Shadowing-Übung: 10 Things You Do Every Day That Build Your Baby's Brain Forever - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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Your baby will not remember most of what you say to them.
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Your baby will not remember most of what you say to them.
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They will not remember most of what you do for them.
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They will not remember the long nights,
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the early mornings, the worry,
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or the love you poured into the first three years of their life.
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That is the part most parents already know.
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What they do not know is this.
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Your baby will remember ten very specific things.
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Not in the way an adult remembers a birthday or a vacation.
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not in conscious memory, but in something much deeper,
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something neuroscientists call implicit memory,
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the kind of memory that gets stored in the body before the brain can speak.
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These ten things, repeated every day,
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become the foundation of who your child will eventually become,
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the way they will trust,
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the way they will love,
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the way they will move through the world when you are not there anymore.
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In the next 18 minutes,
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I am going to walk you through all ten.
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Some you have probably suspected.
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Others are going to surprise you.
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And the tenth one in particular is so subtle
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that almost no parent realizes how much weight it carries in their baby's developing nervous system.
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By the end of this video,
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you will understand exactly which parts of your daily routine are being recorded forever,
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and which ones are passing through unnoticed.
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Welcome to Inside the Baby Mind.
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Subscribe right now, because what comes next is something every parent deserves to know before their baby's first birthday.
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Thing one, the sound of your voice.
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Before your baby could see your face clearly,
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before they could recognize your shape,
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before they could feel the difference between your touch and anyone else's,
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they knew your voice.
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In the last trimester of pregnancy,
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your baby's auditory system is fully developed.
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They have spent months listening to you,
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your specific cadence, your specific pitch,
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the way you laugh, the way you sigh when you are tired,
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the way your voice softens when you are speaking to someone you love.
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By the time they are born,
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your voice is the most recognized sound in their entire world.
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Researchers have shown that newborns will turn their heads toward their mother's voice within hours of birth.
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They will calm faster when she speaks than when anyone else does.
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They will stop crying for her voice when no other intervention works.
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What you do not realize is that this recognition does not fade.
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It deepens.
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Every word you say to your baby in the first three
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years is being filed into a part of their brain that does not need conscious memory to function.
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The sound of your voice,
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the way it changes when you are happy or stressed,
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the specific rhythm of how you talk to them becomes the soundtrack of safety in their nervous system
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for the rest of their life.
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Thing two, the way you touch them.
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Your hands are doing something extraordinary every single day,
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something most parents never think about.
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A baby's nervous system uses touch to learn what safety feels like,
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not as a concept, as a sensation.
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The pressure of your hand on their back,
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the way you hold them when you pick them up,
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the way you support their head when you carry them,
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the temperature of your skin when you hold them close.
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All of these are being recorded as the baseline for what safe physical contact feels like.
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This is why babies cry differently when they are held by different people.
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They are not being dramatic.
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Their nervous system is reading the new touch and registering the difference.
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Yours is the touch they know,
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the touch that was there from the very first hour.
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By age three, your child will not consciously remember any specific moment of being held by you,
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but their body will remember.
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The way they relax when you hug them as a teenager.
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The comfort they find in physical closeness with the people they love as adults.
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The safety they feel when they are touched by someone they trust,
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all of it is being built right now, by your hands.
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Thing 3.
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The way you respond when they cry.
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This one matters more than almost any other thing on this list.
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When a baby cries, they are not manipulating you,
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they are not testing you,
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they are signaling that something is wrong and their entire nervous system is watching to see what happens next.
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If you respond consistently, if you come close,
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if you pick them up,
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if you check what is needed,
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their brain is building a foundational belief about the world—the belief that when something is wrong, help comes.
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That distress is followed by relief.
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That the world is fundamentally responsive.
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If you do not respond,
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if you let them cry without intervention because you have been told that will teach them independence,
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their brain is building a different belief.
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The belief that distress signals do not work,
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that they have to manage difficult feelings alone,
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that the world is not always responsive when they need it.
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This belief, formed in the first three years,
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becomes the template for every relationship they will have for the rest of their life,
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the way they will reach out for help as adults,
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the way they will trust their partners,
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the way they will parent their own children one day.
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What you do in those first three years,
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every time they cry, is not just about that moment.
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It is about who they will be when they are 30,
