쉐도잉 연습: Consciously Reclaiming the Feminine & Masculine Within Each of Us | Sarah Poet, M.Ed | TEDxAsheville - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

C2
쉐도잉 컨트롤
0% 완료 (0/161 문장)
Reviewer Gopal Six years ago, I was a school principal, and I identified as a hard-working professional.
⏸ 일시 정지
모든 문장
161 문장
1
Reviewer Gopal Six years ago, I was a school principal, and I identified as a hard-working professional.
2
I was not using the words sacred feminine in my vocabulary, and I thought that they might be words reserved for women who danced naked around fire circles at the full moon.
3
You know?
4
At this time, I had two master's degrees.
5
I was generally very driven.
6
I was not doing a lot of dancing.
7
If I wanted to go after something and accomplish it, usually I did.
8
I helped run a school by day, and I was bossy at home by night.
9
I knew how to maintain order.
10
My son's father and my therapist encouraged me to relax, to rest, but I didn't actually know how.
11
And I was getting sick at this point from how hard I had been pushing myself for so long.
12
I was secretly laying on the floor in my office, with my feet elevated on a chair three times a day to help regulate my adrenals.
13
I was 32 years old.
14
I had a toddler son.
15
I was just getting started.
16
I had a coveted position at work, and I was utterly depleted.
17
Around this time, I remember being in a leadership team meeting, and we were making an important decision about a student with special needs.
18
I offered up what I thought, and one of my colleagues dismissed what I said and said, Sarah, you take intuitive leaps.
19
We didn't yet have the data to back up what I was saying, and data was the driver of the decision.
20
So I walked away, and I was thinking, intuitive leaps?
21
Well, if I'm a woman, isn't intuition a part of me?
22
And what is the role of this feminine quality in leadership?
23
And if I'm repressing this aspect of me, then what else about the feminine am I repressing?
24
The discord was increasingly rising in me.
25
The pressure to perform and succeed was just less and less fulfilling all the time.
26
And my career, though it was heart-centered, really seemed to demand that I repress part of me, what I innately knew.
27
And I sensed that something had long ago been forgotten, something to do with the sacred feminine.
28
And so I went on a quest, first to reclaim the sacred feminine within me, and then to reclaim the sacred masculine in me as well, because what I discovered is both are needed for wholeness.
29
Today I want to challenge assumptions of what we think we know about the sacred feminine and masculine in the modern world.
30
And I'm going to share some of my story, and I want to invite you on a journey of self-exploration as to how you incorporate these two archetypes in your life, work and relationships.
31
relationships.
32
So first of all, what do I mean by masculine and feminine?
33
I see these two as the foundational archetypes in our entire collective.
34
Psychologist Carl Jung said that the archetypes are the patterns in the collective subconscious.
35
He called them inherited potentials that we actualize when we bring them into consciousness.
36
Masculine and feminine are not gendered.
37
Masculine does not equal male and feminine does not equal female.
38
Rather, they're archetypes, potentials, energies.
39
And I have to tell you, some people say to me, Sarah, please do not use these words, for fear that there will be more divisiveness if we do.
40
But I actually think that the opposite is true, and that we can really bring connection if we understand the beauty in the polarities of these archetypes, and that they all exist within us.
41
I also want to take a moment to say that I'm going to use the words man and woman a lot in this talk today and there are a lot of our friends who do not identify on that binary and I want to say that every beautiful human is welcome here in this conversation.
42
We're all in this together.
43
So the archetypes, the masculine and feminine, they're complements.
44
They're energies and potentials and they all exist within us.
45
So if you look at this slide, you can see that you have all of these within you and that you might call on them at different times.
46
So masculine logic balances feminine intuition.
47
Feminine emotion balances masculine cognition.
48
They really want to work together and so we can balance them or we can polarize them and we can dance in between within one human.
49
These two would, one would never dominate the other in nature.
50
But about 10,000 years ago, at the inception of the patriarchy, which is a social system that defaults power and authority to men, the sacred feminine, the archetype, was systematically suppressed.
51
It wasn't valued, and it was even seen as a threat.
52
And what happened is, you and I have all been defaulting to the masculine first ever since.
53
I'm sure that you can think of a time in your life where you chose cognition over emotion, or logic over intuition, right?
54
So in my life, I've been looking at this for about eight years, really looking at how and why my own feminine became so repressed.
