تدريب Shadowing: Why You Keep Failing At Self Discipline? | English & Chill with Jennie | English Podcast - تعلم التحدث بالإنجليزية مع YouTube

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Hi, my dear friends!
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It's Jenny here.
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If this is your first time visiting the channel, welcome!
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I'm really happy you found your way here.
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This is a gentle little space where we learn,
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reflect, and grow together through English,
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everyday life, and honest conversations.
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And if you've been here for a while thank you for coming back
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and staying with me sometimes the hardest part of growth isn't starting it's what we say to ourselves
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when we stop a missed plan a skipped habit one day
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that didn't go the way we wanted and suddenly our inner voice becomes much harsher than it needs to be
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and that brings me to something i want to ask you today have you ever said this to yourself
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Why can't I just be more disciplined?
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Maybe after skipping a workout.
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Maybe after not following the study plan you made.
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Maybe after telling yourself, this time I'll really change,
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and then stopping again a few days later.
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If that sounds familiar, I want to start with something important.
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Maybe it's not a discipline problem.
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A lot of people are much harder on themselves than they need to be.
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They miss a few days.
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They lose momentum.
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And immediately, the mind starts talking.
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I'm lazy.
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I have no discipline.
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Other people can do this.
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Why can't I?
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But what if that story is wrong?
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Let me describe a moment that might feel very real.
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It's Sunday night.
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You feel inspired.
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Maybe you watched something motivating.
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Maybe you just had one of those quiet moments where you realize something needs to change.
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So you open your notebook,
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you write a plan, wake up early,
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exercise, study, no distractions, a perfect schedule.
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And in that moment, it feels powerful,
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like your life is finally about to change.
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Monday goes well, Tuesday feels okay, Wednesday gets harder.
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By Thursday, work is heavier than expected.
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Your energy is lower.
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You skip one thing, then another.
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By the weekend, the plan is gone.
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And then comes the part that hurts the most, the self-judgment.
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I failed again.
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But let me say something a little sharp.
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Failing a plan does not mean you failed yourself.
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Sometimes the plan was the problem, not you.
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Because many people confuse discipline with intensity.
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They think being disciplined means changing everything at once.
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More habits, more rules, more pressure.
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But pressure is not discipline.
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Pressure often creates resistance, especially when your mind and body are already tired.
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Let me be honest here.
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There were times I thought I needed more discipline too.
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But when I looked closer,
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what I actually needed was more honesty.
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Honesty about my energy, my schedule, my emotional state.
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Because discipline built on unrealistic expectations almost always breaks.
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Not because you're weak.
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Because it wasn't built for real life.
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Real discipline is much quieter than people think.
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It doesn't always look intense.
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Sometimes it looks like doing one small thing even on a difficult day.
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Sometimes it looks like keeping one promise to yourself.
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Sometimes it looks like restarting without shame.
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And that's why I want you to hear this clearly.
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You are not broken because a plan didn't work.
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You are learning what kind of system actually fits your life.
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That's not failure, that's information.
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And once you stop blaming yourself,
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you finally create space to build something sustainable.
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because discipline isn't about becoming someone perfect.
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It's about becoming someone consistent in small, honest ways.
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And maybe what you need right now isn't more pressure.
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Maybe what you need is a different approach.
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A more human one.
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A more realistic one.
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One that works even when life gets messy.
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Let's talk about something almost everyone experiences.
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The beginning feels easy.
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almost strangely easy.
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Day one, you feel excited.
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You wake up earlier.
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You follow the plan.
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You feel proud.
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And somewhere in your mind, a thought appears.
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Maybe this time I've finally changed.
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Day 2 still feels good.
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Day 3, still manageable.
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But then something shifts.
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Day 4 feels heavier.
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Day 5 feels annoying.
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By day 7, even the smallest task starts to feel difficult.
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And that's usually the moment people say,
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see, I have no discipline.
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But that's not the real story.
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The real story is that motivation often tricks you at the beginning.
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Let me explain.
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At the start of any new habit,
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your brain gets energy from novelty.
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New things feel exciting.
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A fresh routine.
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A clean notebook.
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A new version of yourself in your imagination.
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That image creates emotional momentum.
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You're not only doing the habit,
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you're feeling the possibility of becoming someone better.
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And honestly, that feeling can be beautiful, but it doesn't last.
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Because motivation is emotional.
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And emotions move.
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They rise, they fall, they change with sleep,
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stress, weather, work, even one bad conversation.
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So when motivation fades, many people think something is wrong.
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But actually, something completely normal is happening.
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The emotion that helped you start is stepping back.
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And now the real habit begins.
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Let me give you a very human example.
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A listener once told me she started waking up at 6am to study English.
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The first three mornings felt amazing.
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Quiet room, hot coffee, fresh mind.
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She even texted a friend saying,
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I think I finally found my routine.
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Then Thursday happened.
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She slept late the night before.
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Work was exhausting.
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The alarm rang, and her first thought was not motivation.
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It was, no, not today.
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She stayed in bed, and the next thing she told herself was even more important.
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I ruined it.
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where many people lose the habit,
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not on the missed day,
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but in the meaning they attach to it.
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One hard morning becomes, I always fail.
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One missed workout becomes, I'm not disciplined.
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But the truth is much simpler.
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The beginning was powered by excitement.
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The middle requires intention.
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And those are two different things.
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Motivation helps you start.
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Discipline helps you continue when the feeling is gone.
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So if the first few days felt easy and now it feels harder,
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that doesn't mean you're failing.
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It means you've reached the real part,
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the part where growth actually begins.
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And honestly, this is the moment that matters most.
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Because anyone can move when when they feel inspired.
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Real change happens when you keep moving without the feeling.
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There's a pattern I see again and again when people talk about discipline.
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And honestly, it's one of the biggest reasons habits fall apart.
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Too much, too soon.
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It usually starts with a strong emotional moment,
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a Sunday night promise, a motivational video,
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a frustrating day that makes you think Something has to change.
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And in that moment, you decide to change everything.
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Wake up earlier.
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Go to the gym.
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Eat healthier.
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Study every day.
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Use your phone less.
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Sleep on time.
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Read before bed.
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Drink more water.
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Become a whole new person by Monday morning.
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At first, it feels powerful.
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Like you're finally taking control.
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But let me say something a little direct.
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Trying to change your whole life in one day is often just a more organized way of setting yourself up to fail.
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Because your mind may be excited,
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but your lifestyle hasn't changed yet.
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Your energy hasn't changed.
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Your environment hasn't changed.
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Your habits haven't changed.
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Only your expectations have.
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And that gap creates pressure.
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Let me share a small, real story.
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A friend of mine once decided he was tired of feeling unproductive.
