Pratica di Shadowing: I Survived Sensory Deprivation - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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Ryan: Sensory deprivation is straight up scary.
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Ryan: Sensory deprivation is straight up scary.
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What does it even mean to experience nothing?
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Especially when my screen time is ten hours a day, which led my father to say this.
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Ryan's dad: I bet you can last a few hours in one of these.
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Ryan: Okay. He might be right, but I'm too insecure to accept that, so I bet him that I could.
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And whoever loses the bet, has to paint themselves green and say in front of all of you...
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Ryan's dad: What are you doing in my swamp?
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On camera? Ryan: Next thing I know, I'm outside of a building that's probably on the cover of a Goosebumps book. It didn't take long to find the entrance and immediately be terrified by a cat waving at me, as well as a plethora of ducks.
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Why are there so many ducks here?
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That is a Superduck.
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I nervously waited for a few minutes when I was greeted by a man named Tom, legally known as the Master of Senses.
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I was then guided to the world's largest sensory deprivation pool.
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I'm not scared, you're scared.
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I feel like I walked into a nether portal at some point back there.
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You're telling me this isn't the most ominous door you've ever seen? Bruh!
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I'm gonna be doing the maximum legal time in this thing.
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3 hours. One with no gravity, one with no gravity or light, and one with no gravity, light or sound. Complete sensory deprivation, which apparently can have some side effects.
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I'm a little scared of hallucinating, like in a Simpsons episode, they hallucinate, so it must be true. But first I checked how deep the water is because I can barely swim, which Tom thought was hilarious.
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And now I'm ready.
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Yay! Oh, my goodness!
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Whoa! See ya!
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Tom: So when you get into a floating pool, generally the progression is as follows.
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You get in, you sit down, you lay back, and as you lay back, you float up to the surface of the water.
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Ryan: Oh, my gosh!
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I feel like a single-celled organism right now.
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I've got a timer on my phone that's gonna go off at the three hour mark.
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This pool is saltier than my ex-girlfriend.
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I don't have an ex-girlfriend.
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You guys know I can't swim really. Well, I can't float either.
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I am negative, buoyant somehow.
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So these pools have tons of salt.
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Like 2,500 lbs of salt.
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Even in Stranger Things, they show them filling up a pool of salt. And salt makes you float.
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I worked really hard on this visual.
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Please affirm me!
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Ryan: But in conclusion... Tom: I's like dropping an ice cube into a glass.
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If it's a person's first time, it's going to take maybe 5 to 10 minutes for them to start to release their body in a way that trusts the water.
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Ryan: I have never successfully floated before, and this is...well, this is crazy.
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I was only 18 minutes into this challenge when I had the actual scariest experience of my life. What the freak? A duck.
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Of course. Tom: You know, I would say 10 minutes to 20 minutes is, you know, mind dump.
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Ryan: I feel like a butterfly.
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<i>(Sings:)</i> "It's fun to stay at the Y-M- C-A..." Tom: BS. BS. BS.
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And then maybe around 25 to 30 minutes, the mind just goes, okay.
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I give up. Ryan: I don't see how people fall asleep in here.
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You know, this is why you don't say stuff like that.
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I'm completely asleep here, totally vulnerable.
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But the duck woke me up, and now it's time to turn off the lights.
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No light. Here we go.
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Turning off the lights added a completely new element to this, that I genuinely didn't expect to be that dramatic, but it was.
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I have lost all concept of time, but I still have my duck with me, so...
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Tom: You know, being glued to a phone or glued to a screen, I think increases, you know, your own personal suffering.
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Ryan: So I haven't even gotten to the silence yet, and I feel so weird because I've realized I have developed a habit of listening to something at all times, or watching something at all times. Like this screenshot is my life.
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I feel like the DVD icon that's like bouncing around, just hoping to get the corner perfectly.
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Oh, nope. Ryan: Not quite. Tom: We are the happiest, and this has been proven in study after study, when we are fully present in a moment. Right here, right now. And the moment is not on the screen.
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Ryan: It's so echoey. I feel like we're in the inside of my mind right now. And it's not a very familiar place.
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Tom: 60 to 90 minutes is enjoyable, relaxing, refreshing. Floating longer, it could be visionary.
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You could see either things that you have seen or things that you've not.
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Ryan: Around 2 hours and 4 minutes-ish is where something actually crazy happened.
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I really feel like my mind was the only thing working at this point.
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I suddenly felt like I infiltrated this memory that I haven't thought of in years, because I felt so still.
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Please don't judge me when you watch this!
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I feel like this reminded me of when I was little in the summertime, so I didn't have to go to school. My grandma, she was like my... she like, raised me.
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My grandma would like, take naps the day and I hated taking naps, but I always took a nap with her. And I just remember feeling so still.
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Well, that's embarrassing.
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Uh...but it was real.
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Anyways...we got 2 earplugs. Maxed out sensory deprivation.
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Tom: When you cut off sensory input to the body, it's pretty amazing, right?
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So you have no gravity, no light, no sound.
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You're reducing the workload that your brain and central nervous system has to process pretty dramatically. Ryan: Bye!
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Oh! Hey! All I can hear is the noises inside my ear that are like...
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I fell asleep immediately.
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Hour 3. Let me tell you about hour 3!
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It hits different.
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Okay? Tom: It's like everything in the world.
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It's a wave. It starts at a certain level, you know?
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And then you sink down into a deep relaxation, and then the mind comes back and asserts itself.
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Ryan: Ah! You could tell me I've been in here for 30 minutes or 10 hours.
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Seriously. I'm not just saying that.
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And now you're about to watch me reach the threshold of hallucinations, confusion, constipation...
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I don't remember the full list, but this is it.
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If I had to explain what I was feeling in this moment, or what I was seeing, is basically on screen. I felt like my mind just started creating content because what even is nothing? Like the absence of every sense, every thought, my identity on this planet, everything.
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It was just gone for a bit.
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The last 20 minutes was a spiritual experience, and it took me another 10 minutes to even realize my timer was going off.
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But what I did next is the real story here.
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I did it! I immediately started checking my notifications.
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And if you heard this sound throughout this video, that's because there were 62 of them.
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One for every notification I missed while in this tank.
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Ryan: And so I guess the question is: Were they worth missing? Ryan's dad: Is this thang on?
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What am I supposed to say?
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What are you doing in my swamp?
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So that's basically just gonna pop up and... Let me do it one more time!