55
And the significant turning point for me was a significant trauma at the age of 18.
56
You see, I got pregnant my very first semester of college.
57
It was accidental, and it was out of the expected order of operations.
58
I intuitively knew that this child was meant to be in the world.
59
I also knew that to my family, school remained a priority.
60
And so I spent that first trimester of pregnancy with a plain bagel in one hand and a Nalgene full of orange juice in the other to settle my stomach while I kept going to classes.
61
And I finished the semester with high grades, of course, and I packed up and drove the 10 hours back home to my disappointed Christian conservative parents in small town, and we were going to decide how to proceed.
62
And it was decided that because I was doing things in the wrong order, my child would be adopted at birth.
63
So I put my head down.
64
I did what needed to be done.
65
I went to classes during the day.
66
I waited tables at night.
67
And then as if I was carrying this little stowaway, I would sneak away in all of the quiet moments that I had with her and just cherish the time that I had.
68
And in that time and space, I found books written by midwives with wisdom about the body that my mother and grandmother had not taught me.
69
I don't think that they knew it.
70
It was as if something ancient was calling to me, and I was seeking it out.
71
I birthed my daughter, all nine pounds, three ounces of her, naturally, as if wanting this primal process of the body.
72
I named her based on a sacred vision that I had, and I chose her parents based on a gut knowing.
73
And all of this was evidence of the sacred feminine, and I see that looking back.
74
I wasn't aware of that then, but there was a wisdom there, and I was touching it.
75
And immediately after her birth, I shut it all down.
76
There was one formula for success before me.
77
go make something of yourself.
78
So I went back to school within three weeks.
79
And the shame sounded in my head like, you are not enough.
80
You are not old enough, wise enough, wealthy enough, educated enough, married enough to be worthy of your own beautiful baby.
81
And so go prove your worth.
82
Shame and vulnerability expert Brene Brown says that when we live with shame, we are more likely to attempt to control the variables and to prove our worth outside of ourself.
83
After the loss of my daughter, I no longer knew if I had ever known my internal sense of wholeness, and I certainly hustled for my self-worth for a good long time.
84
If we don't operate with a conscious awareness of masculine and feminine, then we operate in the subconscious, as my story shows.
85
I remained in that driven, masculine orientation of achievement, drive, cognition, go back to school, make something of yourself,
86
for over 10 years, until I find myself physically, emotionally, spiritually, and mentally exhausted, laying on my office floor a decade later.
87
I had played by the rules of the patriarchy, and I wasn't winning.
88
So when we repress the feminine, the masculine automatically goes into a subconscious orientation.
89
You can't have one existing healthily without another.
90
By the way, this is what we call toxic masculinity these days, the repression of the feminine, and the masculine goes into more of a domination, control, and separation orientation.
91
And we're all experiencing this as a collective.
92
We're all experiencing what I call a collective trauma of separation, domination, and control.
93
Because you simply can't repress half of the energy that comprises the entire universe for so many thousands of years without massive consequence.
94
And we're feeling it inside of ourselves, individually, and then we're also feeling it within our collective.
95
Think about problems of domination and separation.
96
Racism, sexism, environmental destruction.
97
At the core, this chasm between the feminine and masculine that want to be united is the cause.
98
so later on my journey of reclaiming the sacred feminine this by this time recognizing some
99
of what had been sort of suppressed i began to identify as a resilient feminine badass and i began claiming my story and using my voice and i made a man box
100
And I put into that man box my understanding of masculinity, as well as every man who had hurt me, as well as every man that I knew.
101
And then I began asking them to prove to me that they didn't deserve to be in my man box.
102
I was essentially asking for men to hustle and prove their self-worth, which is not exactly the sacred feminine in action.
103
The Me Too movement was so powerful because what we see is women together raising up their voices in spite of fear.
104
And I want to be clear that what's happening is actually a rising up of the sacred feminine under these women's movements, right?
105
It's exciting, it won't be stopped, and it's a little uncomfortable right now because we're in this pivot of such a long history.
106
When I see one woman at a time reclaim her voice and her right to her own body, I know within my entire being that this courageous choice of hers ripples change into the world.