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40, 50 years old, navigating the relationships of their entire adult life.
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Thing four, the expression on your face when you look at them.
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Your baby is studying your face hundreds of times a day, maybe thousands.
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In the first two years of life,
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the human face is the single most important object in a baby's visual field.
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They watch your eyes.
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They read your mouth.
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They scan your eyebrows for tension.
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They notice the tiniest shifts in your expression that adults rarely consciously detect.
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What they are reading is one specific thing.
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Am I welcome here?
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When your face lights up as they enter the room,
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their nervous system records welcome.
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When your face is tense or distracted,
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their nervous system records caution.
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When your face is neutral and unresponsive,
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their nervous system records absence.
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None of this is happening at the level of words or thoughts.
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It is happening at the level of biological data.
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Their brain is building a map of which faces feel safe,
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and yours is the central reference point.
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The face you wear when you look at them in the small,
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ordinary moments—when you walk into the nursery in the morning,
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when you turn to them at the dinner table,
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when you glance at them
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while you are doing something else—that face becomes the home base they will return to emotionally for the rest of their life.
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Thing 5.
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How you respond to their bids for connection.
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Throughout the day, your baby is making small requests for connection—a sound,
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a look, a reach, a facial expression.
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Researchers call these bids, and they are the building blocks of attachment.
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What you do in the seconds after each bid matters more than you realize.
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When you respond, when you meet their eyes,
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when you mirror their sound,
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when you smile back, their nervous system registers something fundamental.
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The world responds when I reach out.
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My signals are received.
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I am seen.
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When you do not respond,
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when you are scrolling, When you are tired,
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when you are looking somewhere else,
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their nervous system registers something different.
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My signal did not work.
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I am not always seen.
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You will miss bits.
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Every parent does.
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The goal is not to catch every single one.
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The goal is to catch enough of them,
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consistently enough, that your baby's brain builds the belief that connection is possible.
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This belief, formed quietly through thousands of small moments,
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becomes the foundation of every relationship they will ever have,
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every friendship, every romantic partnership,
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every connection with their own future children.
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If this video is opening your eyes,
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take two seconds to subscribe.
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Thing 6.
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The sound of your laughter.
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Most parents underestimate the power of this one.
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Babies remember laughter not as sound, but as feeling.
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The vibration in your chest when you laugh while holding them.
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The way your whole body shakes when something delights you.
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The specific tone of joy in your voice.
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Laughter is one of the earliest emotional signatures a baby learns.
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They know what makes you laugh.
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They know how often you laugh.
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They know whether laughter is part of the soundscape of their daily life or whether it is rare.
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Children who grow up in households with frequent,
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easy laughter develop different stress response systems than children who grow up in households where laughter is scarce.
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This has been studied extensively.
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The difference is measurable.
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You do not need to be funny.
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You do not need to manufacture joy.
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You need to let yourself laugh when something is genuinely amusing in front of your baby.
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Your laughter teaches them what joy feels like in a body.
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And that lesson, learned in infancy,
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becomes part of who they are.
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Thing 7.
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The Rhythm of Your Daily Routines A baby's brain runs on rhythm.
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Every time you do something in roughly the same way,
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at roughly the same time,
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every day, you are building a pattern that your baby's nervous system uses to predict the world.
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Morning routines, feeding schedules, bedtime rituals,
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the order of events that happens when you arrive home from somewhere,
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the way the day unfolds from waking to sleep.
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Your baby may not consciously remember any specific routine,
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but their nervous system will remember the rhythm,
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the sense that the world has a predictable shape,
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that what comes next is knowable,
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that they can relax into the day because they know what is happening.
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This sense of predictability, built through repetition over the first three years,
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becomes the foundation of emotional regulation later in life.
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Children who grew up with rhythmic,
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predictable routines have measurably better stress tolerance,
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sleep regulation, and emotional stability as adults.
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The rhythm itself, more than any individual moment within it,
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is what gets remembered.
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Thing 8.
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The Way You Say Goodbye This one surprises most parents.
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Every time you leave your baby,
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even for a few hours,
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their nervous system is processing the departure.
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How you leave, how present you are in the moment before you go,
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whether you say goodbye or sneak out to avoid distress,
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all of it gets recorded.
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Babies whose parents say goodbye warmly,
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with eye contact, with a specific word or gesture,
