쉐도잉 연습: How to Not Waste Your Life (before it's too late) - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

C1
If you've ever had big dreams and projects and started them with all the passion in the world,
⏸ 일시 정지
288 문장
문장이 너무 짧거나 길면 Edit를 눌러 조정하세요.
1
If you've ever had big dreams and projects and started them with all the passion in the world,
2
only to then at some point lose momentum and not actually finish what you started,
3
then I made this video to help.
4
Shiny object syndrome
5
and continually getting distracted from finishing what you start will only
6
result in a life where you're surrounded by the graveyard of
7
dozens of half-done passion projects with nothing actually completed to show for it.
8
This is for anyone who actually wants to create cut-through and make progress to fulfilling their potential.
9
Because execution is a muscle that you can practice and strengthen over time.
10
If you're new here, my name's Izzy.
11
I'm a mum, tech founder and Cambridge trained doctor.
12
And on this channel, I share the mindsets and strategies to help you create a life that you love.
13
In the first part of this video,
14
we'll walk through exactly what the cost is of all of these unfinished projects.
15
Then we'll walk through the psychology of why most people don't actually finish what they start
16
and how we can try to fix this.
17
And finally, we'll go through a three-part framework that will show you exactly how to finish everything you start from today onwards.
18
So without further ado, let's dive in.
19
Every single one of your actions either reflects traction,
20
so moving in the direction of what you actually want and helping you to achieve your goals,
21
or distraction, moving away from what you actually want and your goals.
22
And so let's dive into the cost of all these graveyard projects,
23
which are often the result of repeatedly being distracted away from actually making traction on your goals.
24
The average person will have 4,000 weeks in their life,
25
which is an idea popularized by Oliver Buckman's book.
26
And now think about how many of your 4,000 weeks have been invested into those half-done projects.
27
And the return on that life energy investment
28
into these projects that you start and then don't finish is actually quite minimal
29
if you don't complete a project because maybe you get the enjoyment
30
and start to learn new skills and it's kind of fun along the way and those are all very valuable.
31
But then the real return on time investment for a project usually actually comes after a significant investment in it.
32
So once it really comes to fruition,
33
this means that of your 4,000 precious weeks that you have in your life,
34
maybe dozens of these have been dedicated to projects that you just started and then never really took anywhere beyond that.
35
And our time, our life energy,
36
our attention is the most valuable finite resource that we have.
37
It's one of the only things you can't really buy that much more of.
38
So other than the life energy that was dedicated to these unfinished projects,
39
another cost is actually the mental cost.
40
In 1927, Bloomer Zygarnik, a Russian psychologist,
41
ran her famous restaurant study.
42
Zygarnik noticed that waiters could remember extremely complex orders if they were unpaid.
43
But as soon as customers paid,
44
the waiters immediately forgot all the details about the order.
45
She took this to the lab to test it again.
46
People were given around 20 tasks each,
47
but in around half of these tasks,
48
they were obviously rather annoyingly interrupted before they could even finish them.
49
And this was a surprising finding.
50
Participants remembered incomplete tasks 90% better than completed ones,
51
which just goes to show how our brain keeps tabs on all of these unfinished tasks.
52
And this actually does result in this level of mental load which stays with you until you finish them.
53
This led to her developing the theory of the Zygonic effect,
54
which can be defined as the way that open loops
55
and unfinished tasks actually create intrusive thoughts and mental tension that persist until the task is completed or that loop is closed.
56
This means that our graveyard of unfinished passion projects aren't just a collection of dreams that were half cooked and abandoned,
57
they're actually an active attention vampire,
58
because when we think about these projects and think,
59
oh I should really like get back to this project where I started to learn Shaolin Kung Fu
60
and then gave up halfway,
61
and actually creates that friction and drag across everything else that we do.
62
And finally, the third and biggest cost to unfinished projects is actually losing self-trust.
63
Repeatedly starting a new project and then not actually finishing it creates seeds for self-doubt and erodes your self-efficacy.
64
Self-efficacy is your belief in your ability to achieve the things that you set out to do.
65
Psychologist Albert Bandura defined it as your confidence in your own ability to take the actions needed to reach a goal.
66
By eroding this sense of agency,
67
it leads us to limiting ourselves and then actually putting a ceiling on our potential in life.
68
Before we move on to the next section,
69
I actually have a completely free gift for you.
70
It's a three-day guide on how to integrate soft productivity into your life
71
so you can make both sustainable and also effective progress on the things that matter the most.
72
So if you'd like me to send it over for free,
73
I've popped a link down below in my description.
74
So now let's dive more into the neuroscience of why we don't finish what we start.
75
Most people never finish what they start because they just get completely bogged down and stuck in the perilous valley of despair.
76
Let me explain.
77
You might have heard of the Dunning-Kruger effect,
78
which explains why beginners often feel overconfident and excited
79
because they don't actually know enough yet to recognize what they don't even know.
80
So this is known as the Rumsfeld matrix,
81
which is a way of categorizing information and knowledge about something.
82
There are two main axes, awareness and knowledge.
83
And so when we start out a project,
84
we actually don't have any awareness of even what we don't know.
85
We have so many information gaps about a new project
86
or a new goal that we don't even know what we need to learn about.
87
And this is exactly what the Dunning-Kruger effect is based on.
