Pratique du Shadowing: Discipline Your Mind Every Morning | Slow English Conversation (C1-C2) | The Cozy English - Apprendre l'anglais à l'oral avec YouTube

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The Cozy English.
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Learn English slowly.
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Hi, hi everyone.
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Welcome back to The Cozy English.
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It's Emma here, sending you a little dose of calm wherever you're listening from.
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And I'm Daniel.
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Morning, Emma.
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How are you today?
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You've got that peaceful, already-centred kind of energy.
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Did you meditate at sunrise again?
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You know me well.
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I actually did.
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Just ten minutes of breathing before checking anything else.
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It's become a small promise I keep to myself.
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How about you?
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My morning was less peaceful.
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I hit snooze twice, forgot where my phone was, then found it under my pillow.
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But I made tea, so I'm still calling it progress.
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Progress is progress.
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And before we dive in, a quick reminder to everyone listening.
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Today's episode uses C1 to C2 level English.
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So if you find some vocabulary or expressions new, that's completely fine.
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Take it slow.
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You can always check the PDF transcript for the full script, explanations, and vocabulary list afterward.
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Yeah, it's a great way to learn naturally.
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Listen first, try to understand the meaning from context, then open the PDF and study deeper.
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That's how your listening and thinking grow together.
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Exactly.
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This podcast is not about perfection.
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It's about feeling connected, curious and inspired through English.
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I love that.
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So, what's our topic today, Emma?
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We're talking about something I truly believe can change your life if you practice it daily.
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Disciplining your mind every morning.
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That sounds serious, but also kind of powerful.
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What do you mean by discipline your mind?
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Well, every morning, before the world starts rushing in, your mind is like soft clay.
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open, impressionable, full of potential.
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The way you shape it in those first moments decides the tone of your entire day.
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If you start in chaos, you'll chase chaos.
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But if you start with clarity, the day moves with you, not against you.
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That actually makes sense.
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When I wake up and instantly check messages, my brain feels scattered for hours.
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It's like I've already lost control before I even brush my teeth.
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Yes.
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The first hour after waking is sacred time.
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It's your chance to lead your thoughts before they start leading you.
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I often think of it like tuning an instrument.
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If you start the morning in tune, your entire day plays in harmony.
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So, discipline isn't about forcing yourself into routines.
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It's about building mental rhythm.
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Yes, rhythm instead of rigidity.
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It's the difference between pressure and presence.
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Some people think discipline is about punishment, but real discipline is actually self-respect.
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It's telling yourself, I care enough to start with intention.
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So, I guess my habit of scrolling through memes first thing doesn't exactly count as mindful rhythm, right?
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Not unless they're deeply philosophical memes.
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But honestly, it's not about perfection.
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It's about awareness.
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Even pausing for one deep breath before touching your phone is an act of discipline.
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It's saying, I choose what enters my mind.
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I like that.
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Maybe that's what real freedom feels like, when you can actually choose your first thought of the day.
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Yes.
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Freedom through focus.
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Peace through discipline.
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The morning is your mind's first conversation with life, and you get to decide how it begins.
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Then tomorrow I'll start that conversation a little differently.
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Maybe with silence.
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Or at least before my notifications start screaming at me.
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That's a great start.
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A calm mind doesn't just happen.
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It's built, moment by moment, morning by morning.
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So, Emma, now I'm curious.
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What actually happens when we don't discipline our mind in the morning?
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Like when we start the day in chaos?
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It's like giving away the keys to your car before you even start driving.
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The moment you open your eyes and let noise flood in – messages, news, notifications – you're already reacting instead of directing.
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You move through the day responding to everything instead of choosing what deserves your attention.
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That's exactly what happens to me on work days.
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I check my phone just for a second and suddenly 30 minutes disappear.
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My brain feels full, but not focused.
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I think most of us fall into that trap.
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When the first thing you see is someone else's opinion or problem, your mind learns to chase, not create.
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You start your morning in someone else's world, not your own.
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That's so true.
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Sometimes I open social media right after waking up, and before I know it, I'm comparing my life to people who haven't even had breakfast yet.
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I know that feeling.
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It's funny.
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You wake up in your own bed, but end up waking your mind in someone else's life.
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That kind of mental noise quietly drains your energy before the day even begins.
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So that's why people talk about digital detox mornings – to protect their mental space before it gets hijacked.
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yes imagine your brain as a clean still lake when you first wake up every notification every piece of news is like a stone thrown into it the more you let in the more ripples you create
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soon the water isn't calm it's restless and you can't see your own reflection clearly anymore That image actually hits hard.
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I've had mornings like that.
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Restless, unfocused, just noisy inside.
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When you start your day with noise, your thoughts lose their centre.
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You can't hear your own voice over the crowd of everything else.
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Discipline, in this sense, isn't about control.
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It's about protecting silence long enough to hear what truly matters.
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It's almost like mental pollution.
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You breathe in too much information before you even breathe fresh air.
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That's a perfect way to describe it.
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We often think burnout comes from doing too much, but sometimes it comes from consuming too much, too early.
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I remember one morning I got an upsetting email at 7am.
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I hadn't even brushed my teeth yet.
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It ruined my whole mood.
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Every small thing that day felt heavier because I started from the wrong place mentally.
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I've been there too.
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One early distraction can pull your mind off balance for hours.
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That's why protecting those first quiet minutes is so important.
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It's like emotional armour.
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Invisible but powerful.
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So, Emma, now that we know what happens when we lose control early, How do we build that control?
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I mean, how do you actually train your mind to be disciplined every morning?
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The same way you train your body, with repetition, patience, and small challenges.
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Your mind is a muscle.
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Every time you resist distraction, you strengthen it.
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Every time you choose focus over chaos, you build endurance.
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I like that.
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It sounds simple but powerful.
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though, I guess, like the gym, it's easier to skip than to show up.
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Yes, but just like the gym, the hardest part is often getting started.
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Most people think discipline is about motivation, but it's really about consistency.
