Shadowing-Übung: I used to overthink everything, and this changed it. - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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You're lying in bed, staring at the ceiling.
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You're lying in bed, staring at the ceiling.
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Your body is ready to sleep,
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but your brain, your mind is running a marathon.
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It's stuck replaying the conversation from three days ago,
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dissecting every word, every pause.
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Why did you say that?
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Did I sound like an idiot?
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Or maybe you're about to start something new,
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something you are actually excited about,
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but before you can even take the first step,
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your brain thinks about a hundred different the worst case scenario.
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You tell yourself you're just being thorough.
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You're just planning, preparing, problem solving.
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But what if that's a lie you're telling yourself?
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What if all this thinking isn't getting you to a better solution,
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but is actually keeping you from any solution at all?
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There's a thief that has been quietly robbing you blind.
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It doesn't take your wallet or your TV.
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It steals something so much valuable.
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It steals the joy that you could be feeling right now.
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It seals your ability to just move forward,
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to take a chance and to live the life that is waiting for you.
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This thief is overthinking.
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And today, we are not just going to talk about it.
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We are going to learn how to catch it,
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disarm it and take back your mental space for good.
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Also, I want to say thank you to this person who asked today's question.
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This video is actually started from that question.
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So let me read the comment first.
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The comment from our friend was,
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I have something I want to ask.
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How do you manage not to overthink too much about what's happening around you?
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Sometimes I make small mistakes in the way I communicate and I also tend to overthink everything around me.
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If you were in my position,
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what do you think you would do better or differently?
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Personally, I often write in a journal to a lot of self-reflection and try to turn inward,
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but I still find myself stuck in the same mental loop sometimes.
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Thank you so much.
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So let's talk about it and welcome back to this episode of This is Hazel.
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First of all, overthinking is not a personality trait.
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It's not who you are.
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It's just a learned mental habit,
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like repetitive program that feels productive but actually goes nowhere in psychology
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that breaks this overthinking process down into two types first rumination
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which is replaying the past and second worry which is imagining future threats
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and this fifth is very convincing because it tells you
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if you just think a little bit more you'll find a perfect answer.
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It disguises itself as preparation.
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It makes you believe that if you imagine every worst case scenario,
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you'll somehow avoid them.
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But that's not true.
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This habit turns simple decisions into overwhelming ones.
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It replays your mistakes over and over again.
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It fills your nights with noise when you're supposed to be resting or sleeping.
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And maybe the worst part is,
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It takes away your present.
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You can be sitting with your friends,
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but you're not really there.
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You're replaying something you said at work,
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worrying about something that hasn't even happened yet.
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Like your body is there, but your mind isn't.
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And over time, it drains your energy,
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increases your anxiety, and eventually leaves you with the feeling of too afraid to make a move,
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so you can't make the move.
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Okay, to stop this, we need to understand why it happens.
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Overthinking isn't your brain trying to sabotage you.
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It's actually trying to protect you.
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It's not totally a bad thing.
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Back then, being able to analyze threats,
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learn from the past, your mistakes,
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unprepared for the future was essential for survival.
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That part of your brain is actually very useful.
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You need to know what's coming and you need to know what to learn from the past, right?
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You need to know if something goes wrong or some things might be your threats.
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Today is different.
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Now your brain reacts to things like a text message,
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a deadline, or slightly awkward social moments.
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So in the end, how much you think,
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how much we worry, and how much time we spend on it,
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that's something we need to decide and regulate ourselves.
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Because this overthinking is actually a function,
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a capability of our mind, not just anxiety.
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So it's all about control.
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Your brain is trying to create a sense of control when things feel uncertain but instead it just keeps you stuck.
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But the good news is this is learned which means it can be unlearned.
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And trust me, I'm a huge control freak too.
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Honestly, I might not even be the best person to make this video but these things helped.
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Okay, so the goal for us isn't to eliminate the thoughts.
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I think it's impossible, I think.
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It's to change your relationship with them.
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Okay, the step one.
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Notice and label The first step is simply awareness You're not judging it,
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you're just observing it When you name it,
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you create the space between you and the thought You are not the thought,
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you are the one noticing it And that weakens its power And step two,
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schedule your worry Yes, set aside a specific time to worry About like 15-20 minutes a day During that time,
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let yourself think freely write things down, analyze them, feel everything.
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In the comment, this friend mentioned journaling and that actually helped me too.
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For me, I tend to think I need to solve the problem to move on.
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I need to have the solution to be okay with it.
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But before that, organizing my emotions really helps.
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Journaling doesn't always give me solutions,
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of course, which is like my feelings,
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but it gives me the space to understand what I'm feeling and why I'm feeling this.
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And when the time is up, you stop.
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When worries come up outside that time,
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you tell yourself, I'll think about it later.
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I know it's hard.
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It's not easy.
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But interestingly, after some time passes, the emotional intensity fades.
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Solutions come more naturally after that.
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Step three, take action.
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Overthinking is strongest when you're not taking action.
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So the solution is simply move.
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Whatever it is, do it for five minutes.
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This small action breaks the thinking loop and most of the time,
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those five minutes turn into more.
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If possible, take connection that moves you closer to solving the problem.
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If not, maybe just call someone who can help and
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if even that feels like too much just go outside
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and take a walk
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that counts too overthinking quietly steals your life the goal isn't
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to have no thoughts it's to become someone who can manage
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them to acknowledge them to notice them delay them act anyway
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and come back to the present that's enough don't try to do everything at once just pick one thing
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and let me know in the comments which steps stood out to you
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and if you have your own way
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or a better way of managing your mind of course i'd love to hear
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that too um it was nice to talk to you i talked to you
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but yeah see you next time and bye
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You're going
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to Did it get hurt whatsoever?
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We can make it better Tell me,
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boy, now wouldn't that be sweet?

