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B1
English Leap Podcast from Speak English with Class.
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English Leap Podcast from Speak English with Class.
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Hey English learners!
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Welcome back to the English Leap Podcast,
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your cozy place to learn easy English through real conversations.
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I'm Anna.
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And I'm Jake.
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We're really happy you're here.
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Okay Jake, what's your brain weather today?
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Sunny or stormy?
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Stormy.
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Like my thoughts are in a group meeting without me.
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A group meeting?
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No way.
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Are you sure?
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Yeah.
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Everyone's talking at once.
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No agenda, no minutes, just panic.
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Oof.
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No agenda is the worst kind of meeting.
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And if your brain feels like that too,
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trust me, you're not alone.
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You're really not.
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And today's episode is like a warm cup of tea for your mind.
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Because today we're talking about how to change your life by journaling in 2026.
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Yep, because when you write,
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it's like you give your thoughts a home,
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so they stop living rent-free in your head.
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Living rent-free, whoa, that's painfully accurate.
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Right?
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Like, excuse me thoughts, pay rent, or leave.
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And here's the funny part.
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People hear journaling and they think,
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oh, I have to write a whole book.
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No way.
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That's exactly why they quit on day two.
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Yeah, because they imagine a perfect notebook, perfect handwriting, perfect feelings.
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Perfect feelings?
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Huh?
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What even is that?
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I don't know.
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I've never met them.
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So today we're making journaling simple, real life, doable.
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Doable is the key word because small is how you stay consistent.
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Also, just so you know,
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this is a B1 level episode.
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Yeah, perfect for intermediate learners and still friendly for strong beginners.
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Right.
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Take what you understand, repeat the useful lines,
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and let the rest wash over you.
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That's still learning.
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And because it's the English Leap podcast,
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we'll do a calm word tour at the end.
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Yes.
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Key vocabulary, idioms, and phrasal verbs explained simply.
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No dictionary fight.
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Yeah.
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Dictionary fights are banned.
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Totally banned.
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Okay, Anna, one question before we jump in.
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Hmm.
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Go on.
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Why does writing feel like therapy?
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But starting feels so hard.
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Because starting means you have to face what's inside.
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But don't worry.
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We'll do it gently.
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All right.
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Let's start with point one.
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Why is your brain overloaded with thoughts?
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Okay.
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Picture this.
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Your brain is not broken.
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It's just… overloaded.
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Like a phone with 2% battery but 50 apps running.
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50?
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No way.
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That phone is suffering.
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Exactly.
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And your brain is suffering too.
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So why does it happen?
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Reason one.
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You're holding too many unfinished things.
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Unfinished things?
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Like what?
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A message you didn't reply to.
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A task you keep delaying.
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A conversation you keep replaying.
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A worry that never got a clear answer.
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Ah, so your brain keeps them open like tabs.
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Yes, and open tabs create noise.
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Mmm, and when your mind is noisy,
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it's hard to hear yourself.
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Right, and that leads perfectly to reason two.
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Reason two.
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Modern life gives your brain no quiet minutes.
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Ah, true.
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The moment you feel bored, you grab your phone.
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The moment you feel sad, you scroll.
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The moment you feel stressed, you distract.
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So the feelings never get processed.
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They just get covered.
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Yes.
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And covered feelings don't disappear.
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They wait.
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Yes.
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They wait and then they show up later when you least expect it.
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Right.
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And that brings us to reason three.
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Reason three.
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Your brain is trying to protect you.
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Yes, protect you from mistakes, from embarrassment, from failure.
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So, it keeps sending warnings.
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Don't forget.
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Don't mess up.
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What if?
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What if?
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The what if department is very active.
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Too active.
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And here's the truth.
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Your brain is not your enemy.
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It's doing its job, but it needs help.
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And journaling is that help because writing is like taking the thoughts out of the air and putting them on a table.
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So you can finally look at them.
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Yes.
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And when you can look at them, you can sort them.
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You can choose what matters.
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You can breathe.
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Okay.
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So now you know why your brain feels overloaded.
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Yeah.
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And honestly, just naming it already helps.
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Like, oh, this is why I feel tired.
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That's it.
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Because when your mind is crowded,
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you don't need more pressure.
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You need more space.
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And that takes us to the next Next question.
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Why journaling is important.
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Yeah, because when your brain feels crowded,
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you don't need more pressure.
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You need space.
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Exactly.
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And journaling is one of the simplest ways to create that space.
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Quietly.
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Think of your mind like a room.
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When life gets busy, the room fills up with stuff.
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Unfinished tasks, emotions, worries, little fears.
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That's mental clutter.
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Yes, mental clutter is the perfect phrase.
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It's not one big problem.
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It's lots of small things piled up.
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And when the clutter builds up, you start feeling cloudy.
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Ooh, you mean brain fog.
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Brain fog, exactly.
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You're awake, but not sharp.
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You stare at one task and nothing moves.
