Практика Shadowing: How to Get 1% Better Every Day | English & Chill with Jennie | English Podcast - Изучайте разговорный английский с YouTube

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Hi, my dear friends.
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Hi, my dear friends.
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It's Jenny here.
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Today felt steady.
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Not special, just a quiet flow of small tasks,
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a bit of listening, a bit of thinking,
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and moments where I paused without really planning to.
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I've been noticing how often we wait for something bigger to happen before we take ourselves seriously.
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A perfect mood.
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A strong motivation.
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A clear sign that now is the time.
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But most days don't feel like that.
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Most days are simple, a little repetitive,
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sometimes even a bit dull.
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And maybe that's the part we don't talk about enough.
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Real life doesn't always feel inspiring while you're in it.
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Most people imagine change happening in a dramatic way.
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A big decision.
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A powerful moment.
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A sudden transformation that changes everything.
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You wake up one day and decide,
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from now on, my life will be different.
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You start a new routine.
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You create a detailed plan.
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You feel motivated and ready.
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For a few days, everything feels exciting.
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But then something happens that many people don't expect.
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The excitement fades.
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Progress feels slow.
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And suddenly, the big transformation you imagined starts feeling far away.
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Maybe you're walking somewhere.
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Maybe you're relaxing after a long day.
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Or maybe you're just taking a short break.
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Before we go deeper into today's idea,
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let me ask you something simple.
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Have you ever tried to change something about your life in a big way?
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Maybe you decided to study English more seriously.
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Maybe you planned to wake up earlier.
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Maybe you promised yourself you would exercise every day.
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At the beginning, the energy feels strong.
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You imagine a better version of yourself.
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More disciplined.
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More focused.
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More confident.
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And that feeling can be very motivating.
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But real change rarely happens in one big step.
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It usually happens through something much quieter.
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Small improvement.
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Repeated many times.
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There is a simple idea that many successful people talk about.
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Instead of trying to become completely different overnight,
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focus on becoming just a little better every day.
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Just 1% better.
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Now 1% doesn't sound impressive.
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If someone asked you to improve by 50%, that would sound exciting.
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10% might feel meaningful.
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But 1%?
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It almost feels too small to matter.
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That's why many people ignore this idea.
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They think real progress must feel dramatic.
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But here's the surprising truth.
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Small improvements have a powerful effect when they happen consistently.
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Think about learning a language.
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If you study for five minutes today,
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it doesn't feel like much.
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If you learn two or three new words, it might feel insignificant.
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And if you repeat that small effort every day,
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something interesting begins to happen.
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Weeks pass.
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Months pass.
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And slowly, without noticing it day by day, your understanding grows.
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You recognize more words.
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You follow conversations more easily.
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You feel a little more confident speaking.
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The change didn't happen overnight.
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It accumulated.
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The same principle works in many areas of life.
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Health.
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Skills.
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Confidence.
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Relationships.
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Tiny actions repeated regularly slowly change the direction of your life.
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But because the change happens gradually,
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it often feels invisible in the beginning.
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And that invisible stage is where many people give up.
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They expect fast results.
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They expect motivation to stay high.
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When progress feels small, they assume nothing is happening.
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But real growth rarely feels dramatic while it's happening.
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It feels ordinary.
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Quiet.
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Almost unnoticeable.
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And that's exactly why the idea of getting just 1% better each day can quietly reshape your entire life.
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One of the biggest reasons people give up on improvement is this simple feeling.
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I'm doing is too small to matter.
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You try something for a few days.
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You make a little effort.
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But the result feels almost invisible.
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So your mind begins to question the process.
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Let's look at a very normal moment.
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It's evening.
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You finally sit down with the intention to study English.
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Maybe you review a few words.
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Maybe you listen to a short podcast.
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Maybe you practice speaking for a few minutes.
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20 minutes later, you close your notebook.
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And a thought quietly appears.
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That wasn't much.
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You look at your life.
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Your goals still feel far away.
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Your progress doesn't feel dramatic.
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And that small effort suddenly feels almost meaningless.
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This is where many people stop.
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Not because they can't improve,
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but because the brain is very bad at noticing small change.
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Our mind likes immediate results, quick rewards, visible progress.
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But improvement in real life usually works differently.
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It grows quietly.
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Think about going to the gym for the first time.
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You exercise for 30 minutes.
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When you finish, your body doesn't look different.
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You don't suddenly feel stronger.
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Nothing dramatic happens.
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If you expect instant transformation, the effort feels pointless.
