Pratica di Shadowing: Do This Every Day! The 6 Things Your Baby Secretly Needs From You - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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Your baby can't speak.
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Your baby can't speak.
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They can't text you.
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They can't write you a letter.
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And they certainly can't sit across from you and tell you what they need.
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But here's what most parents don't realize.
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Your baby is communicating with you every single second of every single day.
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And the way you respond to that silent language will shape who they become for the rest of their life.
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Today, we're going to talk about six acts of love.
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Six specific things your baby is silently hoping you will give them.
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Not toys, not a perfectly decorated nursery,
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not even the most expensive stroller on the market.
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Something far more powerful than any of that.
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And here's what makes this even more remarkable.
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Science has now confirmed what babies have been trying to tell us all along.
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These six acts don't just make your baby feel good in the moment.
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They literally wire the brain,
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shape the nervous system, and lay the foundation for how your child will love,
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trust, and connect with people for the rest of their life.
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Stay with me, because by the end of this video,
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you're going to see your baby and your role as a parent in a completely different way.
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And I promise you, that shift is going to mean everything.
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Let's start with something that sounds almost too simple,
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something you probably already do without even thinking about it,
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but the science behind it,
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it will absolutely stop you in your tracks.
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Act number one, touch.
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When you hold your baby close,
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when you press their tiny body against your chest and they feel the warmth of your skin,
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something extraordinary happens inside them.
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Their brain releases a flood of oxytocin,
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often called the love hormone.
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Their cortisol levels, the stress hormone, begin to drop.
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Their heart rate slows.
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Their breathing steadies.
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Their little fists, so often clenched tight with the overwhelm of being new in this world,
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begin to open.
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In that moment, your baby's entire nervous system is saying something it will spend a lifetime looking for.
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I am safe.
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I am loved.
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The world is okay.
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But here's the surprising part.
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This isn't just comfort.
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This is construction.
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Touch in the early months of a baby's life is not optional.
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It is neurological fuel.
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Studies from the University of California found that premature babies who were held
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and gently massaged for just 15 minutes a day gained weight 47% faster than those who weren't touched.
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They were also discharged from the hospital nearly a week earlier.
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not because of medication, not because of any medical intervention,
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simply because of human hands, simply because of warmth.
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Now think about what that means for your full-term baby at home.
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Every time you pick them up when they cry,
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every time you carry them close to your body,
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every time you stroke their cheek or hold their tiny hand,
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you are not spoiling them, you are building them.
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Brick by invisible brick, you are constructing a nervous system that knows how to feel safe in the world.
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What most parents don't realize is
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that the fear of holding the baby too much is one of the most damaging myths in parenting culture.
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It has been passed down from generation to generation with absolute certainty,
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and it is simply not true.
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Your baby cannot be held too much.
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In the first year of life,
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physical closeness is how your baby learns to regulate their own emotions.
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It's how they develop what psychologists call a window of tolerance,
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the ability to experience stress without being overwhelmed by it,
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the ability to feel big feelings and come back to calm.
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And that ability, it will follow them through every hard moment they will ever face for the rest of their life.
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So the next time someone tells you that you're going to spoil your baby by holding them too much,
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smile, pull your baby a little closer,
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and know that you are are doing exactly what their brain is asking for.
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Now here's where it gets even more fascinating.
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Act number two, eye contact.
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Your baby was born with one very specific visual ability.
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In the first days of life,
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the clearest thing a newborn can see is a human face at the exact distance of 8 to 12 inches.
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That is precisely the distance between your arms and your eyes when you hold them close.
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That is not a coincidence.
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That is evolution leaving you a message written in biology.
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Look at your baby.
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Really look.
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When you gaze into your baby's eyes and they gaze back,
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when that soft, searching look connects,
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something magical and completely measurable happens.
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Neuroscientists at Cambridge University discovered that when a parent and baby make eye contact,
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their brainwaves literally synchronize.
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They fall into the same rhythm,
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like two instruments tuning to each other without a single note being played.
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In that quiet gaze, parent and child become attuned.
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And this matters more than we ever imagined.
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Because through your eyes, your baby learns something that no textbook can ever teach them.
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I exist.
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I am seen.
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I matter.
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That feeling, the feeling of being truly seen by someone who loves you,
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is one of the deepest human needs.
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It doesn't begin in adolescence.
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It doesn't begin in school.
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It begins right here, in these early wordless moments of locked eyes between you and your child.
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But it gets even more interesting.
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Researchers found that babies who experience frequent warm eye contact with their caregivers go on to develop stronger language skills,
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deeper empathy, and more secure attachment patterns than babies who don't.
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Not because their parents read more books to them or enrolled them in more programs,
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simply because they looked consistently, warmly, and with love.
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This is one of the quietest,
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most powerful gifts you can give your child.
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Put down your phone, look at your baby,
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let them see your face,
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your smile, your wonder, the way your eyes soften when you see them.
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Because right now, your face is their whole world.
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And when they look at you and see joy reflected back,
