シャドーイング練習: Taking It One Day at a Time - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

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The Without us perhaps quite noticing, much of what we place our hopes in will be ready for us in a very long time indeed.
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The Without us perhaps quite noticing, much of what we place our hopes in will be ready for us in a very long time indeed.
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In months or even decades from now, if ever.
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The successful completion of a novel, a sufficient sum of money to buy a house or begin a new career, the discovery of a suitable partner, a move to another country.
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In the list of our most intensely felt hopes, few entries stand to come to fruition this season or next, let alone by tonight.
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But occasionally, life places us in a situation where our normal, long-range, hopeful way of thinking grows impossible.
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Imagine you've had a car accident, a very bad one.
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For weeks, it seemed like you might not make it at all.
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Now you're out of a coma and back home, but you still have multiple broken bones, serious bruises and constant migraine.
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It's unclear from here when you'll be going back to work or whether you ever will.
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When someone asks how things are, one answer seems to fit above all.
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We're taking it one day at a time.
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Or imagine that a person is 89, mentally agile, but very slow on their feet and often in pain.
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They had a fall last month and their left knee is badly arthritic.
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Yesterday they did some gardening.
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Today they may go to the shops for the first time in a while.
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You ask their carer how they are.
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We're taking it one day at a time.
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You're a new parent.
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It was a very difficult birth.
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The baby had jaundice and required a blood transfusion.
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And now, finally, mother and child are home.
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The baby cries a lot in the night and has to take some medicines that aggravate the stomach.
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but last night was good enough and hopefully today, if the weather holds, there's a chance of taking a trip to the park to see the daffodils.
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How's it all going?
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We're taking it one day at a time.
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These may be extreme scenarios and a natural impulse is to hope that we will never encounter them, but they contain valuable teachings for anyone with a tendency to ignore their own advantages, that is, for all of us.
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One day at a time thinking reminds us that in many cases our greatest enemy is that otherwise critical nectar, hope and the perplexing emotion it tends to bring with it, impatience.
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By limiting our horizons to tonight, we're girding ourselves for the long haul and remembering that an improvement may best be achieved when we manage not to await it too ardently.
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Our most productive mood may be a quiet melancholy with which we can ward off the temptations of rage or mania and fully imbibe the moderate steadfastness required to do fiddly things – write a book,
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bring up a child, repair a marriage or work through a mental breakdown.
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Taking it day by day means reducing the degree of control we expect to be able to bring to bear on the uncertain future.
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It means recognising that we have no serious capacity to exercise our will on a span of years and should not therefore disdain a chance to secure one or two minor wins in the hours ahead of us.
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We should, from a new perspective, count ourselves immensely grateful if, by nightfall, there have been no further arguments and no more seizures, if the rain has let off and we have found one or two interesting pages to read.
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As life as a whole grows more complicated, we can remember to unclench and smile a little along the way, rather than jealously husbanding our reserves of joy for a finale somewhere in the nebulous distance.
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Given the scale of what we are up against, knowing that perfection may never occur and that far worse may be coming our way, we can stoop to accept with fresh gratitude a few of the minor gifts that are already within our grasp.
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We might look with fresh energy at a cloud, a duck, a butterfly or a flower.
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At 22, we might scoff at such suggestions, for there seem so many larger, grander things to hope for than these evanescent manifestations of nature – romantic love, career fulfilment or big political change.
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But with time, almost all one's more revolutionary aspirations tend to take a hit, perhaps a very large hit.
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One encounters some of the intractable problems of intimate relationships.
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One suffers the gap between one's professional hopes and the available realities.
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One has a chance to observe how slowly and fitfully the world ever alters in a positive direction.
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One is fully inducted to the extent of human wickedness and folly and to one's own eccentricity, selfishness and madness.
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And so, natural beauty may take on a different hue, no longer a petty distraction from a mighty destiny,
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no longer an insult to ambition, but a genuine pleasure amidst the litany of troubles,
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an invitation to bracket anxieties and keep self-criticism at bay, a small resting place for hope in a sea of disappointment, a proper consolation for which one is finally ready on an afternoon walk to be appropriately grateful.
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Vincent van Gogh was admitted to the Saint Paul Mental Asylum in Saint-Rémy in southern France in May of 1889, having lost his mind and tried to sever his ear.
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At the start of his stay, he mostly lay in bed in the dark.
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After a few months, he grew a little stronger and was able to go out into the garden.
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And it was here that he noticed, in a legendary act of concentrated aesthetic absorption, the gnarled roots of a southern pine,
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the blossom on an apple tree, a caterpillar on its way across a leaf, and, most famously, the bloom of a succession of purple irises.
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In his hands, these became like the totemic symbols of a new religion, oriented towards a celebration of the transcendent beauty of the everyday.
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His vase with irises is no sentimental study of a common flower,
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it is the work of a pivotal figure in Western culture struggling to make it to the end of the day without doing himself in and clinging on very tightly indeed with the hands of a genius to a reason to live.
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It's normal enough to hold out for all that we want.
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Why would we celebrate hobbling when we want to run?
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Why accept friendship when we crave passion?
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But if we reach the end of the day and no one has died, no further limbs have broken, a few lines have been written and one or two encouraging and pleasant things have been said, then that is already an achievement worthy of a place at the altar of sanity.
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How natural and tempting to put one's faith in the bountifulness of the years!
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But how much wiser it might be to bring all one's faculties of appreciation and love to bear on that most modest and most easily dismissed of increments – the day already in hand.
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The School of Life is coming to New York from the 4th to the 6th of October for a three-day conference, where you'll have the chance to meet other like-minded individuals and embark on a journey of genuine self-discovery and self-transformation.
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We hope to see you there.
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Thank you.
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このビデオで話す練習をする理由

