Shadowing-Übung: The Joy of Self Denial (A Guide to Asceticism) - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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My life is a bit different from the rest of the world. I do not have sex and I don’t look at pornography. I don’t have a bank account and I get $200 to spend each month, but I rarely use it all. I wear the same tattered clothes every day, whether it’s raining, snowing, or sweltering. I take cold showers, fast twice a week, work with the homeless, and spend hours at a time in complete silence. In general, I go out of my way to make my life uncomfortable… and I am probably the happiest, most fulfilled person…
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My life is a bit different from the rest  of the world. I do not have sex and I don’t look at pornography. I don’t have a bank  account and I get $200 to spend each month, but I rarely use it all. I wear the same tattered  clothes every day, whether it’s raining, snowing, or sweltering. I take cold showers, fast  twice a week, work with the homeless, and spend hours at a time in complete silence.  In general, I go out of my way to make my life uncomfortable… and I am probably the happiest,  most fulfilled person you will ever meet.
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Not despite these things. Because of them.
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Our world is all about getting  more. It’s about chasing and owning and indulging whatever our desires  dictate. The best life, we’re told, is one with unlimited hookups with beautiful  people, cash to spend, popping bottles.
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Even if we’re not trying to live like a rockstar, what I think drives nearly everyone in our  world is a need for safety, and comfort, and predictability—just being able to  go on nice vacations with friends and provide for our kids without worry. We  want to be control to do what we want.
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My question to you is… how’s that working out?
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For the person indulging in every impulse, has  that brought you happiness, like real happiness?
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For the person living a comfortable suburban  life, has owning the latest gadget, living in a nice house, making decent money—brought  your life meaning, like true meaning?
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By the looks of our world, my guess is no. Never  before have people been so unhappy. Year after year depression numbers skyrocket, anxiety is on  the rise. So many live in a malaise of boredom and dissatisfaction, wondering how they got there  and what they can do to feel something again.
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I can say that I lived “in the world” for quite  a while. I enjoyed what it had to offer. I sought the thrills, I indulged in the immediate  gratifications. I didn’t try everything there was to try, but I had my fair share of  pleasure and excess, of comfort and control… And it was always great while I was experiencing  it, don’t get me wrong. There are some fun things in this world. If you want to feel good,  there is something for everyone out there.
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But for how long? What I found is that the more I  indulged, the more I needed… and the less I felt.
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Until I left that life behind. Until  I stopped trying to get more. Until I decided to live a penitential life—letting go,  giving up, denying myself earthly pleasures, to live a life that is grounded, disciplined,  hopeful, and most of all fulfilling.
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I think one of the misconceptions of a life  like this is that we’re people who like pain, that we do these difficult tasks as ends in  themselves because we hate joy, or something like that. The reality is that everything we do  is a means to an end, a means of curtailing our desires, of controlling our impulses, of becoming  people who live like Jesus did and enjoy it.
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The irony of our lives is that we  deny so many of earth’s pleasures because what we really want is freedom—freedom  to be in control of our own passions rather than always falling into temptation. It’s about  disciplining our minds, our hearts, our bodies, and our attention spans so that we live the way  we want rather than at the whims of the world.
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At the heart of it all is the recognition that  left to our own devices, we are prone to sin, prone to deny God, and we don’t want  that. We want to direct every aspect of our lives to the source of life, Jesus Christ.
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Which means that we pray. And not  just a quick prayer before bed or the occasional plea in times of need. Five  times a day, no matter the circumstances, we take a brief moment to stop whatever  we’re doing and pray a section of the psalms. Either together or in private, we  ground ourselves in the presence of God, reminding us, even for just a moment, that we  can put the world on hold to be with Jesus.
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In addition to this, silent meditation is  a must. Some pray for blocks of 15 minutes, others for a half hour… I prefer the holy  hour—an entire hour of silence. Turn off the phone, cut off the distractions,  let everything else go.. and just be.
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Sometimes I read spiritual books and meditate  on my life. Sometimes I have a conversation with God. Sometimes I sit in silence and let God  embrace me, telling me it’s going to be okay.
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Much of the time it is a beautiful break in the  day, a time to relax and unwind, but sometimes it’s work. Sometimes I have a billion other things  to do and the last thing I want to do is “do nothing.” But of course, it’s not nothing.  It’s the most something thing I could do, a connection with the source of life himself, the  one who tells me who I am and where I should go.
