Pratica di Shadowing: Kristen Bell on Living with Depression and Anxiety | Body Stories | SELF - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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I have to know how my brain works in order to catch it from doing bad things.
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I have to know how my brain works in order to catch it from doing bad things.
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Because the brain is really tricky and it will tell you things that aren't true.
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And so knowing that I would remember a negative experience more than I'd remember a positive,
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I would really make it my mission to go,
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okay, but the positive experiences with that person were equal.
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I'm gonna choose to let that negative experience go.
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What is your anxiety?
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It's hard to put into words,
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honestly, and it feels different at different times.
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When my anxiety is high,
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it feels like an absolute inability to make decisions.
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Like, I would rather not do something than decide what to do.
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And it's almost paralyzing, which is odd,
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because it seems like it's simple.
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Do you want to go on a walk or sit on the couch and watch TV?" And I'm like,
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I can't figure that out.
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I don't have the brain power.
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It feels like decision fatigue.
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And then depression is different.
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My version of it feels very restricted,
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like if you're trying to put on a latex glove that's way too small for your hand.
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Also, it sort of coincides with this feeling of not being excited about anything,
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which, again, on a day when you feel great or even normal,
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you can get excited about things.
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Like you're like, oh, I'm gonna have pizza today,
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or I'm gonna see a friend today,
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or any, all of the fun things about life.
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And when I'm having depression,
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it's like none of those things are exciting or seem worth it.
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So there's this real disconnect because I know,
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logically, that should be a feeling that induces some happiness,
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but it's like my depression will not let me recognize those feelings.
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At 40, I don't believe anything should be taboo anymore.
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Like I talked to my kids about sex,
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and yes, they're very young,
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but they wanted to know how they got here
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and we talked about it and they were grossed out
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and left the room and that's fine but I think
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that anything that's taboo
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and hard to talk about should be some of the first
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priorities you should be talking about with the support systems in your life.
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I wish that I had known as a person in the public eye to talk about it publicly at an earlier date.
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I had been
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acting and you know doing publicity for a while
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and I was at the stretch the last stretch of two movies of a press tour
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and I'd done all these interviews
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and I was lying in bed about to do Sam Jones
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which is a long-form interview like it's like a 45 minute to an hour sit down
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so you better be prepared to talk right
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and I said to my husband God I have nothing to
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talk about I feel exhausted like I've I've said every story about my life.
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And he said, why don't you talk about your struggle with anxiety and depression?
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And it was a huge light bulb.
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I was like, have I never, I've never done that.
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I was experiencing the same thing that everyone else was,
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which is like, well, just don't talk about that.
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And then I just felt so inauthentic and irresponsible to have been presenting this bubbly,
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happy person, which is someone that I cultivate and I nurture and I try really hard to exist as.
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And I just wasn't being honest with the people,
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like the girls who may look up to me.
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And so I was like,
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okay, I'm just gonna talk about it.
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And so I don't even think that Sam knew,
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but during that interview I was like,
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actually, you know, for a period of my life,
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and periods, and often, and sometimes just on a random Wednesday,
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I feel this way.
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And then we started to get more in depth and I found myself really happy to be admitting all of it.
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And the response I got from that interview was astounding to me.
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So many people saying, I've felt that way too.
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Thank you for saying it out loud.
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You gave me the courage to say it out loud,
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which I mean, I did practically nothing other than do what I should do,
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which is be honest and authentic.
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And it really, it was a huge turning point in my life.
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I just felt a huge sense of responsibility.
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And so I kept talking about it and I talk about it a lot.
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And here we are.
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And here we are.
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I started noticing a feeling of being disconnected when I was probably 18 or 19.
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I moved out of Detroit and to New York when I was,
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I just turned 18.
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I was like two weeks into being 18.
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And I was so excited,
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it was all I wanted to do.
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I was going to NYU,
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I was studying musical theater,
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I was living in this beautiful melting pot cultural city and seeing Broadway shows each night.
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And it was wonderful.
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And I just felt like if I wrote my life down on paper,
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I had so many opportunities,
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so much privilege, so much access to happiness,
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and yet my feelings were not that.
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As an 18 year old living on her own in New York City,
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I should be like, yes.
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Like it should be so exciting, but it wasn't.
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I felt like I was sort of followed by this weird dark cloud
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that just didn't allow me to see all the happiness around me.
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And I was lucky that I felt in my bones that that wasn't how I,
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I hate to use the word should,
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but should be feeling or how I could be feeling, I guess.
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And I was lucky enough that my mom had sat me down and had a conversation with me and she said,
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hey, just a quick heads up.
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I experienced these feelings sometimes.
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Your grandmother experienced these feelings sometimes.
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She's a nurse.
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And so she recognized that there could be a hereditary component to a serotonin imbalance.
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And she said, if you start to feel any of these things,
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just know there are a variety of ways
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that you can reach out to people or try to fix it and you don't sort of have to live like that.
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It's such a hard thing to talk about like I don't like
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that there's any sort of stigma to it but I get it.
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It's a weird thing to talk about because it's not an affliction that you can see.
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It's like a hard thing to I guess diagnose and also acknowledge
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and a lot of families or support systems or anyone in your life,
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they don't know how to talk about it,
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especially if they aren't themselves feeling it.
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I think I had an upper hand
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because my mom had explained it to me in a very medical way early on and I was like, oh, okay.
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It sort of armed me with the information about what could happen and maybe it never will,
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but if it did, there's access to help.
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I knew that there were all of these ways like talking to a friend,
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finding a therapist, talking to a psychiatrist or a psychologist,
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and just knowing that changed everything for me.
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Even if you're not experiencing any mental health issues,
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I would hope that you would walk through life being open and ready to be a shoulder if someone needs you.
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Because the reality is we're not all born the same.
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Some of us are born with a ton of confidence and then some are born really timid.
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And I just feel like,
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maybe this is just my maternal instincts talking,
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but I just don't want anyone to feel like they don't have a support system.
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So if we collectively as a society,
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like self-care, this whole idea,
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should also include caring about each other.
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You know, it has to obviously be on the person to identify the feeling and say I need help.
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But then I think it has to be on the people around them that love them to say,
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okay, let me see if I can support you,
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you know, even if that's just checking in once in a while.