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they learn something that will shape every relationship they will ever have.
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I am worthy of love simply by being here.
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Act number three, your voice.
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Here is something that will genuinely stop you.
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Researchers at Stanford University found that babies begin recognizing their mother's voice
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while still in the womb as early as 28 weeks of pregnancy.
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By the time your baby is born,
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your voice is the most familiar sound in the entire universe to them.
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It is not just a sound.
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It is home.
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It is safety.
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It is the first love song they have ever heard.
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And yet, so many parents go quiet around their babies.
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They feel a little silly narrating out loud to someone who can't respond.
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They second-guess themselves.
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They worry about saying the wrong thing.
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But what most parents don't realize is that your baby does not need perfect words.
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They don't need rehearsed speeches or educational audio programs or carefully curated vocabulary lists.
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They need you, your real voice,
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your laugh, your gentle, imperfect,
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beautiful narration of the world around them.
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Oh, look at that sunlight coming through the window.
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Isn't it something?
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Mama's going to change your diaper now.
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I know, I know, you don't love this part.
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There we go.
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Almost done.
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See?
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All clean. That.
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Right there.
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That quiet, ordinary,
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everyday moment of talking to your baby is one of the most scientifically powerful things you can do for their developing brain.
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Every word you speak is building neural pathways.
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Every sentence is laying down the architecture for language,
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for emotional intelligence, for their future ability to put words to their feelings and connect with other human beings.
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Studies have shown that children who were spoken to frequently and warmly in their first three years had,
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by age three, heard 30 million more words than children raised in less verbal environments.
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30 million.
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And that gap, known as the 30 million word gap,
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predicted reading ability, academic achievement,
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and emotional regulation years later.
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Not the expensive preschool, not the flashcards, the voice.
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The ordinary, tender, daily voice of a parent who talked to their baby like they mattered.
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Because they do.
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And they are always listening.
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They have always been listening.
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If this is moving something in you,
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if you feel that quiet shift that comes from learning something true and important about the people you love most,
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consider subscribing to this channel.
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We talk about baby psychology,
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early development, and the deep science of connection every single week
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because parenting is the most important thing most of us will ever do,
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and you deserve honest, meaningful,
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science-backed information to help you do it well.
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Now, let's keep going, because the next three acts are where things get truly profound.
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Act number 4.
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Responding to their cries.
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I know, this one is hard.
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Especially at 3 in the morning.
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Especially on day 11 of fragmented sleep,
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when you've tried everything and nothing seems to work,
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and you're sitting on the edge of the bed,
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wondering if you're somehow doing all of this wrong.
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But stay with me, because what I'm about to share may be the single most important insight in this entire video.
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When your baby cries and you respond,
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when you come to them,
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when you pick them up,
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when you sit close and try to understand what they need,
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you are teaching them one of the most fundamental truths about being human.
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When I am in pain, help will come.
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That might sound simple, but think about how many adults walk through the world carrying the opposite belief,
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that when they struggle, no one will come,
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that their needs are too much,
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that they have to manage everything alone and never show the parts of them that hurt.
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So many of those beliefs,
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deep, invisible, powerful, were formed in the first year of life,
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in those tiny, repeated moments when a cry was either answered or wasn't.
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John Bowlby, the father of attachment theory,
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spent his entire career studying exactly this.
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He found that a baby's sense of security,
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their ability to form trusting relationships,
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their resilience in the face of hardship,
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their future capacity to ask for help without shame,
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all trace back to one deceptively simple pattern,
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consistent, loving responses to distress.
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Here's the surprising part, and I want you to really hear this.
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You do not have to be perfect.
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Research shows that good enough responsiveness,
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meeting your baby's needs around 50% of the time with warmth and genuine intention,
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is enough to create secure attachment.
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You don't have to be superhuman.
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You don't have to never lose your patience.
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You just have to keep showing up.
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You just have to keep trying.
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So when your baby cries tonight,
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even if you're exhausted, even if you're not sure what they need,
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even if you can't fix it,
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the act of coming is the message.
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The act of trying, of being present,
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of not disappearing, that tells your baby something they will carry in their bones for the rest of their life.
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You are not alone in this world.
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And I promise you, there is no more important thing a human being can ever learn than that.
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Act number 5.
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Play and joy.
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This one might surprise you,
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because we don't always think of play as something serious,
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something that belongs in a conversation about neuroscience and attachment and brain development.
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But here's the truth.
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Play is the most serious business of childhood.
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And the joy you share with your baby is not a luxury,
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it is a necessity.
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When you make a ridiculous face and And your baby erupts into that full-body laugh.
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When you blow raspberries on their belly,
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and they squeal with a delight so pure it almost breaks your heart with how beautiful it is.
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When you play peek-a-boo, that ancient,
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universal game that parents in every culture,
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in every corner of the world,