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Without this time, dedicated as a priority,  everything else falls apart. How quickly my life becomes about me, when what  I really want is to be about him.
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Which is very easy to say, much  harder to do. As our scriptures say, “The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak,”  and I know that my flesh is weak. As much as I say that I want to do only what is good, my body  still calls out for things that do not fulfill.
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I’m talking unhealthy foods, yes, but I’m  also talking lust, drunkenness, laziness, self-indulgence of every kind. It doesn’t  matter if you’ve been a friar for 13 years, those passions are alive in us.
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And so, I try to curb those passions.  I put limits on my body. I whip it into shape to strengthen my will and to  remind me that I can resist temptation.
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A big part of this is fasting. Twice a week  I go meatless and eat sparse meals—enough to be sustained but nothing else. No snacks, no  desserts, often just a peanut butter sandwich for lunch and simple dinner. I also try,  on those days, to limit screen time to only essential things and cut out all media—TV,  music, movies—enter the silence a bit more.
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Cold showers are one of those things that  really aren’t that bad, we’re just addicted to having supreme comfort in every instant. The  same with this brown robe, called a habit, and these sandals. They’re uncomfortable, they take a  bit getting used to, but you’re going to be okay.
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And the money? You really don’t need that much.  The moment I realized that I would never have the latest phone, the ability to go out whenever  I wanted, was the moment I realized how little those things actually bring happiness. What a  freedom it is to be content with what you have.
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What do these two things get  you? Where does humility and self-mastery lead? One would hope  to a life of goodness in the world.
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Free from the grips of lust, I can  enter into relationships without worry of sexual tension or objectification.
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Without a need to be in control, I can serve at  the will of others and make friends with anyone.
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No longer driven by ambition, I can spend  my whole day with a homeless person, a student struggling with self-esteem, an elderly  lady who’s just lonely, and not feel that my day has been wasted. This is what the Lord asked of me  today, and so this is what I am able to provide.
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Does this mean that I’m perfect now, that I  never give into temptation? Of course not.
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The reason I do them is precisely because  I am still a sinner in need of conversion.
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Do I rigorously follow each of  these things without any breaks?
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Hardly. During Easter and Christmas,  times of celebration, I never fast; once a week I get a day off from work, and I’ll  often have a beer or two and have some fun; the showers don’t have to be ice cold in the  winter, just enough to create discomfort, and I take a vacation each year. Even  the ascetic life needs moderation.
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Because, again, the purpose is not to cause pain  or to master acts of self-denial in themselves, it is to facilitate conversion to God.  What I want more than anything else… is for my life is to be so dedicated to  the will of God that what I WANT is to be of service. What I WANT is to  help others. What I WANT is to make sacrifices so that the world may be  a better place for the people I meet.
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As St. Francis of Assisi said in regards  to his own conversion and life of penance, “What was bitter has become sweet.” When he was in  the world, there was much that he hated, much that revolted him. But now, having found the discipline  of the Gospel, those very things brought him joy.
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This is what I think a penitential  life could offer you. At first, things like prayer, fasting,  and service may seem boring, even dreadful. You turn from them because they  provide no joy. Like someone eating broccoli for the first time after eating nothing  candy, there is no appeal to it at all.
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But that’s not because these things are bad…  it’s because you’ve become so accustomed to the sugar of the world that you don’t even know  what will bring you real goodness. With practice, with discipline, with a whole lot of self-denial  and building new habits, you will ultimately find that these things bring you joy, and that there  is no joy in the world that will ever match them.
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So where do you start? Should you sell all your  things and become a friar? Maybe. But maybe start small. Maybe begin by finding one thing in each  of these categories and building from there.
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Can you dedicate 15 minutes each day to  uninterrupted meditation? Maybe choose one day a week that you deny yourself a  pleasure you’re used to. Find a place to volunteer your time or donate your money  that takes you out of your comfort zone.
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Do something, anything, that isn’t about getting  more, but is about letting go. Of your comfort, your will, your control, your need to be  always be seeking the next pleasure. Do this, and then add to it, and add to it, and  add to it, until you find that your life is less about you and more about God… and  trust me: your life won’t be stuck anymore.