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Contesto e Background

Nel video "Kristen Bell on Living with Depression and Anxiety", Kristen Bell condivide le sue esperienze personali con la depressione e l'ansia. Parla di come la sua mente possa trarla in inganno, convincendola a ricordare solo le esperienze negative. Questo tema toccante offre uno spunto importante per gli studenti di inglese: il ruolo della comunicazione e dell'espressione del proprio stato d'animo. Comprendere come gli individui affrontano le difficoltà può migliorare non solo il vocabolario, ma anche la capacità di empatia durante la conversazione.

Le 5 Frasi Chiave per la Comunicazione Quotidiana

  • "È difficile mettere in parole la mia ansia." - Questa frase è utile per esprimere sentimenti di confusione.
  • "Sento una paralisi nelle decisioni." - Ottima per descrivere situazioni di indecisione.
  • "La depressione mi fa sentire molto ristretto." - Aiuta a trasmettere l'idea di sentirsi bloccati.
  • "Niente sembra eccitante quando sono giù." - Utile per discussioni sui sentimenti di apatia.
  • "Dobbiamo parlare delle cose che sono taboo." - Incoraggia conversazioni su argomenti difficili.

Guida Passo-Passo al Shadowing

Per migliorare la pronuncia inglese e la comprensione attraverso il video di Kristen Bell, segui questa guida shadowing:

  1. Ascolta attentamente: Prima di tutto, guarda il video senza cercare di ripetere. Concentrati su come Kristen esprime le sue emozioni e le frasi chiave che usa.
  2. Ripeti a bassa voce: Dopo aver ascoltato una frase, prova a ripeterla immediatamente. Non preoccuparti della pronuncia perfetta all'inizio; l'obiettivo è abituarsi ai suoni e al ritmo.
  3. Imita i toni e le emozioni: Nota come Kristen vari nei toni della voce e cerca di replicarli. Questo aiuta a migliorare l'intonazione e la naturalezza nel parlato.
  4. Usa un site di shadowing: Se possibile, utilizza un shadowing site che offre la possibilità di ascoltare e ripetere i discorsi. Può essere molto utile per l'apprendimento.
  5. Rivedi e ripeti: Ripeti il processo con diverse parti del video. La ripetizione è fondamentale per apprendere e assimilare nuove informazioni.

Ricorda, il segreto per imparare l'inglese con YouTube risiede nella pratica costante. Utilizza queste frasi e questa guida per progredire nel tuo percorso di apprendimento e affinare la tua abilità di shadow speech. Con la giusta determinazione, potrai migliorare significativamente la tua capacità di comunicare in inglese.

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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