このビデオ「Taking It One Day at a Time」は、私たちの日常生活や困難な状況にどう向き合うかについて深く考えさせられる内容です。日々の小さな成功を大事にし、焦らずに進むことの重要性を教えてくれます。このようなテーマは、英語を話す能力を向上させるために非常に役立ちます。特に、状況に応じた表現やフレーズを学ぶことで、リアルな会話に近づくことができます。このビデオを使用して、shadow speakを実践し、自信を持って会話する力を養いましょう。

文法と文脈における表現

ビデオではいくつかの重要な文法構造や表現が使われています。以下は、その中から特に注目すべきポイントです。

  • 「one day at a time」: この表現は、物事を一歩ずつ進めることの大切さを示しています。困難な状況にあるときに使えるフレーズです。
  • 「it's unclear from here」: 未来の状況が不明であることを表すこのフレーズは、会話で自分の不安を伝える良い方法です。
  • 「we're taking it one day at a time」: この文は、習慣的に使うことで、焦らずに日々の進展を楽しむ姿勢を示す表現です。
  • 「improvement may best be achieved」: 改善に関する説明に使われるこの構文は、未来の希望や期待について話す際に非常に有用です。

一般的な発音の落とし穴

ビデオの内容にはいくつかの発音の難しい単語やフレーズがあります。特に注意が必要な点は以下の通りです。

  • 「jaundice」: 「ジョンディス」という発音は、特に日本人には難しいかもしれません。正しい発音を繰り返し練習しましょう。
  • 「transfusion」: この単語も発音が難しいですが、強調音を意識することで改善できます。
  • 「perplexing」: この言葉は少し複雑な響きを持っています。ご自身の練習として、shadowing siteを利用して何度も練習することをお勧めします。

これらのポイントを押さえて、YouTubeで英語学習を進める際に役立つ知識を増やしてください。自信を持って会話に挑戦できるよう、shadowspeakshadow speechの実践を続けましょう。

シャドーイングとは?英語上達に効果的な理由

シャドーイング(Shadowing)は、もともとプロの通訳者養成プログラムで開発された言語学習法で、多言語習得者として知られるDr. Alexander Arguelles によって広く普及されました。方法はシンプルですが非常に効果的:ネイティブスピーカーの英語を聞きながら、1〜2秒の遅延で声に出してすぐに繰り返す——まるで「影(shadow)」のように話者を追いかけます。文法ドリルや受動的なリスニングと異なり、シャドーイングは脳と口の筋肉が同時にリアルタイムで英語を処理・再現することを強制します。研究により、発音精度、抑揚、リズム、連音、リスニング力、そして会話の流暢さが大幅に向上することが確認されています。IELTSスピーキング対策や自然な英語コミュニケーションを目指す方に特におすすめです。

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