Pratique du Shadowing: 5 Habits Happy People Do Before 9AM - Apprendre l'anglais à l'oral avec YouTube

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Genuinely happy people are not happy because their lives are easier.
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Genuinely happy people are not happy because their lives are easier.
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They are happy because of what they do before 9am.
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And here is what makes this genuinely fascinating.
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It is not about waking up earlier.
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It is not about a two-hour morning routine.
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It is not about willpower or discipline or becoming a different person.
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It is about five specific behaviors
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that set your brain's neurochemical baseline before the demands of the day have a chance to set it for you.
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Five habits that researchers have found consistently separating genuinely happy people from everyone else,
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not occasionally, but every single day.
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By the end of this video,
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you will know exactly what those five habits are,
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why each one works at a neurological level,
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and one specific action for each you can start tomorrow morning.
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And the fifth one will surprise you completely.
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It has nothing to do with exercise or journaling or productivity.
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It is so simple, most people never consider it a habit at all.
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But the science behind it is some of the most compelling happiness research that exists.
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Stay with me.
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What if your morning is not just the start of your day,
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but the foundation your brain builds everything else on top of.
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Researchers studying daily mood patterns found
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that your emotional baseline for an entire day is largely set within the first hour of waking.
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Not by what happens to you during that hour,
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by what you do during it.
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The specific inputs your brain receives in those first 60 minutes
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determine the neurochemical environment it operates from for the following 12 to 14 hours.
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This is why two people can go through an identical day and one feels genuinely happy and engaged,
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while the other feels flat and drained before noon.
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Same circumstances, completely different brain chemistry.
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And the difference was built before 9am.
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Here is the best part.
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These five habits happy people do before 9am do not require waking up earlier.
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They do not require any equipment.
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They require small, intentional choices that collectively shift your brain's chemistry before the world gets to shift it for you.
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So here is exactly how this works.
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Habit number 1.
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They Protect Their First 5 Minutes.
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The first habit happy people practice before 9am is protecting their first five minutes of consciousness from external input.
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In the first few minutes after waking,
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your brain is transitioning from sleep to wakefulness.
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During this transition, your prefrontal cortex,
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your rational thinking center, is not yet fully online.
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Your amygdala, your emotional alarm system,
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is more sensitive than at any other point in your day.
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Whatever information enters your brain during this window lands with disproportionate emotional impact and sets the neurochemical tone for everything that follows.
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Researchers at the University of British Columbia found
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that checking phones within the first five minutes of waking was associated with significantly higher stress,
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lower mood, and reduced sense of control for the following several hours,
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regardless of what was actually on the phone.
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The act of checking itself triggered a cortisol response that colored the entire morning.
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Happy people do not reach for their phone first thing.
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They give their nervous system five uninterrupted minutes to complete its
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natural transition from sleep to wakefulness before the world's demands begin flooding in.
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Here is your action tomorrow.
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Put your phone in another room tonight.
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Use a separate alarm clock.
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Five minutes.
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No phone.
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No news.
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No notifications.
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That is the entire first habit.
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And those five minutes protect the neurological window that makes every other habit on this list work more powerfully.
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Now, the second habit is one happy people do within the first 15 minutes of waking,
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and the speed matters as much as the action itself.
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Habit number two.
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They get natural light immediately.
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The second habit is one of the most well-documented and most ignored pieces of morning happiness science available.
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Happy people expose their eyes to natural outdoor light within the first 10 to 15 minutes of waking,
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every single morning, without exception.
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And here is exactly why this is not optional for your brain.
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Your suprachiasmatic nucleus, the master clock of your entire circadian system,
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is calibrated and reset by the first light signal it receives each morning.
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This calibration directly controls the timing and amplitude of your serotonin production,
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your dopamine sensitivity, and your cortisol rhythm for the entire day.
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When this morning light signal arrives on time and is strong enough,
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your entire neurochemical system runs on the schedule it was designed for,
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serotonin rises appropriately, dopamine functions optimally,
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and your emotional baseline throughout the day is measurably more stable and positive.
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When this signal is absent,
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when you stay in artificial indoor light or darkness for For the first hour of your day,
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your circadian clock drifts, your serotonin rhythm is disrupted,
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your dopamine sensitivity decreases, and your mood energy
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and emotional stability suffer in ways that accumulate across days and weeks of consistent morning light deprivation.
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Neuroscientist Andrew Huberman at Stanford has documented this mechanism extensively.
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He found
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that 10 to 30 minutes of outdoor morning light exposure was
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one of the single most powerful biological interventions for sustained daily mood that exists,
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more impactful than most supplements,
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and comparable in effect to consistent exercise for emotional baseline regulation.
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Here is your action.
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Tomorrow morning, within 15 minutes of waking, step outside.
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Not to your window, outside.
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30 seconds minimum.
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Eyes open toward the sky,
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not directly at the sun done.
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Just outdoor light on your open eyes for 30 seconds to 2 minutes.
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Happy people do this instinctively.
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Now you know exactly why it works.
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And here is something I want to share with you genuinely.
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This habit, the morning light,
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the serotonin connection, the circadian rhythm,
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is just one of 70 hidden human practices I spent years researching and documenting.
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Each one is something that modern life has quietly taken from us without most people ever noticing.
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I put all 70 into a complete book called Hidden Habits.
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Every chapter has the science,
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a real story, and one specific practice just like this one.
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If today's video is giving you something useful,
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the book has 69 more chapters waiting for you.
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No pressure at all, the link is in the description if you are curious.
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It is called Hidden Habits,
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and I genuinely think you will find something in it that feels like it was written specifically for you.
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Now, the next habit is one that most morning routine advice skips completely,