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You don't wait to feel inspired to brush your teeth, right?
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You just do it.
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The same goes for your morning mind.
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So, discipline becomes a kind of habit, an automatic system that carries you when your emotions don't want to cooperate.
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That's beautifully said.
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There's a quote I love.
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You will never always be motivated, so you must learn to be disciplined.
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It's a simple truth.
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Your emotions fluctuate, but your habits can stay steady.
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That actually reminds me of something that happened last year.
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I went through a stressful time at work.
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New deadlines, no sleep, too much coffee.
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Every morning I'd wake up and immediately feel anxious.
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My thoughts would start racing before I even got out of bed.
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That sounds exhausting.
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What did you do to get through it?
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I started with something small.
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I told myself I wouldn't check my phone for the first 15 minutes after waking up.
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I'd just sit up, breathe and look outside the window.
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It felt useless at first, like I wasn't doing enough.
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But after a few days I realised something.
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Those 15 minutes became my anchor.
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I stopped starting my day in panic mode.
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That's a perfect example of discipline.
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It's quiet, invisible, but deeply transformative.
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You didn't change your whole life.
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You just built a small ritual that taught your brain, we begin calmly.
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Yeah.
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And after a few weeks, my morning started feeling different.
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I didn't wake up to stress.
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I woke up with awareness.
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It's like my thoughts finally waited for me to wake up instead of sprinting ahead.
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I love that image – your thoughts waiting politely by the door.
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That's what discipline does – it teaches your mind to respect your pace.
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And that kind of self-control eventually becomes emotional strength.
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I think people underestimate how powerful small acts of self-discipline can be.
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It's not about reading 10 pages or meditating for an hour.
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Sometimes it's just sitting in silence for 60 seconds before you touch your phone.
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Exactly.
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The goal isn't perfection.
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It's progress.
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Every act of resistance against distraction is a mental push-up.
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Over time, your focus grows stronger, your emotions become steadier, and your confidence deepens.
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So the brain really learns through repetition, like muscles learning movement.
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Yes.
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And just like training, rest matters too.
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Discipline doesn't mean forcing your mind every day.
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It means guiding it.
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Some days you'll feel unstoppable.
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Other days you'll struggle.
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But showing up?
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That's the real training.
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I like that word – guiding.
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It feels human.
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Most advice about discipline sounds cold, but this – it's like building a friendship with your mind.
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Yes.
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You're not fighting your mind.
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You're teaching it trust.
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And the more you practice, the more it listens.
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Then I guess my mind and I have a long friendship to build.
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But maybe tomorrow I'll start with one mental push-up.
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No phone, one deep breath, and a little gratitude.
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That's a strong start.
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Remember, every quiet morning choice is a vote for the person you want to become.
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Discipline as self-respect.
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I'm really starting to feel that now.
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Daniel, was there ever a morning that truly changed how you saw discipline?
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There was, actually.
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It happened two years ago, when I was completely drained, mentally and emotionally.
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My mornings were chaotic.
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I'd wake up late, check messages right away and already feel behind.
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It was like starting every day on defence.
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I know that feeling.
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Waking up tired before the day even starts.
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Exactly.
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But one morning, I woke up earlier than usual.
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It was still dark outside.
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I almost grabbed my phone, but something stopped me.
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I just sat there, listening to the silence.
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The world was still, and for once, so was my mind.
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That kind of silence can change everything.
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It really did.
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I made tea, watched the sky turn gold, and realised how much noise I'd been letting in.
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That morning showed me what peace actually feels like, and that it was something I could choose.
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That's the beauty of discipline.
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It's not control.
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It's care.
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You didn't force anything.
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You simply protected your quiet.
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After that, I started small.
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Ten minutes of silence before my phone.
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It became my anchor, and somehow, those ten minutes changed how I handled everything else.
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That's what true discipline does.
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It starts invisible but ends powerful.
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One mindful act can shift your entire day.
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I guess that morning taught me that discipline isn't pressure.
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It's peace.
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Beautifully said.
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calm start is a promise to yourself a quiet way of saying i'm ready you know
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the more we talk about this the more i realize discipline isn't about being strict it's about
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building peace through structure yes a lot of people think freedom comes from doing whatever you want but real freedom
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actually comes from creating the right boundaries the moment you design your mornings with care
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life feels less like a storm and more like a rhythm you can dance to that's such
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a beautiful idea when my mornings are structured even just a bit my whole day feels lighter
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i don't have to fight myself so much because structure gives your mind clarity it's like
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creating invisible walls to protect your focus you don't waste energy deciding what to do next
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you simply flow so discipline isn't a cage it's a compass it keeps you steady when everything else pulls you off track
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that's a lovely way to put it and the most amazing part is that discipline grows quietly
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you don't notice it day by day but suddenly you realize you're calmer sharper
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and kinder to yourself it's like emotional fitness every small act adds up until peace becomes your natural state
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yes and that's why the morning matters so much the first hour after waking isn't
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just about productivity it's about presence it's your chance to decide who leads your day
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your mind or your mood i think i'll remember that my mind or my mood maybe that's the question we should all ask ourselves every morning.
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That's a powerful reflection.
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So, to everyone listening, maybe tomorrow, don't aim for a perfect morning, just aim for a peaceful one.
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Start small.
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One breath, one quiet moment, one act of awareness.
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Discipline doesn't have to be loud, It just has to be consistent.
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And maybe that's how we win the day.
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By mastering the first few minutes of it.
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Beautifully said.
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Thank you, everyone, for joining us in this conversation.
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If you'd like to study this episode more deeply, check the PDF transcript with vocabulary and exercises in the description.
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And if this talk inspired you, share your thoughts in the comments.
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we love hearing your morning stories wherever you are may your next morning be calm intentional
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and full of quiet strength and if not you can always start again the next morning take care everyone see you next time see you soon goodbye