88
All of these unknown unknowns,
89
where when you're a total beginner,
90
you don't know what you don't know to the extent that you don't know enough to even be intimidated by it.
91
And you think it's easy and simple because you don't know any of the difficulties that exist.
92
The issue is that once you actually start a project and as you learn more,
93
you enter something called the valley of despair.
94
And that's because you go from unknown unknowns to having known unknowns,
95
where you have awareness of all the things that you don't know and all the things that you need to learn,
96
the skills you need to gain in order to complete your goal or project.
97
This here is the psychological moment where most people quit,
98
not because they lack the ability but
99
because actually the reality of how difficult the thing they're trying to do has actually caught up with the initial optimism.
100
Additionally the initial dopamine flooding into their brains from the novelty of drawing something new has usually dried up.
101
So there's a dip in motivation and also a realization
102
that oh this actually is a bit harder than I thought and it's gonna take longer than expected.
103
The only way out of this valley of despair is actually through.
104
And so you dedicate and commit to actually going from known unknowns to actually known knowns and you level up.
105
And so this is the cycle that everyone,
106
including myself, will go through when we actually approach a new project.
107
So the axes here are essentially progress,
108
so how far through the project you are,
109
and then how you feel.
110
So this is like how motivated you are, how optimistic you feel.
111
We all start out at this high peak where we feel
112
so optimistic and this is also known as the peak of uninformed optimism.
113
This is where you're like,
114
oh my gosh, this goal is gonna be so exciting.
115
I'm gonna get so in shape and I'm gonna learn all these languages
116
and I'm gonna start this business and it's gonna be so good.
117
I can totally do this.
118
This is like, how hard can it be?
119
I see all these other people doing it and everything feels
120
so possible because you don't actually yet know what you don't know.
121
Then after working on it for a little while comes the valley of despair.
122
And this is where reality hits.
123
The work is harder than expected.
124
Progress is slower.
125
You realize how much you still don't know.
126
And then you also lose that initial dopamine rush of motivation.
127
So this is where you start to think,
128
maybe I'm not cut out for this.
129
Maybe this was actually like not a great idea.
130
Everyone else makes this look easy.
131
What's wrong with me?
132
Why can't, why is this not working?
133
Maybe this isn't for me.
134
Maybe it's time to quit.
135
This is where the graveyard happens.
136
If you actually decide to commit and push through the valley of despair and feeling like actually maybe actively pessimistic even,
137
maybe even dropping below neutral,
138
then you actually start to enter what's called the slope of enlightenment.
139
You start gaining actual competence and you start to make small wins
140
and you develop systems and progress starts to become visible again.
141
And finally, you reach a plateau of sustainability.
142
This is where you've really built out the systems.
143
The project is working.
144
It's a habit that you've built in and it feels automatic.
145
You're no longer struggling through.
146
You're in a sustainable rhythm.
147
And this is where you really get to the next level and start to see the fruits of your investment.
148
So before you think, how could I possibly make it through this valley?
149
I always quit exactly around this like three to four week mark where the valley of despair usually hits the hardest.
150
Do not actually despair.
151
We have a three-part framework to actually give you a proper system to finish everything you start.
152
By the way,
153
if you're looking for a more frictionless way of getting out your best ideas onto the page
154
and then actually following through with them,
155
you might want to try speaking them instead of typing
156
because the average person actually speaks four times faster than they can type.
157
And that's where Whisperflow comes in.
158
It's a voice-first writing tool that works on both Mac and Windows,
159
which lets me speak into my computer instead of typing.
160
And they're very kindly sponsoring today's video.
161
So nowadays, whenever I'm drafting my newsletter,
162
Letters to My Younger Self,
163
scripting these videos, or working on any project that requires getting my thoughts down,
164
I can just speak naturally into my computer.
165
Flow does the transcribing and automatic tidying up for me,
166
which means that all of my rambly thoughts get turned into sentences that actually flow nicely and make sense.
167
And what I found particularly useful is that it works across all of my apps on my whole computer.
168
So whether I'm in Notion,
169
Google Docs, email, anything else, I can just speak.
170
So if you want to try speaking more and typing less,
171
I've put the link down in my description below
172
and you can use my code Izzy for an extra 30 days completely free.
173
Now let's get back into the video.
174
Step one is choosing what to start and investing your attention skillfully.
175
This is being wise about where to dedicate your energy and attention.
176
When starting a new project,
177
sometimes it's easy to go all in and think,
178
oh my god, I'm going to buy all the equipment,
179
I'm going to commit to like years of this gym membership
180
and like really like send this only to then three
181
or four weeks later realize that actually you're not really feeling anymore
182
and so what I'd like to invite you to do is instead run tiny experiments.
183
My friend Anne-Law actually wrote a whole book on tiny experiments
184
and how to integrate them into your life and I love this concept.
185
So when you're approaching a new project blocking your calendar a fixed amount of time to run a tiny experiment.
186
For example
187
when I was deciding on what new hobbies to start I
188
thought okay I'm just going to sign up for literally just two sessions of Chinese calligraphy and see how that goes.
189
Part of my work includes building out software and apps
190
and on the engineering side a big part of starting a project is actually scoping the project,