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and it is the habit that separates people who feel genuinely happy in the morning from people who just feel awake.
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Habit number three.
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They move their body before their mind gets busy.
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The third habit is brief,
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intentional physical movement done before the mental demands of the day fully activate.
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Not a full workout, not an hour at the gym.
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Research from the University of Vermont found that even five to ten minutes of moderate,
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vigorous movement within the first 30 minutes of waking produced mood improvements that lasted an average of 12 hours.
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Not from an hour of intense exercise,
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from 5 to 10 minutes of intentional movement done early.
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Here's the mechanism.
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Physical movement triggers the release of brain-derived neurotrophic factor,
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BDNF, which neuroscientists describe as fertilizer for your brain.
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BDNF promotes the formation of new neural connections
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and significantly enhances the effectiveness of every other positive input your brain receives throughout the day.
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Morning movement does not just improve your mood directly,
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it makes your brain more receptive to everything good that happens afterward.
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Happy people move in the morning not because they are more disciplined than you,
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because somewhere along the way,
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they discovered that five minutes of movement before the day begins makes the entire rest of the day feel genuinely different,
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and now they cannot imagine starting without it.
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Here is your action.
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Tomorrow morning, after your five phone-free minutes and your outdoor light exposure,
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do five minutes of any vigorous movement.
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Jump in place, do jumping jacks,
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walk fast around your home,
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dance to one song, anything that briefly elevates your heart rate for five minutes.
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That is the entire habit.
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Five minutes.
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brain will reward you for the next 12 hours.
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Now, number four.
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This is the one most morning routine advice skips completely,
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and it is the habit that separates people who feel genuinely happy in the morning from people who just feel awake.
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Habit number four.
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They connect with one person genuinely.
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The fourth habit happy people practice before 9 a.m is one brief,
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genuine human connection, and the neurochemical reason it works will permanently change how you think about your morning social interactions.
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Oxytocin is your brain's connection and bonding chemical.
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It creates warmth, trust, and a sense of belonging that no solo morning habit can fully replicate.
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And here is the finding that most people never hear.
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Oxytocin release begins at the moment of genuine social intention,
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not when the other person responds,
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but when you genuinely orient toward another person's well-being.
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Researchers studying social connection and morning mood found
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that people who had at least one genuine brief human connection before 9am reported significantly higher happiness levels,
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lower anxiety, and stronger sense of purpose throughout the day,
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compared to people who spent their entire morning in isolation,
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regardless of how productive that isolation was.
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The key word is genuine.
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Scrolling other people's social media content is not connection.
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Sending a meme is not connection.
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One real sentence to one real person about something real is connection.
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And it takes 30 seconds.
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Here is your action.
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Tomorrow morning, send one genuine message to one person before 9am.
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Not a logistical message not a reaction, something specific and real.
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One observation about them, one thing you appreciate,
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one check-in that shows you were actually thinking about them.
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Your oxytocin release begins the moment you send it,
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not when they reply, right now.
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Here is the crazy part.
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Oxytocin is one of the few happiness chemicals that compounds,
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rather than depleting through use.
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The more genuine connection you create,
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the stronger your oxytocin response becomes over time.
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Happy people are not more connected because they are more extroverted.
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They are more connected because connection is one of the few happiness inputs that gets stronger the more you practice it.
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Now, everything I have shared so far is real and it works.
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Five minutes of phone protection,
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morning light, brief movement, one genuine connection.
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Each one shifts your brain chemistry in a specific and measurable direction before 9 a.m.
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But this fifth habit, this is the one that changed how I understand morning happiness entirely.
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And I think it will do the same for you.
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Habit number five, they set one meaningful intention.
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Now, everything I've shared so far is important,
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but this fifth habit is the one that gives all the others their direction.
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And it takes less than 60 seconds.
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Happy people begin their morning with one clear,
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meaningful intention for the day.
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Not a to-do list, not a schedule review,
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one sentence that answers a specific question,
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who do I want to be today?
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Here is why this matters neurologically.
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Your brain's default mode network,
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the system that activates when you are not focused on any specific task,
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has a strong tendency toward negative,
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self-referential thought, worry, Comparison – Rumination Without a deliberate intention to anchor to,
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your default mode network spends the unstructured moments of your day reinforcing whatever neural pathways are already most grooved.
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For most people, those are pathways of stress, concern, and dissatisfaction.
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A morning intention does something specific and measurable.
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It gives your default mode network a positive anchor to return to during the unstructured moments of your day.
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studying intentional self-directed thought found that people who began their day with a clear,
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personal intention spent measurably less time in negative self-referential thinking throughout the day.
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Not because they forced positive thoughts,
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but because the intention gave their wandering mind somewhere positive to land when it returned to itself between tasks.
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Happy people do not set goals every morning.
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They set intentions.
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The difference is critical.
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A goal is about what you achieve.
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An intention is about who you are while you are achieving it.
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Today I choose to notice what is good.
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Today I respond rather than react.
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Today I give my best energy to what matters most.
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One sentence, 60 seconds, and your default mode network has a positive anchor for the entire day.
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Here is your action.
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Tonight, before you sleep, write one intention for tomorrow.
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Not a task, not a goal.
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One sentence about who you want to be or how you want to move through the day.
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Read it in your first five phone-free minutes tomorrow morning.
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Let it be the first deliberate thought your fully conscious brain holds.
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And notice how differently the day feels when your brain has somewhere meaningful to return to.
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Save this video.
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These five habits happy people do before 9 a.m are worth
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coming back to every morning until they become as automatic as making coffee.
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Because the mornings where you most need them are the mornings you will most feel like skipping them.