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So one night, he made a new plan.
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Wake up at 5.30.
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Morning workout.
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Healthy breakfast.
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No social media.
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Two hours of deep work before 9 a.m.
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Reading at night.
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Sleep by 10.
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Honestly, it looked impressive.
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The kind of plan that makes you feel like life is about to transform.
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Monday went well.
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Tuesday was harder.
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By Wednesday, he was exhausted.
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He skipped the workout, checked his phone, stayed up late.
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And by Friday, the whole system was gone.
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When we talked about it,
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he said something many people say.
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I just don't have discipline.
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But that wasn't true.
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The real issue was overload.
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He didn't fail because he lacked discipline.
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He failed because he gave himself six new battles at the same time.
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That's the hidden pattern.
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People don't usually fail at discipline.
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They fail at volume.
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Too many changes.
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Too many rules.
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Too much pressure all at once.
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And here's what makes this tricky.
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Doing more feels serious.
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It feels like commitment.
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But sustainable discipline usually begins much smaller.
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One habit.
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One promise.
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One repeatable action.
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Not ten.
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Let me say something honest.
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A smaller system may not feel exciting.
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It doesn't look dramatic.
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It won't give you that new life starts tomorrow feeling, but it works.
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Because real discipline is not built through emotional intensity.
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It's built through repetition.
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One small thing repeated long enough to become part of who you are.
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So maybe the question is not,
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how do I become more disciplined?
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Maybe it's, what am I trying to change too quickly?
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because sometimes the problem is not your effort.
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It's that you're asking too much from yourself too soon.
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And once you see that,
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everything becomes more human, more realistic, and much more possible.
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Here's something I really want you to hear.
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Discipline does not grow from pressure.
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It grows from identity.
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And that small shift changes everything Because pressure sounds like this.
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You have to do better.
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You need to stop failing.
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Why can't you be like other people?
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That voice may sound motivating at first,
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but over time it becomes heavy.
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It creates shame, resistance, and honestly, exhaustion.
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Pressure can force action for a short time,
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but it rarely creates lasting change.
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Identity works differently.
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Identity sounds more like this.
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I am someone who keeps small promises.
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I am someone who shows up, even imperfectly.
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I am someone who comes back.
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Let me explain with something very real.
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Imagine two people both want to start exercising.
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The first person says, I need to force myself to work out every day.
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That's pressure.
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The second person says, I want to become someone who takes care of my body.
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That's identity.
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The action may look similar at the beginning.
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Both go to the gym.
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Both follow a plan.
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But internally, it feels completely different.
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One is driven by a fear of failure.
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The other is guided by a sense of self.
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And identity is always stronger than pressure,
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because pressure disappears when emotions change.
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Identity stays.
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Let me share a small example.
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A listener once told me she struggled with studying English consistently.
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She would start with big plans,
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then stop, then blame herself, then start again.
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The cycle kept repeating.
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One day, instead of making a strict schedule,
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she changed the way she talked to herself.
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She stopped saying, I need to study every day,
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and started saying, I'm becoming someone who learns a little every day.
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That small language shift changed something.
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Missing one day no longer felt like failure,
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because her identity didn't disappear.
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She was still that person.
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She just needed to return.
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And that's powerful.
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Because identity allows imperfection.
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Pressure does not.
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Pressure says you failed.
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Identity says come back tomorrow.
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Let me be honest.
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There were times I thought discipline meant being hard on myself.
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But the harder I pushed, the more I resisted.
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What actually helped was building trust with myself,
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keeping small promises, very small ones.
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10 minutes, one task, one honest return after a missed day.
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That's how discipline starts to feel natural,
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not like punishment, but like self-respect.
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And maybe that's the line that stays with you today.
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Discipline is not self-punishment.
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It's self-trust in action.
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The more you repeat that trust,
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the more it becomes part of who you are.
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Not something you do, but someone you become.
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There's one idea I really want to leave with you today.
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Maybe the reason you keep failing at self-discipline is not because you keep stopping.
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Maybe it's because every time you begin again, you begin too big.
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You call it a fresh start,
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a new routine, a better version of yourself.
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But sometimes, it's just the same pressure wearing a different outfit.
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Let me say something gently.
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You do not need another dramatic restart.
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You need a smaller beginning.
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Because discipline is not built in big emotional moments.
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It is built in ordinary repetition,
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the kind that almost feels too small to matter.
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A 10-minute study session, one workout,
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one honest no to a distraction,
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one task finished before checking your phone, that's it.
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And I know… part of your mind might say, that's too small.
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But honestly, that thought is exactly what keeps many people stuck.
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They underestimate small actions, then overestimate big plans.
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And the cycle repeats.
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Start big.
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Feel inspired.
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Miss a day.
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Feel ashamed.
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Start over.
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But what if this time, you didn't start over?
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What if you simply continued… smaller?
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Let me give you a real example.
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A friend of mine once kept trying to build a reading habit.
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Every month, he made the same promise.
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Read one hour every night.
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And every month, it collapsed after a few days.
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One evening, he changed just one thing.
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Instead of an hour, he told himself, just read two pages.
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That's it.
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Two pages.
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At first, it felt almost silly.
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Too easy.
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But something important happened.
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He actually did it.
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Every night.
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And after a few weeks, the habit felt natural.
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Some nights he still read only two pages.
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Other nights he kept going.
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But the key was this.
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The habit no longer felt heavy.
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It felt possible.
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And possible is powerful.
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Because possible gets repeated.
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And repeated actions become identity.
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Let me bring this back to you.
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You do not need to prove anything through discipline.
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You do not need to punish yourself into becoming better.
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You need a system gentle enough to survive real life.
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Busy days.
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Low energy days.
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Imperfect days.
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Because those days are not exceptions.
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They are life.
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So maybe the better question is not,
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how do I become more disciplined?
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Maybe it's, what is the smallest promise I can actually keep tomorrow?
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Stay with that question.
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And if today's episode helped you feel a little less broken,
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a little more understood, and a little more ready to begin again in a healthier way,
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I'd love for you to stay with this journey.
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Subscribe to the channel so we can keep growing together,
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not through pressure, but through small, honest progress.
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Thank you for being here.
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Take care of yourself, keep learning,
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and I'll see you in the next episode.