191
estimating how long each thing is going to take,
192
what it's really going to require,
193
and also beyond how hard or long it will be,
194
also scope your enjoyment and fulfillment.
195
How much are you actually enjoying this thing that you're doing?
196
And ask yourself this key question,
197
will I still care about this in week three when it feels boring and hard?
198
And something I'd like to say here is that there's a paradox of optionality,
199
where there's often a sense that maintaining optionality is a good thing.
200
But actually if we optimize only for optionality in every area of life,
201
this actually closes the doors to real success in any one area.
202
Think of relationships.
203
Optimizing for optionality is very useful in the early stages of dating,
204
but to actually build something deep and real with someone you need to commit
205
and invest and put a stake in the ground
206
and decide to push through even in all the moments when it's not fun and easy.
207
It's that commitment that brings true fulfillment and allows you to reach the next level.
208
Projects are kind of similar.
209
The early stage is optimizing for tiny experimentation and optionality,
210
figuring out, okay, what's a good fit in terms of like how hard it is
211
and how much I enjoy it and how much I care about it.
212
But then once you've done that experimentation,
213
choose and commit to facing the valley of despair and going all the way through it.
214
This brings us to the second stage,
215
which is facing the valley.
216
And firstly, we're to talk about motivation.
217
This actually all happens in the preparation in the early stages while you're riding that wave of motivation,
218
dopamine, novelty, you're so excited,
219
you feel the vision, you're like yeah we're gonna do it,
220
combined with then the discipline to actually look at what you prepared for yourself.
221
Let me explain.
222
When you are excited and starting out prepare the following things for yourself.
223
Record a video which is maybe just for you or journal about your vision for this project,
224
share all of your excitement,
225
write a letter to your future self which is the version of you in the valley,
226
encouraging yourself to keep going because you know that the valley is normal.
227
Literally every great thing that was built
228
or learned required someone to go through the valley to the other side
229
and so really remember that experiencing the valley is not necessarily a sign that you should quit because it's completely normal.
230
The third part of this framework is systematization and this is
231
because in the valley of despair there is both the crisis of motivation
232
and also a crisis of actually like you need to actually start taking action steps
233
and knowing what to do next
234
and this is about taking your goal breaking it into milestones
235
and for the current milestone
236
that you're currently on breaking this down into more action points
237
once you've got a bunch of these action points what i love to do is time block
238
so i live by my calendar my google calendar is like my one source of truth for what i'm doing
239
and what i'm working on and
240
so blocking out time to actually do these action points
241
and instead of setting the bar really high and expecting myself to always have a good day.
242
Set your standard for a bad day.
243
So what is a minimum viable session on this project that you can still choose to feel good about?
244
By making it easier to actually succeed and feel good about yourself,
245
this helps you to actually develop that momentum that you need to carry you through this season.
246
Another hack is actually building in accountability systems.
247
Psychologist Dr Gail Matthews did a study on 270 people around goal attainment and completion,
248
basically trying to answer the question of what actually increases the chance that someone achieves the goal they've set out to achieve.
249
She found
250
that the two groups who are the most successful in actually
251
completing their goals always involved an accountability buddy to keep them in check.
252
So literally having a friend on board
253
and keeping them in the loop on your progress is proven to increase your goal attainment.
254
For example here group four sent their goals
255
and action commitments to a supportive friend and group five sent weekly progress reports on top of everything that group four did.
256
And the final thing that has helped me through so many valleys of despair is creating implementation intentions.
257
Two leading psychologists, Golwitzer and Shiren,
258
investigated over 90 studies and did a meta-analysis,
259
finding that people who made if-then plans,
260
which are also known as implementation intentions,
261
had around a 68% better chance of achieving their goals than those who didn't.
262
So from your goal, breaking down into milestones,
263
breaking down into action points,
264
for each of your action points,
265
actually create an intention of,
266
okay, let's say one of my action points is I want to go to the gym every single week on Monday,
267
Wednesday, and Friday.
268
And so then maybe what I do is I set an alarm to ring on Monday,
269
Wednesday, and Friday at the time I want to go to the gym
270
and it's like okay if the alarm rings then I go to the gym.
271
So now that we've gone through the cost of our graveyard projects,
272
the valley of despair, and how it's been sabotaging so many of our goals,
273
and how to actually push through it,
274
the next step is to take action.
275
At the end of every video I always invite you to
276
choose at least two action points to take forward from this video and write them down somewhere whether that's in the comments,
277
in your emails, or in your journal,
278
and whether that's let's say getting some of the free resources I've attached to this video
279
or actually deciding on a project that you're going to take forwards and take through this framework,
280
the important part is execution.
281
If you enjoyed this video,
282
feel free to hit subscribe and maybe follow me over on Instagram at Izzy Seely.
283
And I think you'll enjoy this video over here where I
284
walk you through a systems-based approach to realistically achieve all of your goals this coming year.
285
As always, thank you so much for watching,
286
take care of yourselves, and remember that the journey is the destination.
287
I'll see you in the next video.
288
Bye!