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develop a healthier relationship with separation.
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They learn that goodbye is not abandonment,
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that parents leave and return, that separation is survivable.
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Babies whose parents sneak out to avoid distress,
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or who leave with anxious or rushed goodbyes, develop a different pattern.
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They become hyper-vigilant about parents leaving.
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Their separation anxiety lasts longer.
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They struggle more with transitions.
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You can teach your baby that separation is safe by treating goodbye as a small, sacred moment.
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A specific phrase, a kiss,
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a wave, a look, done the same way every time.
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The pattern itself becomes the comfort.
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Thing 9.
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The way you say hello.
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This one matters as much as goodbye, sometimes more.
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How you greet your baby when you walk back into a room.
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How your face changes when you see them after being away.
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The energy you bring when you come home from work,
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when you return from an errand,
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when you come back into the nursery after a moment elsewhere.
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This is the moment your baby's nervous system is waiting for—the reunion,
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the reconnection, the signal that you came back and that coming back is a moment of joy,
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not just a return to baseline.
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The parent who greets their baby with warmth,
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attention, and presence every single time is building a specific belief in that baby's nervous system,
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the belief that being seen by the person who matters most feels wonderful.
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That coming together after being apart is a moment to be celebrated,
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that love is something that lights up when you arrive.
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Children raised with this consistent,
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warm greeting pattern grow into adults who expect to be welcomed by the people who love them,
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who reach out for connection without hesitation,
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who do not interpret quiet greetings as rejection.
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The hello matters as much as the hour that follows.
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Thing 10.
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The way you regulate your own emotions in front of them.
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This is the one that almost no parent realizes is being recorded.
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Your baby is watching you all the time,
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learning how a human being handles emotions,
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not by what you tell them,
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by what they see you do.
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When you are stressed, do you breathe through it or do you escalate?
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When you are frustrated, do you take a moment or do you snap?
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When you are sad, do you allow yourself to feel it or do you suppress it and pretend everything is fine?
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When you are angry, do you regulate before responding or do you react in the heat of the moment?
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Every one of these moments is being recorded in your baby's nervous system,
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not as a specific memory,
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but as a template, the template for how humans handle the emotional weather of being alive.
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By the time your child is five years old,
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the way they regulate their own emotions will look strikingly similar to the way you regulated yours in front of them,
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not because you taught them with words.
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Because they watched you every day for thousands of hours and their nervous system absorbed the patterns.
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This is in many ways the most important of the ten,
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because it is the one that gets repeated the most,
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because every emotional moment of your daily life is being watched,
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because the patterns you live in front of your baby become the patterns they will live for the rest of their life.
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You do not need to be perfect.
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You need to be aware.
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You need to demonstrate in front of them that emotions are workable,
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that feelings can be felt and moved through,
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that distress does not have to become explosion,
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that sadness does not have to become collapse.
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Show them how a healthy human handles being human,
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and they will carry that lesson with them for the rest of their life.
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Let me say one thing as we close.
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If you are watching this video and you have recognized yourself in the failures more than the successes across these 10 things,
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take a breath.
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You are not too late.
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The most beautiful thing about the infant brain is how responsive it is to change.
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The patterns that have started can still shift.
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The grooves that have not been deeply carved yet can be carved differently from this moment forward.
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The child you are raising is not finished being shaped,
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they are still being built.
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What matters is not perfection.
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What matters is awareness.
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The fact that you are watching this video means you are already in the group of parents who care enough to learn.
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That puts you ahead.
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Pick the one thing on this list that hit you the hardest.
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The one where you thought,
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that is the one I want to do better at.
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Start with that one tomorrow morning.
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Make one small change.
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Then another.
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Then another.
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A baby's brain rewards consistency, not perfection.
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The goal is not to be the perfect parent.
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The goal is to be the parent whose daily patterns build a child who can love deeply,
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trust easily, regulate calmly, and move through the world with the felt sense that they are safe.
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If this video helped you,
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share it with another parent who needs to hear it.
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Share it with your partner.
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Share it with the friend who is overwhelmed and wondering if she is doing enough.
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Share it with the new dad who has not been told any of this.
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Leave a comment telling me which of the ten things hit you the hardest.
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I read every single one.
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And the next time you walk into a room where your baby is,
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remember, they are watching.
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They are absorbing.
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They are building.
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The ordinary moment you are about to have with them is being recorded forever.
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Make it count.
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Don't blink.