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أفضل 5 عبارات للتواصل اليومي

  • لماذا لا أستطيع أن أكون أكثر انضباطًا؟ - تعبر عن الإحباط الذي نشعر به عندما لا نلتزم بخططنا.
  • أشعر أنني كسول. - عبارة شائعة تعكس عدم الرضا عن الأداء الشخصي.
  • يستطيع الآخرون القيام بذلك، لماذا لا أستطيع؟ - تعكس القلق والمقارنة مع الآخرين.
  • الخطة كانت مشكلة، وليس أنا. - تذكير بأن الخطط غير الواقعية يمكن أن تؤدي إلى الفشل.
  • التغيير يحتاج إلى وقت. - علامة على أهمية الصبر خلال عملية نمو وتعلم.

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لتحسين النطق باللغة الإنجليزية من خلال طريقة التظليل، يمكنك اتباع الخطوات التالية:

  1. استمع بعناية: ابدأ بمشاهدة الفيديو، وركز على كيفية نطق الكلمات والعبارات.
  2. استخدم خاصية الإيقاف المؤقت: توقف بعد كل عبارة حاول تكرار ما سمعته بصوت عال.
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باستخدام طريقة التظليل في الإنجليزية، يمكنك تعزيز مهاراتك اللغوية في بيئة غير رسمية ومشجعة. تعلم الإنجليزية مع يوتيوب واستمتع بتجربة تعليمية ديناميكية وفعالة.

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.

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