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Like your brain is saying,
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I'm here, but I'm tired.
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Yeah, and I had a tiny moment like that this week.
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Can I share it?
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Please.
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So I sat down to work,
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and I kept opening and closing the same thing.
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I couldn't focus.
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I felt foggy and irritated.
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That's so real.
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And I realized I was bottling up stress.
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I didn't talk about it.
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I didn't write it.
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I just held it in.
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Like putting a lid on your feelings and hoping they behave.
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Exactly.
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But they don't.
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They push back.
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And when you bottle things up, thoughts can spiral.
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Spiral, yeah.
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One small worry becomes five,
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then ten, and suddenly your mind is running a marathon at midnight.
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And you're tired, but you can't stop.
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This is where journaling helps,
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because writing lets you get it out of your system without needing the perfect words.
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Yes.
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You don't have to write a novel.
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You can just jot down a few lines.
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Quick.
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Honest.
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Mm-hmm.
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A few lines can clear your chest,
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like letting air out of a tight balloon.
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And then you get headspace.
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Headspace, that breathing room inside your mind.
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And journaling also helps you process.
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Yes, not rushing, not ignoring,
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just slowly working through what happened and how you feel.
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It's like you're sitting with yourself instead of running away from yourself.
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Mmm, that's beautiful.
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And there's something else I love about journaling.
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Tell me.
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It gives you a blank slate feeling,
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a fresh page, a new chance.
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Yes, even if the day was messy, the page feels clean.
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And in 2026, this matters because journaling is small,
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but in the long run, it changes you.
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It really does.
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Little writing today becomes clarity later.
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Okay, so that's why journaling is important.
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Now, let's make it super simple.
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Let's go to the next part,
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the three levels of journaling.
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Yes, three levels so you can pick what fits your day.
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No pressure.
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No perfect journal energy.
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No, dear diary, today I became a new person.
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Please.
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Real life only.
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And we'll share how we actually do it.
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Like what we write.
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Yeah.
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So you're not guessing.
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You can copy the style and start today.
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Let's start with level one.
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What you did.
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This is the easiest level.
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Perfect for busy days.
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Yes.
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When you have mental clutter and you don't want deep thinking,
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you just want relief.
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When your brain is like, please, not today.
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Exactly.
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For me, level one is a blur day.
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Work, messages, errands.
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And at night, I'm like, what even happened today?
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Mmm, that's when you keep it simple.
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So I wrote coffee, meetings,
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traffic, quick lunch, grocery, cooked, shower, phone, sleep.
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See?
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That's journaling.
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Short, honest.
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And sometimes I add one tiny moment I don't want to forget.
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Yes, one small detail makes the day feel real.
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And when you can see your day clearly,
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your mind relaxes a little.
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Yes, but some days, even after you list the day,
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the thoughts are still running.
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Yeah, those thinking too much days.
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Level two is for the thinking too much days.
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Yeah, when you feel brain fog and you can't focus because thoughts are looping.
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And if you don't write them, they can spiral.
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Spiral.
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Yeah.
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I had one of those nights.
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I was tired, but my mind wouldn't stop.
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Midnight brain.
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Yep.
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So I just jotted down the thoughts.
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No filter.
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That's the key.
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Just jot it down.
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I wrote, I'm thinking about money.
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I'm thinking about my time.
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I'm thinking I'm behind.
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I'm thinking 2026 needs to be different.
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Hmm, seeing it on paper makes it smaller.
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And it helps me get it out of my system so I can sleep.
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Hmm, because the page holds the thoughts,
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so your mind doesn't have to.
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Yep, and sometimes it's not even thoughts,
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it's feelings sitting under the thoughts.
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Yeah, the quiet emotions hiding in the background.
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Right, and that takes us to level three.
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Level three is the deepest level, feelings.
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Yeah, because we often bottle up feelings and pretend we're fine.
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And later, it shows up as stress, mood, or silence.
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Yes, so level three is how you process instead of pushing it away.
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I had a moment after a tense conversation.
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I kept replaying it in my head.
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Like a movie you didn't choose.
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Exactly.
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So I wrote, feelings first.
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I wrote, I feel hurt,
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I feel disappointed, I feel small.
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I wanted to speak, but I stayed quiet.
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That's powerful.
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And then I added one more line.
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What I need is peace.
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That's a blank slate moment.
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A fresh page.
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A fresh start.
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Yes.
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And in the long run,
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this is what changes you.
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Because you stop carrying everything in your body.
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You give it a place.
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So those are the three levels.
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Hmm, what you did, what you thought, what you felt.
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And you can mix them.
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Some days, level one only.
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Yeah, some days, one sentence only.
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Still counts.
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Okay, now we go to the last part.
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Yes, actionable tips to start journaling in 2026 and actually stick with it.
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Hmm, because knowing the idea is nice,
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but we want you to do it tomorrow morning.
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Right.
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So we'll start with the easiest step,
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the one that removes pressure.
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Tip 1.
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Make it ridiculously easy to begin.
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Yes.
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Make it so easy your brain can't negotiate.
