Prática de Shadowing: Why Your Business English Still Fails at Work - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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You are in a meeting.
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You are in a meeting.
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Your manager turns to you and asks a direct question in English.
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Something simple, actually.
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What's your take on this?
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Or, can you walk us through where things stand?
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And you have studied English.
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You know this.
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You've been learning for years.
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You have apps on your phone.
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You watch YouTube in English.
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Maybe you've even taken a course.
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You are not a beginner.
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And yet, your mind goes completely blank.
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The words are there, somewhere,
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but they will not come out.
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You can feel everyone in the room waiting.
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You say something, eventually, but it comes out slow, or stiff, or wrong.
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Not the way you meant it.
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Not the way you sound in your own head.
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You walk out of that meeting frustrated and confused.
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Because you practice.
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You really do.
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So what on earth is going on?
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Here is what I want you to hear first.
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You are not bad at English.
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Your effort is real.
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The vocabulary you have built up is real.
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The improvement you have made over the years is real.
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This is not about talent,
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and it is not about intelligence.
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But there is one specific reason your English keeps failing at the exact moment you need it most.
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And once you understand it,
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you will see it everywhere.
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In your study habits, in the way you've been preparing,
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in every course and app that has ever promised to make you fluent.
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And you will finally understand why none of it has fully worked.
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Here is the reason.
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You have been training in the wrong environment.
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I want you to picture a swimmer.
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Not a beginner.
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Someone serious.
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Someone who is genuinely putting in the work.
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This person trains five days a week in a heated indoor pool.
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Perfect conditions.
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A clean lane, still water,
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controlled temperature, no current, no noise.
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Just distance and rhythm.
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And they get good.
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Their stroke is strong.
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Their breathing is efficient.
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Their times keep improving.
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By every measure, they are becoming a better swimmer.
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Then one day, they enter an open water race.
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Cold water, no lane lines,
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choppy waves from the wind and from the other swimmers,
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the crowd on the shore,
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the clock running, everything happening at once.
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And they fall apart.
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Not because they were faking it in the pool,
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not because the training was pointless.
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They are genuinely a stronger swimmer than when they started.
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But the environment they trained in was completely different from the environment they needed to perform in.
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The pool taught them how to swim in the pool.
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It never taught them how to swim in the ocean.
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Those are two different skills,
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and the gap between them does not close automatically.
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Now, I want you to think about how you have been practicing English.
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You open an app.
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You study vocabulary in a quiet room.
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No pressure.
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Plenty of time to think.
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You watch YouTube with subtitles.
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You do a lesson with a teacher over video call,
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where you both know it as practice,
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where there are no real consequences if you get it wrong,
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where you can pause and think and nobody is waiting.
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That is your pool.
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And then you go to work.
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Your manager asks you a question in a meeting with six other people watching,
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you have to write an urgent email to a client in the next 20 minutes,
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and your mind is already on three other things.
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You are on a call with an international team and someone just said something you disagree with,
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and you need to push back,
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diplomatically, professionally, right now, with no preparation,
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no dictionary, no time to translate in your head.
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That is your ocean.
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And here is the thing nobody tells you.
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No matter how good you get at swimming in the pool,
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the ocean will keep catching you off guard.
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Not because you are not improving, you are.
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But improvement in controlled conditions does not automatically transfer to performance under pressure.
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That transfer has to be trained separately,
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and most English learners never train it at all.
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So what does training in the ocean actually look like?
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How do you practice English inside your work,
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not somewhere near it, not in preparation for it, but inside it.
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This is where most advice falls short.
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You've probably heard immerse yourself in English,
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watch Netflix in English, listen to English podcasts.
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And yes, that is better than nothing.
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It is a colder pool,
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let's say, but it is still the pool.
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There are no real stakes.
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You are consuming.
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You are not performing.
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What I am talking about is practicing English in the exact conditions where you actually need it.
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There are four ways to do this.
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None of them require extra study time.
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All of them happen during your actual working day.
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The first one is what I call the work monologue.
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As you go through your day,
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reading through an email, planning a task,
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reviewing a document, walking to a meeting,
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narrate what you are doing in English,
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out loud if you are alone,
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in your head if you are not.
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I need to send a follow-up to the client before noon.
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Let me think about what we agreed on the last call.
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The main issue is the timeline.
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I will address that first,
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then confirm the next steps and ask them to confirm receipt.
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That is ocean training.
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Your brain is generating English in real conditions,
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real content, real stakes, real time.
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Not sentences about the weather,
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not practice dialogues, sentences about your actual work,
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your actual problems, your actual job.
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And you are producing them under the same kind of low-level pressure that your brain feels at work,
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because the content is real,
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even if the audience isn't.
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Most learners have never done this.
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They keep English separate from work.
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They study English over here,
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and they do their job over there,
