you're trying to be successful, you're probably going to feel guilty about your time spent on hobbies.
64
Our 24-7 culture tells us that hobbies are selfish,
65
that they're extra, that time you spend working on yourself is time stolen from work or from the people who need you.
66
Nothing could be further than the truth.
67
And the proof comes from an unlikely place.
68
Researchers at Michigan State spent 20 years studying 773 Nobel Prize winners.
69
What they found was, well, surprising.
70
Nobel Prize winners had three times more serious hobbies than their peers,
71
and they were nine times more likely to have formal training in crafts or fine arts or music.
72
For the world's most capable minds, hobbies weren't a guilty break from their work.
73
it fueled their work.
74
But then the question is, how do you pick the right hobbies?
75
For that, you need a framework.
76
And we're going to use the vibe framework.
77
Every thriving, high-performing individual needs these four pillars.
78
Vitality.
79
Are you running on empty?
80
Then pick a hobby that gets your heart rate up.
81
Dance class, Pilates, tracking, martial arts, climbing, pickleball, all fit here.
82
Are you easily bored?
83
Then pick a hobby that forces you to be a beginner again.
84
Learn a new language, play chess, take a course, belonging.
85
Do you have a real community or just a list of contacts?
86
Try a hobby that weaves you into a tribe, a running club or a band, a nonprofit, a local book club,
87
coaching little kids, and finally the fourth pillar, expression.
88
Do you consume more than create?
89
Then try a hobby that pulls something from inside of you and puts it out into the world.
90
Photography, painting, playing an instrument, pottery, writing, cooking, this one can be a long list.
91
So whether your guilt is, I should be working all the time, or I should be taking care of someone else, this is your answer.
92
Work on yourself first.
93
And one tiny observation about this, your hobbies don't have to fit neatly into one of those four quadrants.
94
Painting, for example, can be an inquiry and an expression.
95
For me, when I used to play in the band, it used to hit all four quadrants for me simultaneously.
96
So what's the action item?
97
You don't have to overthink it.
98
Pick one or two hobbies that you love, apply the framework to see where they fit, if they fit, and then follow the rule of three.
99
Do it three times and see if you want to commit to it.
100
If it's not a good fit, pick something else.
101
Make sure you pick a hobby you'll actually do with full attention because you don't pick a hobby just to escape.
102
You choose it to come back to yourself.
103
Now, what's the best way to keep a hobby going?
104
Focus on play, not on performance.
105
This is the fastest way to kill a hobby.
106
Hobbies are your rehab.
107
Don't turn rehab into a performance review.
108
The moment your hobby becomes a scoreboard, it becomes a grind that won't restore you.
109
The fastest way to kill a hobby is to post about it.
110
The second you bring an audience into the room, you stop playing for yourself and you start performing for them.
111
You're literally outsourcing your joy to the algorithm.
112
You know, it's like going to Paris
113
and spending the whole time taking a selfie with the portrait of Mona Lisa
114
so you can show the world you were there and you're still trapped behind the same screen.
115
So the key question I think is who this hobby is for.
116
If it is for you, you'll build.
117
If it is for them, you'll judge.
118
If your hobby feels like a performance review, then you've lost the plot.
119
So how do you actually protect the play?
120
Not by fighting the urge to go back to doom scrolling.
121
Social media is like an endless river.
122
You don't stop a river by standing in front of it.
123
You cut a new channel and let the water find its way.
124
Here's how you build that channel for yourself.
125
When you're enjoying your hobby, don't shoot it and don't post it.
126
Focus on minutes, not on metrics.
127
Start with cheap gear.
128
Don't overspend.
129
And finally, after each session, just ask one question.
130
Did I feel more alive or more judged?
131
Your hobby is where you go to be a messy, imperfect human in a world that demands you to be polished and optimized machine.
132
So yes, hobbies is how you come back to yourself
133
and it's supposed to restore you not rank you there's no win
134
or lose only the play
135
and here's what we learn from the happiest people in the world in the world happiness report in 2025
136
Finland ranked number one for the eighth time in a row and US fell to number 23, its lowest ever.
137
Now, Finland is no utopia.
138
It endures some of the longest, toughest, bleakest winters anywhere in the world.
139
But their environment is quietly built to reduce stress and increase real world experiences.
140
First, they're surrounded by nature and it's a culture of walking and biking and hiking.
141
Vitality?
142
Check.
143
Second, university education is publicly supported and affordable.
144
Inquiry?
145
Check.
146
And in that society, there is higher trust, stronger sense of community, lower inequality, belonging?
147
Check.
148
And culturally, they care less about constant competition or signaling higher status and success.
149
They create because they want to.
150
Expression?
151
Check.
152
So you see, Finland has actually built their culture around the VIBE framework.
153
And the people there are the happiest on earth.
154
The lesson is that the life you build outside of work should not be seen as a distraction.
155
It's the most irreplaceable gift you can give yourself and to everyone around you.
156
You know, machines and AI can replicate your output, but they can never replicate the life that produced it.
157
I've been thinking about this, that the more machines become like humans, the less will have to be like machines.
158
And hobbies connect you to your inner human being.
159
There is a parable that I love.
160
A traveler sees three stonemasons working very hard in the sweltering heap and they're cutting blocks of stones.
161
So he's wondering, he asks them what they're doing the first one says sir
162
can't you see i'm cutting stones the traveler turns to the
163
second one the second one says well i am earning a wage to provide for my family
164
but the third one stands up tall looks up
165
and says i'm building a cathedral same work different meaning your hobbies don't owe you productivity or followers or wages.
166
They owe you joy.
167
They bring meaning to your moments because your life is not just a pile of rocks stacked higher and higher.
168
It is a cathedral.
169
If you like this video, watch this one next.
170
It's about how to stay calm no matter what's happening around you.
171
Thank you and I love you.