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Exactly.
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Two minutes, one tiny entry.
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Because when your mind is full of mental clutter,
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you don't need a big task.
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You need a small opening.
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Tip 2.
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Choose your time anchor.
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Like after coffee or before bed or right after you shower.
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Your journal becomes part of a routine, not a someday.
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Because someday is where habits go to die.
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Tip 3.
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Keep one simple prompt ready.
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Yes, when you have brain fog, prompts help.
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Like, what's on my mind?
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Or what do I need today?
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Or what am I avoiding?
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These questions help you process without forcing deep writing.
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Tip 4.
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Use the one-sentence rule on hard days.
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Yes, even one sentence keeps the habit alive.
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Like, today was heavy.
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Or, my thoughts are spiraling.
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I need rest.
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That one sentence can get it out of your system a little bit.
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Tip 5.
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Don't bottle up.
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Label it.
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Mmm, name the feeling.
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I feel stressed.
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I feel hurt.
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I feel tired.
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Because when you label it, it stops controlling you.
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And it gives you head space.
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You breathe again.
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Tip 6.
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Treat every page like a blank slate.
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Yes.
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If you missed yesterday, the page doesn't judge you.
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You don't need to catch up.
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Your journal is not your boss.
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Exactly.
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It's your friend.
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And Tip 7.
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Think in the long run.
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Yes.
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Journaling is not a magic trick.
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It's a quiet habit.
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In the long run, it clears brain fog,
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reduces mental clutter, and helps you make better choices.
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Yes, small writing today becomes a calmer life later.
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Okay, we shared a lot today.
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Yeah, so now let's slow down.
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Because we used some really useful words, journaling words.
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And we want them to stay in your English, not fly away.
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So, word tour time, slow and simple.
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First phrase, mental clutter.
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Mental clutter means too many thoughts in your mind,
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like a messy room in your head.
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Yes, your mind feels crowded.
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Journaling helps you clear that clutter.
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For example, my mind had mental clutter,
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so I wrote for two minutes.
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Or, writing helps me clear mental clutter before sleep.
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Next, brain fog.
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Brain fog is when your mind feels cloudy.
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You can't focus well.
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Right, you feel slow, confused, or not sharp.
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Writing can bring clarity when you feel foggy.
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For example, I had brain fog so I jotted down my thoughts.
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Or, journaling helps when my brain fog is strong.
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Next phrasal verb, bottle up.
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To bottle up means you keep your feelings inside.
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You don't express them.
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Yes, like closing a lid on your emotions.
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Journaling is a safe way to stop bottling things up.
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For example, I bottled up stress all week,
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so I finally wrote it out.
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Or, don't bottle it up.
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Put it on the page.
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Next, spiral.
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Spiral means your thoughts go in circles and get worse and worse.
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Right.
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One thought becomes five thoughts, then ten.
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Writing can stop the spiral because the thoughts slow down.
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For example, my thoughts started to spiral,
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so I wrote one page.
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Or, when I spiral at night,
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journaling helps me calm down.
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Next, get it out of your system.
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That means you release something you've been holding inside, so you feel lighter.
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Yes, like taking pressure off your chest.
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A brain dump can help you get it out of your system.
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For example, I needed to get it out of my system,
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so I did a quick brain dump.
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Or, writing helps me get stress out of my system.
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Next phrasal verb, jot down.
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Jot down means write something quickly, just a few words.
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Yes, not a long diary, just quick notes.
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This makes journaling feel doable.
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For example, I jotted down three lines after my coffee.
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Or, when I'm tired, I just jot it down.
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Next, headspace.
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Headspace means the mental space you have to think and breathe.
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Right.
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When you have no headspace, everything feels heavy.
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Journaling can give you headspace.
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For example, writing gives me headspace when I feel overwhelmed.
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Or, after journaling, I feel more headspace in my mind.
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Next, process.
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To process means to understand and deal with feelings or events slowly.
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Yes, not ignoring, not rushing, just working through it.
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Writing helps you process instead of pushing things away.
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For example, I wrote to process what happened today.
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Or, journaling helps me process my emotions.
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Next idiom, a blank slate.
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A blank slate means a fresh start.
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Right!
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New page, new chance.
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In 2026, journaling can feel like a blank slate for your mind.
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For example, this page is a blank slate.
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I can begin again.
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Or, every morning feels like a blank slate when I write.
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So, that was a calm word tour.
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Yes, and you don't need to remember everything.
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Just pick two or three and use them this week.
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And if you miss a day… It's okay.
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Come back.
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Your journal is a blank slate.
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Because this is not about being perfect in 2026.
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It's about giving your mind a little headspace so you can breathe and move forward.
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Even a few lines can clear mental clutter.
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Even a quick jot down can stop a spiral.
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And in the long run,
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those small pages become a calmer life.
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So here's your tiny homework.
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Today, jot down one line.
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Just one.
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What you did, what you thought, or what you felt.
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And if your line is,
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I'm tired, honestly, that still counts.
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That definitely counts.
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This is Anna.
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And this is Jake.
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And you've been listening to the English Leap Podcast.
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Bye!
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Your progress doesn't end here.
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To continue advancing your English skills,
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click on the next video or explore the additional videos we've thoughtfully selected for you.