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About This Lesson

In this lesson, you will explore exciting insights from the video "5 Habits Happy People Do Before 9AM." You will practice listening comprehension and vocabulary related to positive psychology and morning routines, perfect for those looking to learn English with YouTube. As you follow along, you will also work on your speaking skills, specifically in the context of shadowing. By the end of this practice session, you'll have a deeper understanding of how small changes in your morning can impact your entire day.

Key Vocabulary & Phrases

  • Neurochemical - Pertaining to the chemicals in the brain that influence emotions and behaviors.
  • Habits - Regular practices or routines that shape our daily lives.
  • Baseline - A starting point used for comparisons; in this context, it refers to emotional states.
  • Prefrontal cortex - The part of the brain responsible for rational thinking and decision-making.
  • Amygdala - The part of the brain linked to emotions, especially those connected to threat and fear.
  • Intentional choices - Deliberate decisions made with specific outcomes in mind.
  • Emotional alarm system - Describes how our brain reacts to potential threats or stressors.

Practice Tips

When engaging with this lesson's content, consider using shadow speech techniques to effectively improve your English pronunciation. Start by listening to short segments of the video carefully. As you do this, repeat the phrases aloud, mimicking the speaker’s pace, tone, and emotion. Focus on the first few minutes of the video to practice in-depth with crucial ideas, such as why protecting your emotions in the morning is vital.

Maintain awareness of the video’s rhythm, which is generally relaxed but emphasize articulating the key vocabulary clearly. Return to challenging phrases multiple times. By consistently shadowing, you’ll enhance your fluency and gain a natural command over how to express these concepts.

Don't hesitate to return to sections of the transcript that resonate with you, as this can enrich your learning experience. Combining these shadowing site strategies with the engaging content of the video will not only boost your language skills but will also inspire a positive mindset before your own day begins. Enjoy your practice and remember, improvement takes patience and consistency!

Qu'est-ce que la technique du Shadowing ?

Le Shadowing est une technique d'apprentissage des langues fondée sur la science, développée à l'origine pour la formation des interprètes professionnels. Le principe est simple mais puissant : vous écoutez de l'anglais natif et le répétez immédiatement à voix haute — comme une ombre suivant le locuteur avec un décalage de 1 à 2 secondes. Les recherches montrent une amélioration significative de la précision de la prononciation, de l'intonation, du rythme, des liaisons, de la compréhension orale et de la fluidité.

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