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Contesto e Sfondo

Nel video intitolato "I Survived Sensory Deprivation", il protagonista, Ryan, condivide la sua esperienza di privazione sensoriale in una piscina galleggiante. Questa esperienza affascinante e spaventosa lo porta a riflettere sulla sua vita quotidiana e sulla sua dipendenza dalla tecnologia. L'interazione con personaggi come suo padre e Tom, il "Master of Senses", offre uno sguardo interessante su come affrontiamo l'ignoto e le sfide, oltre a creare un contesto perfetto per esercitarsi nell'ascolto e nella pronuncia dell'inglese.

Le 5 Frasi Top per la Comunicazione Quotidiana

  • "I feel like a single-celled organism right now." - Utilizzata per esprimere una sensazione di vulnerabilità.
  • "I'm not scared, you're scared." - Un'affermazione leggera che può essere usata per ridere delle proprie paure.
  • "This pool is saltier than my ex-girlfriend." - Frase umoristica che gioca su esperienze passate.
  • "What the freak? A duck." - Espressione di sorpresa o confusione.
  • "I feel like a butterfly." - Una metafora per descrivere la leggerezza e la libertà.

Guida Passo-Passo al Shadowing

Per migliorare la pronuncia inglese e apprendere frasi utili attraverso shadow speech e shadowspeak, segui questo metodo efficace:

  1. Ascoltare Attentamente: Inizia guardando il video senza fare nulla. Concentrati su come Ryan esprime le sue emozioni e le parole specifiche che utilizza.
  2. Ripetizione: Dopo aver ascoltato una sezione, prova a ripetere ciò che ha detto Ryan, imitando l’intonazione e il ritmo. Questo aiuta a interiorizzare la lingua e a migliorare la tua pronuncia.
  3. Segui il Testo: Scrivi alcune delle frasi chiave che hai appena imparato. Fai pratica ripetendole ad alta voce, osservando la tua articolazione.
  4. Registrati: Usa il tuo smartphone o un registratore per registrare la tua voce mentre ripeti le frasi. Ascolta la registrazione per autocorreggerti e monitorare i progressi.
  5. Applicazione Pratica: Prova a usare queste frasi in contesti reali. Parla con amici, familiari o attraverso forum online per esercitarti nell'imparare l'inglese con YouTube.

Seguendo questi passi, non solo migliorerai la tua pronuncia inglese, ma acquisirai anche una maggiore fiducia nel parlassi. Buona fortuna!

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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