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But if you repeat that small effort three times a week for six months,
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something completely different happens.
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Your strength improves.
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Your energy increases.
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Your body slowly changes.
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But that change only appears because the small actions accumulated.
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The same pattern appears in learning, in work.
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In creative skills, in personal growth,
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progress hides at the beginning.
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And because we can't see it clearly, we underestimate it.
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Let me share a small observation from someone well-known.
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James Clear, the author of Atomic Habits,
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once explained this idea in a very simple way.
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He said that habits often work like an ice cube sitting in a cold room.
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Imagine the room temperature is slowly rising.
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25 degrees.
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26 degrees.
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27 degrees.
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Nothing happens to the ice.
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It still looks exactly the same.
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Then, the temperature reaches 32 degrees.
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Suddenly, the ice begins to melt.
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But the melting didn't start at that exact moment.
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It started because of all the small temperature increases before.
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Those earlier changes were invisible, but they mattered.
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Improvement in life works the same way.
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Small efforts might not show results immediately,
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but they are changing something underneath the surface.
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Your knowledge grows.
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Your skill improves.
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Your confidence develops.
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And one day, the results finally become visible.
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The people who succeed in the long run understand this hidden stage stage.
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They don't judge their progress only by what they can see today.
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They trust the accumulation.
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They understand that small actions repeated long enough eventually create noticeable change.
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And once you start thinking this way,
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small effort stops feeling meaningless.
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It starts feeling powerful.
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Because every small action becomes a quiet vote for the person you are becoming.
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One reason the idea of getting 1% better every day feels difficult to believe is
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that we don't naturally think in long timelines.
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Our brain likes immediate results.
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If something works, we want to see it quickly.
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If we don't see improvement soon,
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we start doubting the effort.
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But many of the most powerful changes in life follow a different pattern.
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They grow slowly at first, almost invisibly.
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Then, over time, the results begin to multiply.
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This idea is called compounding.
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You may have heard this word in finance.
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When money earns interest, and that interest earns more interest,
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the growth becomes larger and larger over time.
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At the beginning, the numbers look small.
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But after enough time, the increase becomes dramatic.
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Habits work the same way.
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Let's imagine something simple.
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You improve one small skill every day, just a little.
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Maybe you learn three new English words.
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Maybe you practice speaking for five minutes.
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Maybe you listen to a short podcast like this one.
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One day doesn't feel important.
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But if you repeat that effort every day for a year,
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the total change becomes much bigger than it felt in the beginning.
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Because improvement builds on itself.
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Your vocabulary grows.
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Your listening becomes easier.
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Your confidence slowly increases.
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Each small improvement supports the next one.
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Let me share a small real example.
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A well-known investor named Warren Buffett once explained that the best investment people can make is in their own knowledge.
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He spends many hours every day reading.
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Not because one single day of reading makes him dramatically smarter.
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But because knowledge compounds.
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Each new idea connects to the previous ones.
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Over years and decades, that accumulated knowledge becomes incredibly valuable.
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The same thing happens with habits.
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Small improvements stack together.
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Your actions today influence what becomes easier tomorrow.
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And tomorrow's improvement makes the next step even easier.
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But here's the challenge.
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In the early stage, compounding feels invisible.
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You put in effort.
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But the result doesn't feel dramatic.
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That's the stage where many people quit.
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They believe the effort isn't working.
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But what they don't see is that improvement is already building underneath the surface.
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Skills are forming.
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Understanding is growing.
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Confidence is quietly increasing.
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Then one day, something changes.
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A conversation suddenly feels easier.
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A task that once felt difficult becomes normal.
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A skill that once felt impossible becomes natural.
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And people often call that moment talent.
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But in many cases, it's simply the result of compounded effort.
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Small improvements repeated long enough.
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So when you think about getting 1% better every day, remember something important.
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You are not chasing instant transformation.
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You are building momentum.
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And momentum, once it starts growing,
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can carry you much further than you originally expected.
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Many people believe improvement depends on motivation.
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They think they need to feel inspired, ready, full of energy.
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But motivation is unpredictable.
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Some days you wake up feeling focused.
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Other days you feel tired before the day even begins.
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And if your progress depends only on motivation,
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your progress will always feel unstable.
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One day, you move forward.
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The next day, everything stops.
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This is why many successful people focus on something different, not motivation.
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Systems.
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A system is simply a small structure that helps you repeat a behavior regularly.
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Instead of asking yourself every day,
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do I feel motivated today?
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A system answers a different question.
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What do I usually do at this time?
