쉐도잉 연습: What are the yips? What’s causing Olympians to fall short? - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Support for Up First Winter Games comes from  NPR sponsor Allianz Travel Insurance. Get ready to give ordinary the cold shoulder  with protection for adventures that give you the best kind of chills. Learn  more at allianztravelinsurance.com.
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The pressure of just being at the Olympics has  been something that a lot of people have been following. And Brian, you've actually spoken to  some psychologists about exactly what that means for athletes in in these Games and what exactly  they're dealing with. Yeah, it's really come up a lot with U.S. athletes here. We've had some top  contenders for gold medals like Ilia Malinin, the figure skater, Mikaela Shiffrin, the Alpine  skier, who haven't yet uh gotten their their individual medals that they were hoping for.  Some real disappointment there. And what sports psychologists talk about there are terms for  it. They call it the yips, getting the yips. Or uh sometimes they talk about getting the twisties  in gymnastics. Sometimes the term is more blunt.
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They say it's a question of choking, which is  such an ugly term, but sometimes it happens to athletes. And all of that preparation and training  coming into these Games. Here's what the experts tell me that they're aiming for. They're trying  to get this down to where it's muscle memory, where essentially once they get into that start  gate or jump into that bobsled or go out on that ice uh to do their performance, it's all dialed  in. They're ready to go. But what can happen is uh that the pressure of these Olympics can crash  down on them. Remember, most of these events, according to experts, after four years of  preparation, it comes down to an average 10 minutes of actual final competition. And so  all of that pressure can kind of come to an edge there and it just blows all that training out  of their minds. And so the twisties, the yips, they can hit really hard. And we've really seen  that, you know, when you saw Ilia Malinin down on the ice last Friday, that was a moment when it,  when it struck with tragic force. And the thing, Brian, and just not with Olympic athletes, but  also with athletes in general, when this does happen, it doesn't necessarily mean it's happening  on the most difficult moves that they can attempt.
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Sometimes it's the routine things, things that  they've done hundreds and hundreds of times and they can't seem to get over that mental hurdle.  Why does this though happen so often, it seems, in the Olympics? Yeah, a lot of it's just  the pressure and the scrutiny. You know, these are people who do perform consistently at  World Cup meets at at national championships, but it's really until you come here, you don't  realize the magnitude of the spotlight that comes on these athletes when they reach the Olympics.  Uh, there is a microphone in front of them, a camera in front of them all the time. You  know, when Mikaela Shiffrin uh skied in the giant slalom the other day, all the other  skiers just skied normally. When she came up, this legendary Alpine skier, they actually play  this dramatic like tension-building music. She has to stand there in the start gate while they  throw this energy at her that's just saying, "You're different. You're being watched more  closely." And again, sometimes, you know, they have techniques. They've all practiced how  to avoid the yips in those moments, but sometimes the walls crumble. They fall down. I spoke to  one expert uh Dr. Sahen Gupta uh who's studies, researches it in Great Britain and and he says  literally they can lose contact with their bodies.
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They can just lose the sense of themselves in  space uh and uh and they lose their their sense of gravity. It can be a powerful event. Is there  anything that you've heard of that they can do to maybe try and get over these make-or-break  moments? Increasingly, what we've seen is these athletes being very proactive on this. Um, a  lot of them are working with therapists and sports psychologists coming in. Really, if you're  talking these days about a top-tier contender, they almost always have in their team somebody  who's working on the mind as much as the body, right? And and you'll see, sometimes you'll  hear them like playing really loud music. You'll see them dancing. You'll see them meditating  sometimes. And these aren't just quirks. These are practiced things to get the mind to quiet  down, right? Those are really important tools and probably a lesson to all of us that there  are moments when we need to kind of, you know, work through our system a little bit to to calm  our brain. And there's another thing that's really important here is that after the yips hit,  there is also a whole kind of playbook for how to help athletes recover, how to help them kind of  rebuild. This this Dr. Gupta that I spoke to said the experience of going through an event like  this is really like grief. They're suffering a loss event. It's very baffling in the moment that  all of that work, four years of work, implodes in a single moment. And so there's a really important  time for these athletes after they fumble, after they fall short, uh, where they need support, they  need help. And and I'll say the hopeful really cool thing on the back end of this, A, is that if  they use those techniques often after they do that kind of collapse, they come back stronger. You'll  remember Nathan Chen, the great figure skater, uh absolutely uh fell apart uh in South Korea,  came back in China and triumphed. Same thing for Simone Biles, the gymnast. Fell apart in Tokyo,  uh had the twisties so bad she had to withdraw from competition. Four years later in Paris, she  was the great star of the Paris Olympics. And so a lot of these people we're seeing struggle here uh  in Milan Cortina. These are going to be the great athletes we're going to see in another four years.  Yeah. And Malinin, to his credit, when it was over, he answered everyone's questions. He stood  there and took the heat and just admitted that he blew it. Admitted that he may have been too  confident and handled it with a lot of poise. Um, yeah. So, I mean, that's, if that's the first  step toward recovery after a huge disappointment, he at least is certainly on his way. NPR's  Brian Mann. Brian, thanks a lot. Thanks, A. The Olympics are about more than medals.  They're about the stories, the sacrifices, and those rare moments that bring everyone together.  NPR is covering the wins, the heartbreaks, and everything in between. From first-time athletes  to history-makers, if you're enjoying the ride, support the coverage by hitting the blue donate  button. Thanks for being part of the team.