앱 다운로드

당신이 말하는 모든 문장을 AI가 채점

TRENDING

인기 동영상

맥락 및 배경

이 비디오에서는 꿈과 프로젝트를 가지고 시작했지만 결국 중도에 흥미를 잃고 끝내지 못하는 경우에 대해 이야기합니다. 이러한 shadowspeak 방식을 통해 영어 말하기 능력을 향상시키며, 프로젝트를 완성하는 데 필요한 마음가짐과 전략을 제시합니다. 발표자는 자신이 어떻게 다양한 프로젝트를 시작하고 완수하지 못했는지 반성하며, 관객들이 이러한 문제를 극복할 수 있도록 돕기 위해 이러한 이야기를 공유합니다. 특히 4,000주라는 인생의 시간 자원을 활용하는 방법에 대한 중요한 관점을 제공합니다.

일상 소통을 위한 상위 5개 구문

  • “What cost do unfinished projects have on your life?” - 미완성 프로젝트가 당신의 삶에 어떤 비용을 초래합니까?
  • “Execution is a muscle that you can practice and strengthen.” - 실행은 연습하고 강화할 수 있는 근육입니다.
  • “Focus on what you can control.” - 당신이 통제할 수 있는 것에 집중하십시오.
  • “Life energy is your most valuable finite resource.” - 생명 에너지는 당신이 가진 가장 소중한 유한 자원입니다.
  • “Don't let distractions derail your progress.” - 방해 요소가 당신의 진행을 방해하게 두지 마십시오.

단계별 쉐도잉 가이드

이 비디오의 내용을 더욱 효과적으로 학습하기 위해 아래 단계를 따라해 보세요. 특히 영어 발음 교정IELTS 스피킹 준비에 큰 도움이 될 것입니다.

  1. 첫 번째 단계: 비디오를 한 번 들어보며 전체 내용을 이해합니다.
  2. 두 번째 단계: 각 구문을 반복해서 들어보며 발음을 따라합니다. 이때 shadow speak 기법을 활용해 보세요.
  3. 세 번째 단계: 발음을 따라하며 문장 구조를 분석합니다. 어떤 억양과 리듬이 사용되었는지 주의 깊게 들어보세요.
  4. 네 번째 단계: 자신이 말하는 모습을 녹음해 들어보며 피드백을 받습니다. 이렇게 하면 더욱 효과적인 shadowspeaks 연습이 가능합니다.
  5. 다섯 번째 단계: 배운 내용을 바탕으로 일상적인 상황에서도 자주 사용해 보세요. 중간중간 자신의 말하기 능력을 점검해 보세요.

이런 단계를 통해 영어 말하기 능력을 향상시키고, 특히 미완성 프로젝트에 대한 감정을 해소하며 목표에 집중하는 데 도움이 될 것입니다.

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