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Hi.
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Let me give you a very simple example.
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A friend of mine once struggled to read regularly.
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He loved the idea of reading.
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He bought books.
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He planned to read every evening.
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But after a few days, the habit disappeared.
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Work got busy.
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He felt tired.
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And the book slowly stayed on the shelf.
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Then he changed something small.
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Instead of relying on motivation, he created a system.
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Every night after brushing his teeth,
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he would read for 10 minutes.
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Not one hour.
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Not a big goal.
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Just 10 minutes.
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Because brushing his teeth already happened every night,
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the reading habit had a clear place in his routine.
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At first, the reading sessions felt short.
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Almost too short.
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But the important thing was consistency.
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10 minutes every night became normal.
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Weeks passed.
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Months passed.
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And something interesting happened.
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He didn't need to convince himself to read anymore.
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It simply became part of his evening.
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Over time, he finished several books.
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Not because he forced himself,
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but because the system quietly supported the habit.
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This is why systems are powerful.
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They reduce the need for willpower.
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They remove the daily negotiation in your mind.
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Instead of making a new decision every day, the structure already exists.
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The action becomes automatic.
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This idea works for many habits.
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Studying.
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Exercising.
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Writing.
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Practicing a skill.
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Learning a language.
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When a habit has a clear place in your routine,
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it becomes easier to repeat.
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And repetition is what slowly creates improvement.
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Motivation might start the journey.
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But systems keep it moving.
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The goal is not to feel excited every day.
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The goal is to create small structures that make showing up easier.
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Because once showing up becomes normal, progress becomes inevitable.
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And this is where the idea of getting 1% better each day becomes real.
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Not through dramatic effort, but through small actions supported by simple systems.
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Those systems quietly guide your behavior,
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day by day, step by step,
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until improvement becomes part of who you are.
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When people hear the idea of getting 1% better every day,
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they often focus on the result.
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Better skills.
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Better health.
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Better performance.
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But the real change is not only the improvement itself.
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The real change is the person you slowly become.
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Because when you practice small improvement consistently,
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something deeper begins to happen.
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Your identity starts to shift.
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At first, you might think of yourself as someone who wants to improve.
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Someone who plans to learn more.
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Someone who hopes to become better.
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But after enough small actions, that identity changes.
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You become someone who actually shows up.
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Someone who keeps learning.
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Someone who continues even when progress feels slow.
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And that shift is incredibly powerful.
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Because once improvement becomes part of who you are,
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it no longer depends on motivation.
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It becomes part of your normal life.
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Let me give you a simple example.
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two people trying to learn English.
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The first person studies intensely for a few weeks.
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Then they stop.
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Then they start again months later.
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Their progress always feels unstable.
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The second person studies for just 10 minutes every day.
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Sometimes they feel motivated.
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Sometimes they don't.
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But they continue anyway.
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After one year, the difference between these two people becomes obvious.
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Not because one person worked harder in dramatic moments,
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but because one person stayed consistent.
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That consistency slowly builds confidence.
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And confidence changes how you see yourself.
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You stop thinking, I hope I can improve.
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You begin thinking, improving is simply what I do.
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This is the quiet goal behind the 1% idea.
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It's not about chasing perfection.
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It's about becoming someone who continues to grow.
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Someone who treats learning as a natural part of life.
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And when you think about it this way,
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improvement becomes much less stressful.
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You don't need huge breakthroughs.
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You don't need perfect motivation.
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You only need small steps repeated often enough.
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Over time, those small steps reshape your direction.
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Your skills grow.
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Your confidence grows.
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Your understanding grows.
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But most importantly, your relationship with growth changes.
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You stop seeing improvement as something difficult or rare.
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You begin seeing it as something normal.
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Something that happens every day.
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Before we finish today, I'd like to leave you with a small question.
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If you became just 1% better every day in one area of your life,
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what area would you choose?
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Your health?
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Your knowledge?
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Your mindset?
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Your communication?
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Whatever your answer is, remember that improvement rarely happens all at once.
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It grows through small actions that accumulate quietly over time.
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And if these conversations help you practice English while reflecting on your own growth,
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you're always welcome to continue this journey with us.
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Thank you for spending this time with me today.
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Take care of yourself, keep learning,
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and I'll see you in the next episode.
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Bye-bye.