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Kontext & Hintergrund

In diesem Video spricht der Sprecher über ein Leben in Askese und Selbstverleugnung, das ihm eine tiefe Zufriedenheit und Erfüllung bringt. Er beschreibt seinen Lebensstil, der durch Verzicht auf materielle Annehmlichkeiten, die tägliche Praxis von Gebet und Meditation sowie ehrenamtliche Tätigkeiten geprägt ist. Dieser Ansatz steht im Gegensatz zum Alltagsleben vieler Menschen, die nach materiellem Besitz und kurzlebigen Vergnügungen streben und dabei oft unglücklich werden. Die Reflexionen des Sprechers bieten wertvolle Einsichten, die für Lernende des Englischen nützlich sein können, insbesondere durch die Analyse seiner Sprache und Ausdrucksweise im Kontext von Askese und spirituellem Wachstum.

Top 5 Phrasen für die tägliche Kommunikation

  • „Ich lebe ein Leben der Selbstverleugnung.“ – Ein Ausdruck, um den eigenen Lebensstil zu beschreiben.
  • „Es geht nicht um die Suche nach mehr, sondern um das Loslassen.“ – Dieser Satz reflektiert einen zentralen Gedanken im Video.
  • „Ich nehme mir Zeit für Gebet und Stille.“ – Nützlich, um eine spirituelle Praxis zu benennen.
  • „Echte Freude kommt von innen, nicht von äußeren Vergnügungen.“ – Eine Philosophie, die inneren Frieden betont.
  • „Disziplin ist der Schlüssel zu einem erfüllten Leben.“ – Eine zentrale Botschaft des Sprechers.

Schritt-für-Schritt Shadowing-Anleitung

Um von diesem Video und seinem Inhalt beim Englisch lernen mit YouTube zu profitieren, nutzen Sie die Shadowspeak-Technik. Beginnen Sie damit, sich das Video anzusehen und den Sprecher aufmerksam zu hören. Notieren Sie sich die oben genannten Phrasen und versuchen Sie anschließend, sie nachzusprechen, während der Sprecher spricht.

Hier ist eine einfache Schritt-für-Schritt-Anleitung:

  1. Ein Video auswählen: Wählen Sie das Video und spielen Sie es auf der shadowing site Ihrer Wahl ab.
  2. Das erste Anhören: Hören Sie die ersten zwei Minuten des Videos ohne Unterbrechung.
  3. Text analysieren: Machen Sie sich Notizen zu wichtigen Phrasen und deren Bedeutung, so wie in der obigen Liste.
  4. Shadow Speech üben: Spielen Sie das Video erneut ab und wiederholen Sie die Sätze des Sprechers synchron. Achten Sie auf die Intonation und Aussprache.
  5. Reflektion: Denken Sie über die Themen nach, die im Video angesprochen werden, und versuchen Sie, Ihre eigenen Gedanken zu formulieren, um Ihr Englisch weiter zu verbessern.

Durch diese praktische Übung im Rahmen von Englisch Shadowing verbessern Sie nicht nur Ihre Sprachfähigkeiten, sondern gewinnen auch Einblicke in das Leben des Sprechers. Es ist eine effektive Methode, um sowohl Ihre Sprachkenntnisse als auch Ihr Verständnis für tiefere Themen zu erweitern.

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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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