Hey guys, before we move back to the video, I just want to remind you that if you are living abroad or if you are working in an international environment and you urgently need to improve your English communication skills because you're experiencing all of these issues that we are discussing in this video, you might really benefit from coaching. So, we are opening our next cohort on April 6 and you can simply apply using the links below in the description box or in the comments. So, I will see you around. So a lot of people think that speaking in a second language work like this. First you would have to collect and learn a lot of new vocabulary, a lot of new words. And then you would have to learn the grammar. And the grammar often times comes in a formula, right? S O know, subject, verb, object, and all of that. And then you're also going to learn phrases to sprinkle in between your sentences here and there. So when you learn a new language as a beginner, that helps a lot. But when it comes to actually using the language for communication, this process is counterproductive because it's making you feel overloaded. It feels like you're going to think to yourself, okay, the grammar is like this, and then you're going to have to individually manually plug in different words into the grammar formula and then add some phrases here and there. And when you're speaking, you don't have the time to actually build sentences from scratch like that. Your brain doesn't actually work that way. So before language or words appear in your mind, something else needs to happen first. So there's a thinking process behind communication that most language learning completely ignores. And once you see it, a lot of things are going to start to make sense. So in order to help with your processing when you're speaking in a second language, I want you to understand the user mental model or the user framework. And it stands for U understanding, S structure, E expansion, and R refinement. And a lot of language classes usually only focus on the refinement part. But I'm going to get into this one by one. And before I get into the explanation, this also connects to a mindset shift. So, if you've been following um my YouTube, my Instagram, you know about my philosophy um in order for you to change your mindset from an English learner who learns English from the outside and shifting yourself to an English user, as in using the English in your daily life, seeing English as a part of you instead of seeing it as separate. Learner focuses on correction or perfection, but user um focuses on using it as a tool for communication. Anyways, I just thought that it was interesting that the framework acronym um spells out user. It was a huge coincidence which I love.