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instinctively discover, you are doing something far more profound than passing the time.
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You are teaching your baby that the world is a place of wonder.
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relationships are a source of joy, not just survival.
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That they can feel big feelings,
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excitement, surprise, delight, and come safely back to calm.
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That emotional arc, that ability to rise into a feeling and return to peace,
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is one of the building blocks of emotional regulation.
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And emotional regulation is one of the most powerful predictors of lifelong well-being we have ever found.
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But it gets even more interesting.
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Neuroscientist Jok Peixep, who devoted his life to mapping the emotional brain,
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identified play as one of the seven core emotional systems that all mammals share.
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When babies play, their brains light up in ways that pure learning cannot replicate.
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Dopamine floods the system.
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Neural connections form and strengthen at remarkable speed.
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Creativity, curiosity, language, empathy, all of it grows in the soil of play.
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And what most parents don't realize is this,
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your baby does not need elaborate toys.
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They do not need rotating light projectors or high-stimulation gadgets or carefully curated activity boxes.
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They need you, your playfulness,
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your willingness to be a little ridiculous for a a moment,
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your ability to put down the weight of your day and just be present in that shared moment of laughter.
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Those moments are being stored somewhere inside your baby,
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not as memories they will consciously recall,
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but as a felt sense of the world,
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a knowledge written in the body.
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Life is good.
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People are safe.
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I am allowed to feel joy.
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And that felt sense, it will quietly shape every friendship they make,
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every relationship they choose, every moment of happiness they allow themselves to have for the rest of their life.
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And that brings us to the sixth and final act,
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the one that holds all the others together.
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Act number six, consistency.
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Not perfection, not being available every second of every day,
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not sacrificing yourself until there is nothing left,
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just consistency, just showing up again and again in all the ordinary and imperfect ways that love actually looks.
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Your baby's brain from the very first days of life is a prediction machine.
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It is constantly working to understand the world,
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to find patterns, to discover what causes what,
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to answer the most urgent question it will ever ask.
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Can I count on the people who love me?
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Every time you show up,
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not flawlessly, but reliably, you answer that question.
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Every time you return after being away.
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Every time you repair after a hard moment.
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Every time you say, I'm sorry,
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that was too much of me, and I love you.
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You write the answer more deeply into their understanding of what love is.
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You build what developmental psychologists call a secure base,
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a place inside your child,
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a felt sense of safety from which they can eventually turn around and face the world.
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The research on this is breathtaking in its clarity.
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Children with secure attachment, children who had consistent,
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loving caregivers in their earliest years,
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grow into adults who are more emotionally resilient,
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more empathetic, better equipped to manage stress,
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more likely to form healthy relationships,
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and even physically healthier across their lifetimes.
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The effects of early consistent love are not temporary.
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They ripple outward through decades, through generations.
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But here's the most beautiful part of all.
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You don't have to be the parent who never loses their temper.
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You don't have to be the parent who always has the right words.
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You don't have to be the parent who gets it right every single time.
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You just have to be the parent who comes back,
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who repairs, who keeps choosing their child,
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even on the hardest days,
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even when it's complicated, even when you're not sure you have anything left to give.
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That is the deepest act of love.
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That is the one your baby is hoping for more than anything else in this world.
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Not a perfect parent, but a parent who keeps showing up.
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So there you have it.
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Six acts of love.
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Touch.
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Eye contact.
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Your voice.
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Responding to their cries.
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Play and joy. And consistency.
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None of these cost money.
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None of them require a certification or a parenting manual or the right piece of equipment.
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All of them require something far more valuable and far more available than any of that.
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Your presence.
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Your intention.
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Your willingness to see the tiny person in front of you for exactly what they are.
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A full human being.
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Already fully feeling.
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Already fully hoping.
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Already reaching toward you with everything they have.
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There will be days when you feel like you're not doing enough.
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Days when you're too tired,
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too overwhelmed, too stretched thin to be the parent you want to be.
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And on those days, I want you to remember this.
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Your baby does not need a perfect parent.
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They need you, showing up imperfectly and consistently,
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trying even when you're not sure,
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loving even when you're running on empty.
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The science is clear.
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The research is unanimous.
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But long before the research,
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before the neuroscientists and the attachment theorists and the longitudinal studies,
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babies already knew, and they have been trying to tell us all along.
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You are the most important thing in your baby's world.
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Not the most impressive, not the most put together, the most important.
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What a privilege, what a weight,
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what an extraordinary, unrepeatable gift to be someone's everything right at the very beginning of everything.
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If this video moved something in you,
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share it with a parent who needs to hear it today.
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Leave a comment and tell me which of these six acts feels most meaningful to you.
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I read every single one, and I mean that.
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And until next time, hold them close.
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Look them in the eyes.
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Talk to them like they understand.
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Because in every way that matters, they do.
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And never, ever underestimate the power of your love.