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Über Diese Lektion

In dieser Lektion werden Sie das Konzept des Überdenkens erkunden und lernen, wie Sie es überwinden können. Wir werden die Bedeutung der Selbstreflexion und der proaktiven Denkweise untersuchen, um Ihre Kommunikationsfähigkeiten im Englischen zu verbessern. Durch gezielte Übungen werden Sie sich mit den Herausforderungen des Überdenkens auseinandersetzen und Strategien entwickeln, um diese Gewohnheit zu durchbrechen. Ziel ist es, Ihre Fähigkeit zu stärken, selbstbewusster und klarer im Gespräch Englisch zu sprechen.

Schlüsselvokabeln & Phrasen

  • Überdenken - die Neigung, über eine Situation oder einen Gedanken obsessiv nachzudenken.
  • Selbstreflexion - der Prozess, über die eigenen Gedanken und Handlungen nachzudenken.
  • Worst-Case-Szenarien - die Vorstellung vom schlimmsten möglichen Ergebnis einer Situation.
  • Vorbereitung - der Akt des Planens und Vorbereitens auf zukünftige Ereignisse.
  • Ruminieren - das ständige Wiederholen und Analysieren von Ereignissen in der Vergangenheit.
  • Sich innerlich zurückziehen - der Prozess, sich auf die eigenen Gedanken und Gefühle zu konzentrieren.
  • Bewältigung - die Strategien, die verwendet werden, um mit schwierigen Gedanken oder Emotionen umzugehen.
  • Produktiv - etwas, das signifikante Ergebnisse oder Fortschritte bringt.

Übungstipps

Um Ihre Fähigkeiten beim Englisch sprechen üben zu verbessern, empfehlen wir Ihnen, das shadowing zu praktizieren. Achten Sie darauf, das Video in einem moderaten Tempo anzusehen und dabei die Sätze laut nachzusprechen. Nutzen Sie die klaren und einprägsamen Übungen, um Ihren Satzbau und Ihre Aussprache zu verfeinern. Hier sind einige spezifische Tipps für das Shadowing:

  • Fangen Sie mit kurzen Abschnitten des Videos an und wiederholen Sie jeden Satz, während Sie ihn hören.
  • Versuchen Sie, den Tonfall und die Betonung des Sprechers nachzuahmen, um Ihren eigenen Sprachstil zu verbessern.
  • Achten Sie auf Pausen, Betonungen und den Rhythmus der Sprache – dies ist besonders wichtig für das shadow speech.
  • Verwenden Sie eine shadowspeaks-Technik, um nicht nur die Wörter, sondern auch die Emotionen und Intentionen hinter den Aussagen zu erfassen.
  • Wiederholen Sie die Übungen regelmäßig, um Ihr Gedächtnis zu stärken und sich auf verschiedene Kommunikationssituationen vorzubereiten.

Denken Sie daran, dass Überdenken eine Gewohnheit ist, die Sie mit bewusster Übung überwinden können. Indem Sie Ihre Gedanken kontrollieren und aktiv an Ihrem shadow speak arbeiten, werden Sie in der Lage sein, selbstbewusster in Englisch zu kommunizieren.

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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