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Über diese Lektion

In dieser Lektion werden Sie lernen, wie wichtig die Stimme eines Elternteils für das Gedächtnis und die Entwicklung eines Babys ist. Durch das Hören und Nachahmen nicht nur der Wörter, sondern auch der Intonation und des Gefühls in der Stimme können Sie Ihre Englischkenntnisse mit einer einzigartigen Methode namens Englisch Shadowing verbessern. Diese Technik ermöglicht es Ihnen, die naturalistische Sprache schrittweise zu erlernen, während Sie gleichzeitig Ihre Aussprache und Ihr Hörverständnis stärken.

Schlüsselvokabular & Phrasen

  • Stimme - voice
  • Erinnerung - memory
  • Entwicklung - development
  • Neugeborenes - newborn
  • Hören - to hear
  • Weinen - to cry
  • Anpassung - adaptation
  • Intonation - intonation

Übungstipps

Beim Shadowing ist es wichtig, in einem Tempo zu arbeiten, das Ihnen angenehm und verständlich ist. Da die Inhalte aus diesem Video sich mit der emotionalen Verbindung und der intonatorischen Vielfalt der Stimme beschäftigen, sollten Sie besonders auf das schattensprechen achten. Hier sind einige Tipps, um das Beste aus Ihrer Englisch sprechen üben-Erfahrung herauszuholen:

  • Beginnen Sie mit kurzen Segmenten des Audios und wiederholen Sie diese mehrmals, bis Sie sich wohlfühlen.
  • Achten Sie auf die Emotionen, die in der Stimme des Sprechers mitschwingen. Versuchen Sie, diese Emotionen beim Nachahmen in Ihre eigene Stimme zu integrieren.
  • Nutzen Sie die Zeit, um auch die Pausen des Sprechers zu beobachten. Diese sind wichtig für das natürliche Sprechen.
  • Suchen Sie einen ruhigen Ort, um störende Geräusche zu minimieren und sich besser auf die Stimme konzentrieren zu können.
  • Wiederholen Sie die Korrekturen, indem Sie auf den Klang und die Melodie achten, um die Qualität Ihrer Aussprache zu verbessern.

Indem Sie sich auf diese Aspekte konzentrieren, werden Sie mit der Zeit nicht nur Ihre Englischen Sprachfähigkeiten verbessern, sondern auch ein besseres Gefühl für den emotionalen Ausdruck in der Sprache entwickeln. Nutzen Sie beim Üben die shadowing site, um verschiedene Stimmen und Kontexte zu erleben und Ihre Fähigkeiten weiterzuentwickeln.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

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