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Why practice speaking with this video?

Practicing speaking through engaging content, such as the video titled "Discipline Your Mind Every Morning," offers a unique opportunity for learners to immerse themselves in natural English conversation. This video is designed for C1 to C2 level learners, making it perfect for those aiming to polish their advanced speaking skills. By listening to conversations about daily routines, mindfulness, and productivity, you will not only enhance your vocabulary but also understand how to express complex ideas fluently.

Moreover, learning English with YouTube fosters a casual yet effective approach to language acquisition. The personal anecdotes shared in the video can evoke emotions, making it easier for you to connect with the material. By employing the shadowing technique—repeating what you hear immediately after the speaker—you can improve your pronunciation and intonation, allowing you to sound more natural when conversing in English.

Grammar & Expressions in Context

Throughout the video, several grammatical structures and expressions are highlighted that can enhance your command of the language:

  • Conditional statements: For example, “If you start in chaos, you’ll chase chaos.” This structure helps in expressing hypothetical situations, allowing for a deeper understanding of causality in language.
  • Present perfect tense: Phrases like “I’ve made tea” reflect actions that have relevance to the present moment. Using the present perfect correctly can enrich your descriptive skills.
  • Metaphors: The analogy of the mind being "like soft clay" is a powerful expression that illustrates a concept vividly. Understanding and using metaphors can make your speaking more relatable and impactful.
  • Colloquial phrases: Conversations such as “hit snooze” or “sacred time” add a layer of familiarity to casual English, which is essential for effective communication.

Common Pronunciation Traps

While practicing your English speaking skills, pay attention to the following pronunciation traps from the video:

  • ‘Chaos’ - The pronunciation can vary, but it's critical to articulate it clearly to avoid confusion.
  • ‘Tuning’ - This word requires careful attention to the ‘u’ sound, which can be tricky for non-native speakers.
  • Soft consonants: Words like ‘peaceful’ and ‘promise’ involve soft sounds that may often get muddled when rushed. Practicing these can help improve clarity in your speech.

By watching and practicing with this video, you are not just improving your English speaking practice, but also learning to convey your thoughts with clarity and confidence. Don’t forget to utilize tools like the PDF transcript to analyze vocabulary further, ensuring a well-rounded approach to your shadow speech practice!

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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