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왜 이 비디오로 말하기 연습을 해야 할까요?

이 비디오는 실제 대화를 통해 쉽게 영어를 배우는 이점을 제공합니다. 영어 회화 연습을 할 때, 자주 사용되는 표현이나 문장을 듣는 것은 학습에 많은 도움이 됩니다. 이 프로그램은 영어 회화 연습에 적합한 환경을 조성하여 여러분이 편안하게 스피킹 능력을 향상시킬 수 있도록 돕습니다. 특히, 해당 에피소드는 B1 레벨에 맞춰져 있어, 중급 학습자들에게도 적합합니다. 말하기 연습을 통해 자신감을 얻고, 발음을 개선하여 자연스러운 대화를 나눌 수 있는 기회를 가질 수 있습니다.

문맥 속의 문법 & 표현

비디오에서 사용할 수 있는 몇 가지 중요한 문법 구조와 표현을 살펴보겠습니다:

  • "Living rent-free": 이 표현은 생각이나 감정이 머리 속에서 자유롭게 떠돌고 있다는 의미로, 일상적인 대화에서 자주 쓰입니다.
  • "It's like you give your thoughts a home": 이 비유는 journaling의 중요성을 강조하며, 자신의 생각을 정리하는 방법을 시사합니다.
  • "Doable is the key word": 이는 실천 가능성을 강조하며, 학습자들이 작게 시작할 것을 권장하는 메시지를 전달합니다.

이런 표현들은 IELTS 스피킹에서도 매우 유용하게 활용될 수 있습니다. 듣고 반복하는 방식으로 말하기 능력이 자연스럽게 향상될 수 있습니다.

일반적인 발음 착오

비디오에서 주의해야 할 발음이나 억양을 살펴보겠습니다. 특히 몇 가지 단어가 영어 회화에서 사람들이 자주 놓치는 부분입니다:

  • "Agenda": 이 단어는 흔히 잘못 발음됩니다. 올바른 발음은 "əˈdʒɛndə"로, 연습이 필요합니다.
  • "Minute": 이 단어도 다양한 의미가 있지만, 회의와 관련된 문맥에서는 "mɪnɪt"로 발음해야 합니다.
  • "Panic": 일반적인 발음 실수로는 첫 음절을 강조하는 것이 있습니다. 정확한 발음은 "ˈpænɪk"입니다.

이러한 발음을 연습하면서 유튜브 영어 공부와 같은 다양한 자료를 참고하면, 보다 자연스러운 발음을 익힐 수 있습니다. shadowspeak 방법으로 자신만의 스타일로 반복적으로 연습하면 더 효과적입니다.

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.

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