쉐도잉 연습: These 6 Brutal Bodyweight Drills Were Born in Prison - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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The most effective strength training system ever devised was not invented in a gym.
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The most effective strength training system ever devised was not invented in a gym.
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It was not funded by a sports science department,
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it was not sold to you in a subscription app,
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and it did not require a single piece of equipment.
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It was built by men with nothing.
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Men locked in concrete rooms roughly the size of your bathroom,
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and what they built in those rooms will outlast every fitness trend you have ever followed.
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Here is why that matters to you right now.
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Picture Rikers Island, New York, 1980s.
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Before dawn, a man named Charles Bronson,
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later known as one of Britain's most notorious prisoners,
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rises in a 6 by 10 foot cell with no weights,
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no bars, and no coach.
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What he has is a body,
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a floor, and a burning need to survive in an environment where physical weakness gets punished immediately.
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He begins moving, push-ups, bridges,
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squats held until the legs shake.
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Over 23 years of solitary confinement,
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he builds a physique capable of lifting a grand piano and bending prison cell doors.
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He does this with nothing.
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So the question you have to ask yourself is this.
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What did he understand about the human body that your gym membership never taught you?
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Here is what happened.
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Somewhere in the late 20th century,
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the fitness industry made a quiet decision.
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It decided that progress required equipment,
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that strength required machines, that the body alone was not enough.
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Not because the science demanded it,
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but because equipment sells, gym membership sell, supplement stacks sell.
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The bodyweight training that built warriors,
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soldiers and survivors for 10,000 years got quietly rebranded as a beginner option.
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Something you do before you get serious.
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That rebranding cost you something real.
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It cost you the understanding that your own body,
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loaded correctly and moved with discipline,
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is the most sophisticated resistance tool ever constructed.
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The commercial fitness industry never told you that.
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It had no financial reason to.
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Here is what the physiology actually shows.
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A 2019 study published in the Journal of Human Kinetics compared progressive calisthenics training against traditional resistance training over eight weeks.
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The calisthenics group matched the resistance group in upper body hypertrophy and exceeded them in functional strength measures.
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Why?
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Because bodyweight training forces your nervous to coordinate entire muscle chains simultaneously rather than isolating individual muscles on a guided track.
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Researcher and strength coach Paul Wade,
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writing in Convict Conditioning, documented this as the difference between training a muscle and training a movement.
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Your body does not think in muscles, it thinks in patterns.
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When you remove the machine and load your own skeleton,
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your nervous system fires in ways that no cable pulley can replicate.
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Your stabilizers activate.
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Your joint angles shift constantly.
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The adaptation is deeper because the demand is total.
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Here is the piece that almost no one talks about.
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Prison-built training is not just physically brutal.
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It is psychologically structuring in a way that modern gym culture has entirely abandoned.
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Researchers studying incarcerated populations found
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that men who maintained strict physical training routines in solitary confinement showed significantly lower cortisol dysregulation than those who did not.
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The training was not just building muscle.
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It was regulating the nervous system in the most hostile environment imaginable.
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That is not a side effect.
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That is the mechanism.
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The movement itself, done with repetition and ritual,
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was rewiring the stress response.
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Your gym does not sell that.
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Your gym sells the mirror.
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Now let me show the six drills born in prison.
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The prison push-up pyramid.
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This is not a standard push-up set.
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Here is how it actually works.
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You begin with one push-up.
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Then you rest for exactly the number of seconds equal to the reps you just completed.
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Then two push-ups.
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Rest two seconds.
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Then three.
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You climb this ladder to 10,
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then descend back to one.
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That is a full session.
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55 push-ups total with embedded recovery built in.
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What the fitness industry will never tell you is that this method,
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used extensively in maximum security facilities,
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trains both fast twitch and slow twitch fibers in a single session,
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because the rep ranges shift constantly.
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Do this three times per week.
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Your chest, shoulders and triceps will not need a bench press.
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They will not miss it.
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The wall sit hold.
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Find a wall.
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Put your back flat against it.
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Lower yourself until your thighs are parallel to the floor.
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Hold.
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The target is two minutes.
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That sounds manageable until about 40 seconds in,
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when your quads begin to burn in a way that feels almost personal.