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Контекст и фон

В этом выпуске подкаста «English & Chill with Jennie» Дженни делится своими размышлениями о том, как маленькие, но последовательные изменения могут привести к значительным результатам в изучении английского языка. Она подчеркивает, что многие люди ожидают мгновенных преобразований и не понимают, что реальный прогресс чаще всего происходит постепенно, через ежедневные усилия и небольшие шаги. Это важный аспект, особенно для тех, кто хочет учить английский с YouTube и собирать мотивацию для изучения языка.

Топ-5 фраз для повседневного общения

  • “Most days don't feel like that.” — «Большинство дней не чувствуются так.»
  • “Real life doesn't always feel inspiring.” — «Настоящая жизнь не всегда кажется вдохновляющей.»
  • “Small improvement, repeated many times.” — «Маленькие улучшения, повторяемые много раз.»
  • “Have you ever tried to change something?” — «Вы когда-нибудь пытались что-то изменить?»
  • “The excitement fades.” — «Возбуждение утихает.»

Пошаговое руководство по шадоуингу

Чтобы эффективно применять метод шадоуинга на практике с использованием этого подкаста, выполните следующие шаги:

  1. Прослушайте отрывок. Сначала просто послушайте, не пытаясь повторять. Обратите внимание на интонацию и произношение.
  2. Загляните в транскрипт. Найдите ключевые фразы из этого подкаста, такие как «Маленькие улучшения» и «Возбуждение утихает». Это поможет вам лучше понять контекст.
  3. Повторяйте за Дженни. Воспользуйтесь методом shadow speak, повторяйте за спикером, копируя его произношение и интонацию. Делайте это несколько раз, пока не почувствуете уверенность.
  4. Записывайте себя. Запишите свою речь, чтобы прослушать и проанализировать произношение и речь. Это важный шаг для улучшения вашей произносительной практики.
  5. Регулярно практикуйтесь. Чтобы «учить английский с YouTube» стало эффективным, выделяйте время каждый день для практики, начиная с небольших отрывков, как это делала Дженни.

Постоянный процесс шадоуинга развивает навыки слушания и произношения, а также помогает проникнуть в контекст языка. Помните, что каждый маленький шаг приближает вас к большому успеху!

Что такое техника Shadowing?

Shadowing — это научно обоснованная техника изучения языка, изначально разработанная для подготовки профессиональных переводчиков и популяризированная полиглотом доктором Александром Аргуэльесом. Метод прост, но эффективен: вы слушаете аудио на английском от носителей языка и немедленно повторяете вслух — как тень, следующая за говорящим с задержкой в 1–2 секунды. В отличие от пассивного прослушивания или грамматических упражнений, Shadowing заставляет мозг и мышцы рта одновременно обрабатывать и воспроизводить реальные речевые паттерны. Исследования показывают, что это значительно улучшает точность произношения, интонацию, ритм, связную речь, понимание на слух и беглость речи — что делает его одним из самых эффективных методов для подготовки к IELTS Speaking и реального общения на английском.

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