107
I get to support women doing this in my business.
108
It's amazing.
109
We saw with Me Too just how much trauma against women and violence has been silenced.
110
And as a woman, I can say Me Too.
111
I have, and I believe in the movement.
112
And I later realized that as a human, I can't stop at Me Too.
113
Because every man who's ever hurt me by taking advantage of my body or attempting to silence me or repressing my equality in the workplace has really done so because of his own repression of the feminine.
114
It's this collective wound of separation.
115
And I can't continue to point my own fingers in anger when I recognize that I, too, have participated in this unconscious programming, suppressing my feminine over time as well.
116
So if I can't point my fingers, I have to do other things, like give TEDx talks and devote my life to it.
117
Last year, the American Psychological Association published guidelines for working with men and boys.
118
And a paper that was published at the same time said that what they called traditional masculinity was marked by stoicism, competitiveness, dominance, and aggression, and is, on the whole, harmful.
119
And then they give recommendations for treating masculinity.
120
And I think that this is really dangerous, because if we put all of masculinity into this subconscious or toxic box, then we don't have another map.
121
We don't need to treat masculinity, we need to reclaim the sacred masculine.
122
In this country, approximately 7 out of 10 suicides are committed by white middle-aged men.
123
the same group of people that we call the most privileged.
124
In the last three years consecutively, the lifespan of men in this country has decreased because the suicide rates have gone up so high.
125
So with these statistics, I think it's clear that men aren't actually winning in the patriarchy either.
126
I've worked with hundreds of male students.
127
I now work with adult men in my practice.
128
I'm the mother of a beautiful son, and I love the masculine within me.
129
And I can say that the true nature of masculinity is not harmful or toxic.
130
It's beautiful, it's powerful in just the right ways, and it's necessary at this time.
131
The sacred feminine rising doesn't want a world without men.
132
So men, at the root of these statistics is really a lot of shame.
133
And what we need you to do is stop trying to control the variables and do the courageous and vulnerable thing of reclaiming the sacred masculine and then the sacred feminine within you.
134
So eventually, I got out of all of those classrooms, and I started the practice of Heart and Soul Embodied Breath.
135
And in this practice, I help individuals, couples, and organizations to consciously relate to themselves and to one another.
136
There's just so much gender-related trauma playing out in our primary partnerships.
137
But what if our primary partnerships were actually the place where we could actually heal some of this separation that I'm talking about?
138
They can be.
139
Because when we come together in primary unions, of course that's going to be the place that our wounds show the most, right?
140
So it also goes to show that that is the place of the most potential in healing.
141
And I'm seeing it in the couples that I'm working with now, each claiming their wholeness, each understanding these archetypes and rebalancing and coming into greater intimacy and connection.
142
And what if we reincorporated feminine differently in our workplaces?
143
I think that we would see far less of those crunchy human resource problems involving gender if we incorporated things like collaboration and intuition and creativity more consciously.
144
The patriarchy historically gave positions of power to men.
145
and women have thankfully been fighting for equality in the workplace for a really long time but I personally found that
146
when I did climb that ladder and I achieved those positions I didn't want what we called equality in the workplace if it meant that I had to force down what I innately knew which it ultimately did.
147
It's wonderful to have women in leadership.
148
What we need is the feminine in leadership, which requires some conscious reprogramming and restructuring.
149
As you've heard, I'm no longer afraid, as I was in those days of being a school principal, to use the words sacred feminine or patriarchy.
150
And maybe, just maybe, I too have now danced naked around that sacred fire, which you may or may not decide to do on your path.
151
This path is mysterious and beautiful.
152
It's lifelong and it's sometimes difficult.
153
Earlier I asked you to consider how you use or how you have the archetypes both within you.
154
And now I'll ask you, how do you consciously integrate them?
155
And how will you?
156
There's one more thing that I noticed on my path.
157
When these two danced within me, in union, wholeness was restored, and love was the result.
158
Living from the heart was the result.
159
And from there, I believe that there's nothing that we cannot do or be, heal or create as a conscious collective of people.
160
Thank you.
161
Thank you.
App Store 및 Google Play에서 4.9/5