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and they wait for the gap to close by itself.
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It doesn't.
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The gap closes when you start doing your job in English,
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even when no one is listening.
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Start with one task, just one.
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The next thing you have to do at work today,
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narrate it in English.
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It will feel strange.
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Do it anyway.
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The second technique is to steal from the room.
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If you work with native English speakers or even with colleagues who are strong in English,
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you are sitting next to a goldmine and probably not paying attention to it.
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When a colleague writes an email that handles a difficult situation gracefully,
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a missed deadline, a tricky client,
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a scope change, don't just read it to understand,
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read it to study it.
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What phrase did they use to soften the message?
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How did they open the pushback?
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What did they say instead of,
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I disagree, or that is not my fault?
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When someone runs a meeting in English and it actually flows,
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notice how they transition between agenda items.
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Notice how they manage the room when someone goes off topic.
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Notice the exact words they use to wrap up and assign action items.
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Write those phrases down.
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Keep a note in your phone.
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Not a vocabulary list, a phrases in the wild list.
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you heard used correctly in real situations by people who know what they are doing.
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And then use them.
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In your next email, your next meeting, your next call.
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This is not copying.
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This is exactly how language works.
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Native speakers became fluent by absorbing the language of the people around them.
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You can do the same thing,
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deliberately, inside the environment where you actually need to perform.
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Now, before I get to the third and fourth technique,
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I want to pause here for a moment.
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If what you are hearing is landing,
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if the pool and ocean thing is making you look at your English study differently,
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I'd really appreciate a like on this video.
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It sounds small, but for a channel this size,
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it genuinely affects how many people YouTube shows this to.
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And if you are new here,
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I'll be honest, the voice you are hearing is AI-generated,
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every word in this script,
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every idea, every technique I am walking you through,
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that is real research, real thinking,
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real time spent figuring out what actually helps people in situations like yours.
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If that is worth something to you,
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the subscribe button is right there.
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It helps more than you know.
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Okay, back to it.
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The third technique is the 60-second warm-up.
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Before any high-stakes English moment,
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a meeting, a presentation, a call where you know you will have to speak.
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Take 60 seconds.
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Out loud if you can.
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The bathroom, the stairwell, your car, wherever.
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In your head if you have no choice.
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Talk through what you are about to do.
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In this meeting, I need to explain the delay on the project.
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I will start by acknowledging the timeline slipped.
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Then I will give the reason clearly, not defensively.
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Then I will give the new date and what we are doing differently this time.
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60 seconds.
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That is the warm-up lap in the actual ocean before the race begins.
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Your brain shifts into English mode.
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The first words of the meeting are no longer the first English words you have said all morning.
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The freeze happens less because you have already started.
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It sounds almost too simple,
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but the reason most people freeze is not that they don't know the language.
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It is that their brain has not switched gears yet.
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It is still in their first language,
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still in planning mode, still somewhere else.
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60 seconds of English before English flips that switch.
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Use it.
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The fourth technique is the debrief.
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This one is the most powerful and the most skipped.
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After a difficult English moment at work,
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a call that didn't go the way you wanted,
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a meeting where you stumbled on something,
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an email you sent and immediately wished you had written differently,
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go back into it in English.
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Not to punish yourself, to learn from the exact environment where learning actually matters.
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Ask yourself, what did I actually say?
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What did I wish I had said instead?
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Where did I slow down and why?
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Was it a word I didn't have,
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a structure I couldn't construct under pressure,
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a situation I hadn't thought about in English before?
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You do not need a notebook for this.
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You do not need an app.
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You need five minutes of honest replay,
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in your head, on your commute home, while you're making coffee.
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Just go back in with no pressure and run it better.
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This is how mistakes become muscle memory.
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Not by avoiding hard situations,
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by going back into them without the stakes and finding what you would do differently.
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A swimmer who trains in open water does not just race and forget.
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They review it.
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They adjust the stroke.
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They go back out.
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The debrief is part of the training.
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So here is where we land.
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The pool still matters.
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Vocabulary, grammar, listening, all of it still matters.
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I am not telling you to stop studying English.
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What I am telling you is this.
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If all you ever do is pool training,
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you will keep freezing in the ocean.
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Because the ocean is not the pool.
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And fluency is not a knowledge problem.
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It is an environment problem.
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You need to practice in the conditions where performance actually happens.
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Narrate your work.
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Steal the phrases around you.
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Warm up before you perform.
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Debrief after you struggle.
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Start with one.
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Just one this week.
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The work monologue is the easiest entry point.
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Zero extra time.
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No partner.
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No tool.
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Just you and whatever you are already doing.
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Start today, before you close this tab.
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And I want to hear from you.
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What is your ocean moment?
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What is the specific workplace English situation that still catches you off guard?
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The one where you know what you want to say,
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but it doesn't come out right?
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Drop it in the comments.
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I read them.
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It also tells me what to make next.
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See you in the next one.