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Perché praticare il parlato con questo video?

Praticare il parlato attraverso video come questo è un modo efficace per migliorare la tua pratica di conversazione in inglese. Non solo ti aiuta a capire il contenuto, ma ti offre anche un'opportunità unica di imitare un madrelingua, affinando le tue capacità linguistiche. Il concetto di shadow speech è fondamentale: ascoltando e ripetendo ciò che senti, riuscirai a sviluppare un'intonazione naturale e a comprendere le sfumature del linguaggio. Inoltre, seguire le emozioni e il ritmo del relatore ti permette di entrare in sintonia con il messaggio, rendendo l'apprendimento più coinvolgente e memorabile.

Grammatica e espressioni nel contesto

Nel video vengono utilizzate alcune strutture linguistiche chiave che meritano di essere analizzate:

  • "Your baby can't speak." - Qui si utilizza la forma negativa del presente, evidenziando l'incapacità del soggetto nel comunicare verbalmente, un concetto importante per chi apprende la lingua.
  • "They are communicating with you every single second." - L'uso del presente continuo sottolinea l'idea di un'azione che è sempre in atto, utile per descrivere situazioni quotidiane che coinvolgono l'interazione.
  • "When you hold your baby close." - L'uso della forma condizionale offre un ottimo esempio di come si utilizzano le subordinate per esprimere relazioni temporali e causali.

Attraverso l'analisi di queste strutture, gli studenti possono migliorare la loro pronuncia inglese e acquisire la confidenza necessaria per esprimersi fluentemente.

Trappole comuni nella pronuncia

Durante la visione del video, ci sono alcune parole e frasi che potrebbero risultare difficili da pronunciare. È importante prestare attenzione ai suoni distintivi e ai toni:

  • "Oxytocin" - Fai attenzione alla “xy” che può risultare complessa; prova a segmentare il suono.
  • "Cortisol" - La pronuncia della "t" potrebbe essere trascurata, quindi assicurati di articolare ogni suono chiaramente.
  • "Nervous system" - Qui, la combinazione di suoni può creare confusione; ripeti lentamente per migliorare la chiarezza.

Praticare queste parole attraverso il shadowing in inglese può aiutarti a migliorare non solo la pronuncia, ma anche la tua fluidità generale. Integrare il shadowspeaks nella tua routine di studio può portarti a ottenere risultati significativi!

Cos'è la tecnica dello Shadowing?

Shadowing è una tecnica di apprendimento delle lingue supportata da studi scientifici, originariamente sviluppata per la formazione dei traduttori professionisti e resa popolare dal poliglotta Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Il metodo è semplice ma potente: ascolti un audio in inglese di madrelingua e lo ripeti immediatamente ad alta voce — come un'ombra che segue il parlante con un ritardo di solo 1–2 secondi. A differenza dell'ascolto passivo o degli esercizi di grammatica, lo shadowing costringe il tuo cervello e i muscoli della bocca a elaborare e riprodurre simultaneamente i modelli di discorso reale. La ricerca dimostra che migliora significativamente la precisione della pronuncia, l'intonazione, il ritmo, il discorso connesso, la comprensione dell'ascolto e la fluidità del parlato — rendendolo uno dei metodi più efficaci per la preparazione alla prova di speaking dell'IELTS e per la comunicazione reale in inglese.

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