Shadowing English 모바일에서

Shadowing English 앱으로 언제 어디서나 영어를 배우세요. 오늘 의사 소통 능력을 향상 시키십시오!

학습 진행 상황 추적
AI 채점 및 오류 수정
풍부한 비디오 라이브러리
Shadowing English Mobile App

이 수업에 대해

이번 수업에서는 성별에 대한 고정관념을 넘어서 '여성성과 남성성'을 내재화하는 여정을 탐구합니다. 발표자인 Sarah Poet는 자기 탐색의 중요성을 강조하며, 성격적인 아키타입이 우리의 삶과 관계에 미치는 영향을 설명합니다. 이 수업을 통해 우리는 내면의 여성성과 남성성을 이해하고, 두 에너지를 조화롭게 활용하는 방법을 배우게 됩니다.

주요 어휘 및 구문

  • 여성성 (Feminine) - 개성이 강한 에너지이며, 직관과 감정을 포함합니다.
  • 남성성 (Masculine) - 논리적 사고와 인지 기능을 포함하는 에너지입니다.
  • 아키타입 (Archetype) - 집단 무의식 내의 패턴으로, 선천적으로 우리 모두가 갖고 있는 가능성을 나타냅니다.
  • 직관 (Intuition) - 본능적인 감각으로, 종종 감정적인 결정을 내릴 때 도움을 줍니다.
  • 균형 (Balance) - 남성성과 여성성이 조화를 이루는 상태입니다.
  • 억압 (Repression) - 본래의 감정이나 성질이 숨겨지는 과정입니다.
  • 조화를 이루다 (To Harmonize) - 두 개의 상반된 요소가 함께 잘 어우러지도록 하는 상태를 의미합니다.
  • 탐색 (Exploration) - 자신을 깊이 이해하고 새로운 것을 배우기 위한 과정입니다.

연습 팁

이번 영상을 보며 shadowing 연습을 하면 큰 도움이 될 것입니다. Sarah의 말하는 속도는 비교적 차분하고 명확하므로, 그에 맞춰 따라해 보세요. 다음은 몇 가지 구체적인 조언입니다:

  • 처음에는 어구 단위로 따라해 보세요. “여성성과 남성성”과 같은 형태로 성조를 맞춰보는 것이 중요합니다.
  • 단어의 발음을 신경 쓰면서 자신의 발음과 비교해 보세요. shadowspeaks에서 제공하는 자료를 활용하여 발음 연습을 해 보십시오.
  • 영상의 각 부분을 반복적으로 듣고, shadow speech 형식으로 나만의 의도적인 발음을 만들어 보세요. 이때, 자연스럽고 유창하게 말하는 것을 목표로 하세요.
  • 대화의 맥락을 이해한 후, 직접 질문이나 응답 형태로 연습해 보세요. 이렇게 하면 shadow speak의 효과가 더욱 커집니다.
  • 매일 연습하는 습관을 들이면 영어 말하기 실력이 확실히 향상될 것입니다. 유튜브 영어 공부를 통해 다양한 콘텐츠를 활용하는 것도 추천합니다.

쉐도잉이란? 영어 실력을 빠르게 키우는 과학적 방법

쉐도잉(Shadowing)은 원래 전문 통역사 훈련을 위해 개발된 언어 학습 기법으로, 다언어 학자인 Dr. Alexander Arguelles에 의해 대중화된 방법입니다. 핵심 원리는 간단하지만 매우 강력합니다: 원어민의 영어를 들으면서 1~2초의 짧은 지연으로 즉시 소리 내어 따라 말하는 것——마치 '그림자(shadow)'처럼 화자를 따라가는 것입니다. 문법 공부나 수동적인 청취와 달리, 쉐도잉은 뇌와 입 근육이 동시에 실시간으로 영어를 처리하고 재현하도록 훈련합니다. 연구에 따르면 이 방법은 발음 정확도, 억양, 리듬, 연음, 청취력, 말하기 유창성을 크게 향상시킵니다. IELTS 스피킹 준비와 자연스러운 영어 소통을 원하는 분들에게 특히 효과적입니다.

커피 한 잔 사주기