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맥락 및 배경

이번 영상은 올림픽 선수들이 겪는 정신적인 압박에 대해 다루고 있습니다. 특히 'yips'와 'twisties'라는 어려움을 겪는 선수들에 대한 이야기가 중심 내용입니다. 이러한 현상은 세계적인 무대에서의 압박감과 긴장감으로 인해 발생할 수 있으며, 결국 오랜 훈련과 준비가 무너지는 순간을 설명합니다. 이 내용은 영어 학습자들에게도 중요한 심리적 요소를 이해하는 데 도움이 될 것입니다.

일상적인 소통을 위한 5가지 주요 표현

  • Getting the yips: 'yips'는 특히 스포츠에서 무언가를 잘못할 때의 심리적 장애를 의미합니다.
  • Muscle memory: 반복적인 훈련 결과로 자연스럽게 몸에 기억된 동작을 나타냅니다.
  • Choking: 중압감 속에서 기대 이하의 성과를 내는 것을 의미하며, 이는 스포츠뿐만 아니라 일상에서도 적용될 수 있습니다.
  • Proactive approach: 상황에 맞춰 미리 대처하는 방법을 의미합니다. 이는 영어 학습에서도 새로운 어휘나 문장을 미리 연습하는 것을 나타낼 수 있습니다.
  • Rebuild: 실패 후 다시 시작하여 회복하는 과정을 의미하며, 영어 학습 시 실수로부터 배우는 과정을 설명할 때 유용합니다.

단계별 섀도잉 가이드

성공적인 섀도잉을 위해 다음과 같은 단계를 요리해 보세요. 이 방법은 유튜브 영어 공부에 효과적입니다.

  1. 전체 영상 듣기: 처음에는 영상의 내용을 이해하려 노력하세요. 자막이 있다면 활용해도 좋습니다.
  2. 짧은 클립 선택하기: 영상의 특정 구간을 선택하여 반복적으로 들으세요. 그렇게 하면 발음과 억양을 집중적으로 연습할 수 있습니다.
  3. 쉐도잉 시작하기: 선택한 클립을 들으면서 바로 따라 말해보세요. 이때 억양과 발음에 유의하세요.
  4. 녹음하기: 자신이 섀도잉하는 모습을 녹음하고 들어보세요. 이는 영어 발음 교정에 큰 도움이 됩니다.
  5. 피드백 받기: 주변 사람이나 온라인 커뮤니티에서 자신의 발음에 대한 피드백을 받아 보세요.

이와 같은 단계들을 통해 영어 실력을 향상시킬 수 있으며, shadowspeak와 같은 개념을 통해 더욱 효과적으로 공부할 수 있습니다. 섀도잉 사이트를 활용하면 이러한 학습 과정이 더욱 수월해질 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.

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