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Contexto & Antecedentes

Você já se sentiu em uma reunião, diante de uma pergunta direta em inglês, e, apesar de todo o seu esforço em aprender inglês com YouTube, não conseguiu responder como gostaria? Essa situação é mais comum do que parece. Muitos alunos dedicam horas ao estudo da língua, utilizando aplicativos e assistindo a vídeos, mas, na hora H, a mente parece travar. A frustração surge quando, mesmo com tantos recursos, a fluência ainda parece distante. O que está acontecendo? A resposta está em como você está se preparando para usar o inglês no dia a dia.

Top 5 Frases para Comunicação Diário

  • What's your take on this? - Qual a sua opinião sobre isso?
  • Can you walk us through where things stand? - Você pode nos explicar como as coisas estão?
  • Let’s circle back to that point. - Vamos voltar a esse ponto.
  • I’d like to highlight an important detail. - Gostaria de destacar um detalhe importante.
  • Can we take this offline? - Podemos discutir isso depois?

Essas frases são essenciais para facilitar a comunicação e aumentar sua confiança em ambientes profissionais. Praticá-las através de shadowing em inglês pode ser a chave para adquirir fluência natural.

Guia Passo a Passo de Shadowing

Para superar as dificuldades apresentadas no vídeo e melhorar sua prática de conversação em inglês, siga este guia de shadow speak:

  1. Escolha um vídeo: Procure por conteúdos relevantes que você se interesse. Use vídeos do YouTube que contenham diálogos naturais.
  2. Ouça e repita: Escute uma frase do vídeo, pause e repita em voz alta. Concentre-se na entonação e na pronúncia.
  3. Grave sua voz: Utilize seu telefone ou computador para gravar sua prática. Isso permitirá que você ouça seu progresso e identifique áreas de melhoria.
  4. Pratique regularmente: Faça disso uma rotina. Dedique pelo menos 15 minutos diários para essa prática, focando na fluência e na naturalidade.
  5. Converse com nativos: Sempre que possível, pratique com falantes nativos ou outros alunos. Isso ajudará a solidificar suas habilidades de conversação.

Com dedicação e a prática correta, você encontrará mais facilidade para se expressar em inglês, especialmente em situações que exigem um pensamento rápido. Não desista; o aprendizado é um processo constante!

O que é a Técnica de Shadowing?

Shadowing é uma técnica de aprendizado de idiomas com base científica, originalmente desenvolvida para o treinamento de intérpretes profissionais. O método é simples, mas poderoso: você ouve áudio em inglês nativo e repete imediatamente em voz alta — como uma sombra seguindo o falante com 1-2 segundos de atraso. Pesquisas mostram melhora significativa na precisão da pronúncia, entonação, ritmo, sons conectados, compreensão auditiva e fluência na fala.

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