تنزيل التطبيق

Everything you need to speak fluently

AI PronunciationScore every sentence
IPA PracticeMaster every sound
VocabularyBuild your word bank
Vocab GameLearn while playing

لماذا ممارسة المحادثة مع هذا الفيديو؟

إن ممارسة المحادثة من خلال مشاهدة هذا الفيديو يوفر لك فرصة فريدة لتحسين مهاراتك في التحدث باللغة الإنجليزية. يتناول المتحدث موضوعًا مهمًا يتعلق بالهوايات وتأثيرها على عقلنا، مما يمكنك من الاستفادة من سياق محادثي غني. من خلال متابعة الفيديو وإعادة صياغة النقاط الرئيسية، أنت لا تقوم فقط بتكرار ما سمعته، بل تتمرن على طريقة التعبير عن الأفكار الخاصة بك باللغة الإنجليزية. هذا سيساعدك في بناء ثقتك بنفسك عندما تتحدث، وكذلك تحسين النطق باللغة الإنجليزية بشكل كبير.

القواعد والتعبيرات في السياق

في الفيديو، استخدم المتحدث عدة تعبيرات وقواعد هامة تتعلق بالهوايات وتأثير الشاشات على عقل الشخص. إليك بعض العبارات الرئيسية:

  • “slowly destroying our brain”: تعبر هذه العبارة عن الفكرة القائلة بأن الاستهلاك المستمر للمحتوى الرقمي يمكن أن يضر بعقولنا.
  • “fiercely protect their seemingly useless hobbies”: هذه العبارة تعكس أهمية الهوايات في حياتنا، حتى لو بدت غير مهمة.
  • “our brains are under a two-stage attack”: تشير إلى التحديات المتزايدة التي تواجه أدمغتنا في العصر الحديث.

من خلال ممارسة المحادثة الإنجليزية باستخدام هذه التعبيرات، يمكنك تعزيز فهمك للقواعد وتوسيع مفرداتك.

غالبية الأخطاء في النطق

تتواجد بعض الكلمات والعبارات في الفيديو قد تكون صعبة النطق بالنسبة لمتعلمي اللغة. إليك بعض منها:

  • “dopamine”: تأكد من نطق الحرف الأول بشكل واضح.
  • “anhedonia”: هذه الكلمة قد تكون صعبة على الكثيرين، لذا ينصح بالتكرار أثناء المتابعة بالفيديو.
  • “hyper-stimulated”: التركيز على النطق الصحيح للحروف المزدوجة.

عند ممارسة المحادثة باستخدام تقنية طريقة التظليل في الإنجليزية أو ما يعرف بshadow speak, يمكنك تحسين نطقك وتقليل الأخطاء. لا تنسى استخدام shadowspeaks كوسيلة لتعزيز قدراتك في المحادثة.

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