쉐도잉 연습: When Stress Stops Helping You (And Starts Hurting You) - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

C1
There's a fine line between when stress stops helping you and when it starts hurting you.
⏸ 일시 정지
178 문장
문장이 너무 짧거나 길면 Edit를 눌러 조정하세요.
1
There's a fine line between when stress stops helping you and when it starts hurting you.
2
And as much as high achievers don't like to admit it,
3
pressure has its limits.
4
Most high performers believe three things about stress that works against them.
5
They believe that stress can't hurt them because they do so well under pressure.
6
They would know when stress is becoming harmful.
7
And they think pressure always leads to more growth.
8
I've touched this personally as well.
9
My name is Charlotte Stebbink-Mills.
10
I've worked in stress, wellbeing and performance since 2005,
11
supported over 8,000 people and spent over two decades helping high capacity change makers
12
and leaders spot pressure patterns that reduce performance and impact before they create full burnout.
13
I've also hosted over 250 podcast episodes and built my work around what actually changes capacity in real life,
14
not just in theory.
15
By the end of this,
16
you'll know how to tell whether your stress is still serving your performance or whether it's quietly started working against you.
17
This is for high performing impact driven people who are doing meaningful work,
18
carrying responsibility well and still showing up strongly but are starting to feel that something is costing more than it should.
19
So maybe you're wondering if your stress is helping you or how would you know if it isn't?
20
That's what we're going to answer today because the danger isn't stress.
21
The danger is not noticing when it changes because pressure has limits.
22
So stress can start costing you before you start noticing it inside your daily life.
23
And this is where capable people get caught out.
24
They assume that because they're still performing well, stress isn't affecting them.
25
But one thing I've noticed working with so many leaders is
26
that stress often starts costing them long before it costs them anything visible on the outside.
27
They're still hitting deadlines and still leading well in the room
28
and still getting praised for good work as well but underneath
29
that i usually see a few shifts happening their decision making gets heavier their recovery gets neglected
30
and their emotional range just starts to get a lot narrower this is
31
because performance is not the same as capacity you can still
32
produce with a stressed out system for quite a long time especially
33
if you're a conscientious driven and used to carrying a lot kind of leader right
34
but when stress stays switched on your body starts using more energy to maintain your normal standards.
35
And that means that the same level of output starts costing you more internally.
36
In the stress performance pyramid that I use with clients,
37
this is where it becomes really,
38
really visible and less confusing about functioning really well.
39
If this is you, you may notice that you're still competent in public,
40
but less patient in private.
41
You still get things done,
42
but simple decisions feel strangely expensive and costly to you.
43
The risk isn't losing performance and impact, right?
44
A lot of PI performers believe that when they slow down or when they recover,
45
they're going to lose something.
46
It's actually about how much it's costing you to maintain it.
47
If you're recognising yourself in this
48
and you want to understand what your stress patterns may already be costing you
49
when it comes to your performance and impact
50
and your just daily general life then you can apply for
51
a private exploration call below where we'll look at your patterns your capacity
52
and whether there is a real opportunity to change what's driving it
53
so the second mistake is assuming
54
that harmful stress is going to announce itself clearly i've seen what stress looks like
55
when it's productive and i've seen what it looks like when the same drive starts reducing our judgment,
56
it shrinks our capacity, and it starts leaking into our health,
57
our relationship, and our long-term impact.
58
After two decades in this work,
59
I can tell you that unhealthy stress rarely starts with this big dramatic crash.
60
More often than not, it begins with a change in texture, right?
61
It starts to just show up very,
62
very differently and very subtly sometimes.
63
So thinking starts to get maybe a bit foggier,
64
perhaps sleep gets lighter, the body stays tense,
65
or you replay conversations over and over.
66
Maybe you push through and then crash.
67
Often it can feel like a bracing that's happening.
68
I had one client describe it perfectly to me, actually.
69
I remember she said, it feels like I'm always preparing for something bad to happen,
70
even when nothing's wrong.
71
This is the shift from acute stress into chronic stress, right?
72
Acute stress is that short-term rise to a challenge that then settles.
73
this is typically where the healthy stress lives
74
and then we have chronic stress
75
which is different there's no real off switch to it
76
so there's not necessarily a full return to baseline
77
when we're in chronic stress see burnout sits further down
78
that line as more of a cumulative effect of unresolved chronic stress
79
and then we have trauma that sits even deeper still
80
when kind of stress overwhelms the system and never really gets properly integrated
81
so no healthy stress and unhealthy stress do not feel obvious.
82
The unhealthy version often just feels normal because you've adapted to it.
83
Ask yourself honestly, when was the last time you felt fully settled?
84
Not distracted, not wired, not recovering from the week,