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What is actually happening is isometric muscular endurance training,
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the same adaptation that Bulgarian national weightlifting teams used in preparation phases throughout the 1970s and 1980s.
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A 2014 review in the Journal of Sports Science and Medicine found
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that isometric holds at 60 to 100 percent of maximum voluntary contraction,
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produce significant gains in both strength and local muscular endurance.
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The wall does not move.
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That is the point.
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Neither should you.
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Hold 2 minutes, rest 90 seconds, repeat 3 times.
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The burpee standard.
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Not the modern bouncy CrossFit branded version.
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The original.
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From standing, you drop to the floor with control,
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chest touches the ground, you push up,
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jump your feet to your hands and stand.
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No clap at the top.
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No chest thumping.
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Just clean, controlled movement.
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Royal H.
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Burpee, the physiologist who invented this test in 1939,
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designed it specifically to assess functional fitness with zero equipment.
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It was immediately adopted by the United States military.
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The version being sold to you in group classes today has had the discipline removed from it.
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Do this version 20 reps,
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rest 60 seconds, 4 rounds.
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Your cardiovascular system and your posterior chain will adapt simultaneously.
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That combination is not available on a treadmill.
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The Back Bridge.
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Lie on your back.
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Plant your feet flat on the floor,
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heels close to your hips.
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Place your hands beside your ears, palms down.
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Press your entire body up until your arms are straight and your hips are high.
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Your body forms an arc.
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Hold for 30 seconds to begin.
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Work toward two minutes over several weeks.
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This is one of the most overlooked spinal decompression and shoulder mobility exercises in existence.
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In prisons with chronic back pain populations,
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the bridge became a staple rehabilitation movement long before physical therapists in civilian settings began rediscovering it.
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It trains the spinal erectors,
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glutes, and shoulder girdle simultaneously under body weight load.
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It also directly counteracts the forward spinal compression that 12 hours of sitting creates in your body every single day.
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Do this daily, not three times a week.
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Daily.
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The towel row.
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You need a door and a towel.
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Loop the towel around the door handle.
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Stand back until your arms are fully extended,
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your body is at a 45 degree angle,
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and your heels are the only contact point with the floor.
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Now row yourself toward the door,
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pulling your chest to the handle.
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Lower slowly.
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This is a horizontal pull.
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It is the movement pattern that the commercial gym industry systematically underprograms,
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because it requires no machine to sell you.
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Yet, a 2020 electromyography study found that the horizontal row activates the mid-trapezius
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and rhomboids more effectively than the vertical lat pulldown that dominates gym floor programming.
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Men in cells with no pull-up bars discovered this not through research, but through necessity.
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Do four sets of 12.
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Your posture will change within three weeks.
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The dead hang.
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Find any overhead bar, a tree branch,
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a pull-up station, a door frame reinforced enough to hold your weight.
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Hang.
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Just hang.
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Grip tight, shoulders engaged, feet off the floor.
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Your target is one continuous minute.
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This single drill addresses something
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that almost no training program in commercial fitness touches directly code passive shoulder decompression and grip endurance under full body weight load.
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John Kirsch, an orthopedic surgeon,
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spent years documenting how regular hanging reduces and in some cases reverses shoulder impingement without surgery.
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Prisoners who perform this daily report shoulder pain relief that physiotherapy could not deliver.
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Do this every morning, 60 seconds.
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The discomfort you feel at 30 seconds is your shoulder capsule
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being pulled open in a way it has not been in years.
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Charles Bronson spent decades in a room where the walls did not move and the options did not change.
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What he had was his body and and the decision to use it with complete seriousness.
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He understood something that the fitness industry spent 50 years trying to make you forget,
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that you are the equipment.
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You always were.
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The six drills above are not a program.
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They are a principle.
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The principle is that constraint produces adaptation,
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that simplicity produces mastery, and that the body responds to honest demand regardless of where that demand comes from.
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If this channel exists for anything,
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it exists to give you back what history already knew.
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Subscribe.
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There is more they never told you.

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이 비디오에서 사용된 핵심 구조 몇 가지를 분석해 보겠습니다:

  • It was built by men with nothing. - 'nothing'이라는 단어를 사용하여, 부족함 속에서도 어떤 것을 이뤄낼 수 있다는 메시지를 전달합니다.
  • The body alone was not enough. - 여기서 'alone'의 사용은 강조의 효과를 줍니다. 필요 조건을 설명하는 중요한 표현입니다.
  • Your nervous system fires in ways that no cable pulley can replicate. - 복잡한 문형을 통해 신경계의 작용을 자세하게 설명하고 있습니다. 'that' 절이 연결되어 더욱 의미가 풍부해집니다.

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  • Confinement - 'confinement'의 첫 음절에 강세를 두고 발음해 보세요.
  • Hypertrophy - 이 단어는 특히 긴 발음이 필요하므로, 처음부터 천천히 발음하는 것이 좋습니다.

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