85
but genuinely settled inside your body?
86
Because the most dangerous stress is often the stress that started to feel familiar and we don't notice.
87
So take a moment to notice for yourself right now.
88
So the belief that pressure always leads to more growth is very,
89
very, very common, right?
90
But this is usually a real significant turning point because a lot of high performers still believe that the same pressure,
91
the ones sharpened them, will keep making them stronger.
92
But that belief works early, right?
93
But it often doesn't help later on.
94
See, pressure can sharpen focus and mobilize us into action and stretch us beyond our comfort zones and build confidence.
95
That's all healthy stress, right?
96
Psychologists call this eustress.
97
But the pattern changes when challenge stops being followed up by recovery.
98
I see this especially in people who are doing meaningful work, right?
99
They're not careless.
100
they actually care deeply about what it is they're doing often being a perhaps a parent
101
or a community member or a leader in the workplace they really do care
102
but they just keep on adding load without recalibrating themselves
103
and this is where the sweet spot matters most the yorks dodson law shows
104
that performance improves with stress up until a point too much and you get reactive and rigid or overloaded.
105
Too little, we feel flat, perhaps even bored.
106
In the middle is the optimum zone,
107
right, between calm and chaos.
108
This is where focus, flow and sustainable performance live.
109
The issue isn't how much stress you have,
110
it's about how well you're processing it.
111
So even if pressure has led to growth and success previously,
112
over time that's not the case.
113
It's really really important to to bring yourself back into
114
that middle way so you can sustain performance over time think of it like a bow
115
and arrow a certain amount of tension creates power keep pulling without release
116
and eventually you're going to create more force you are only creating strain
117
so we need to let go stress can absolutely support growth but pressure without recovery does not create expansion or growth.
118
It creates a sense of distortion,
119
which a lot of high performers miss.
120
If you feel like you might be missing some of this and you want to understand what's really driving your performance patterns,
121
then check out the private exploration call below.
122
And if it's a good fit for us to perhaps work together,
123
we can talk about next steps.
124
If not, you'll simply leave with a lot more clarity and understanding of what's actually happening for you.
125
So the real work is not eliminating stress.
126
It's actually learning to recognize which kind of stress you're carrying that needs to happen.
127
So let me make this practical and share with you an example of a client that I've been working with.
128
So she's somebody who had been managing back to back product launches,
129
stepping into a much larger leadership role,
130
and she was planning her wedding all at the same time.
131
So for her, this was all good news.
132
It was everything that she wanted.
133
Right.
134
But behind the scenes, she wasn't recovering well.
135
her sleep was really fragmented she felt
136
that she had like stomach knots from time to time
137
and she started snapping at her team and her fiance right
138
and she would then feel like super guilty about it
139
so there was nothing wrong though externally
140
so she couldn't quite put a finger on what was going
141
on internally she was just living under this constant pressure this
142
is what unhealthy stress often starts to look like in high performers not chaos but internal tension
143
because the body never really kind of stands down the mind never fully closes off
144
and closes the loops you know she was laying in bed
145
every night thinking about this wedding plan did she get back to
146
that person did she tell this person that
147
or reply to this email this was all going on all the time
148
so she was never fully closing the loops in her head
149
and her system as a result was then staying alert
150
and stimulated because the thing is her identity and sense of responsibility
151
and her actual like bias to perfectionism had also started to feed off of the same state as well.
152
So when stress is healthy,
153
you can then stretch and kind of like recover over time.
154
When stress is unhealthy, you stay switched on and start to call that normal.
155
And that's exactly what she was doing.
156
So she had to switch between the two by adding in a lot more recovery.
157
So have a little moment
158
and reflect for yourself is your stress still helping you is
159
it is a challenge leaving you sharper than you were before
160
or is stress hurting you
161
and is success starting to come with some kind of hidden
162
drain you don't need less ambition you just need more recovery it's as simple as
163
that when it comes to to early stress better regulation
164
and the ability to stop carry impression that longer serves you is the outcome
165
that you then get the sweet spot between calm and chaos is not passive.
166
It's actually where your best performance actually lives.
167
This is where you can think clearly,
168
lead well and recover properly.
169
And you can create an impact without losing yourself in the process.
170
So if stress keeps helping you to rise, fantastic.
171
But if you feel like it's pulling you under,
172
then the real skill is learning to recognize when it changes,
173
not waiting until you collapse.
174
If this video has helped,
175
check out the next video,
176
because everything we've talked about here becomes far more useful
177
when you know how stress shows up in your body before performance drops.
178
Watch that next.

앱 다운로드

당신이 말하는 모든 문장을 AI가 채점

TRENDING

인기 동영상

이 비디오로 영어 회화 연습하는 이유는 무엇인가요?

이 비디오는 스트레스 관리와 성과의 관계를 탐구하는 중요한 내용을 다루고 있습니다. 스트레스는 일상 생활에서 흔히 겪는 감정으로, 때로는 긍정적으로 작용하며 목표 달성을 위해 동기를 부여합니다. 하지만 지나친 스트레스는 부정적인 영향을 미칠 수 있습니다. 이 비디오를 통해, 실패 없이 성공적이고 의미 있는 작업을 수행하는 고성과자들이 어떻게 스트레스와 조화를 이루며 효율적으로 소통할 수 있는지를 배울 수 있습니다. 영어 회화 연습에 있어 이러한 실제적 맥락에서는 대화의 흐름과 감정 표현을 더 잘 이해할 수 있습니다.

맥락 속 문법 및 표현

비디오에서 사용되는 몇 가지 핵심 구조를 분석해 보겠습니다.

  • "Stress can start costing you..." - 이 표현은 스트레스가 성과에 미치는 영향을 표현하는 데 유용합니다. 고급 영어 회화에서는 이러한 구조를 사용해 보다 섬세한 감정을 전달할 수 있습니다.
  • "You may notice that..." - 이 문장은 청중의 관찰을 유도하며, 대화 중 상대방의 반응을 이끌어내는 데 효과적입니다. 이러한 표현은 shadow speech에서 자주 활용됩니다.
  • "Performance is not the same as capacity..." - 이 구조는 두 개념의 차이를 명확하게 설명하는 데 도움을 줍니다. 이러한 비교 표현은 영어 쉐도잉 연습에도 적합합니다.

일반적인 발음 오류

비디오에서 발음이 어려운 몇 가지 단어를 살펴보겠습니다. 고성능을 강조하는 상황에서 사용하는 단어들이 많기 때문에, 정확한 발음을 익히는 것이 중요합니다.

  • "Stress"와 "Success" - 이 두 단어는 비슷한 발음 종결음이 있습니다. 발음의 뉘앙스를 정확히 잡는 것이 중요합니다.
  • "Pressure" - 이 단어는 강세가 들어가므로, 스트레스를 주제로 하는 대화에서 특히 유의해야 합니다.
  • "Capacity" - 이 단어의 정확한 발음은 많은 외국인과의 대화에서 혼란을 줄여줄 수 있습니다.

이 비디오를 통해 얻은 표현과 발음을 shadowspeak와 함께 연습함으로써 영어 회화 연습을 더욱 효과적으로 할 수 있습니다. 이를 통해 보다 자신감 있는 영어 소통을 경험해 보세요.

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