ฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษด้วยเทคนิค Shadowing จากวิดีโอ: A Journey Through Hanoi 🇻🇳 | Slow English Listening Practice for Beginners

B2
I want to tell you about the worst travel decision I have ever made.
⏸ หยุดชั่วคราว
216 ประโยค
หากประโยคสั้นหรือยาวเกินไป กดที่ Edit เพื่อปรับแก้
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I want to tell you about the worst travel decision I have ever made.
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And why it turned out to be one of the best nights of my life.
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I'm Gavin. And today, we are going somewhere together.
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Tonight — we are going to Hanoi...
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It started with a missed flight.
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Not dramatically missed — not the running-through-the-airport, shoes-in-hand kind of missed.
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Just quietly, stupidly missed.
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I had the time wrong.
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I had written 6:15 in my notebook when the ticket said 5:15.
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A simple mistake.
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One hour. Entirely my fault.
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I stood at the departure gate — closed, locked, the plane already on the runway — and felt that specific, hollow feeling of someone who has no one to blame but themselves.
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The next available flight to Hanoi was the following morning.
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I had no hotel booked in the city I was currently in.
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No plan for the night.
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No local SIM card, which meant no working internet on my phone.
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A backpack with three days of clothes, a dead phone charger I had somehow packed instead of the working one, and about forty US dollars in cash.
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That was it.
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That was everything.
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I stood outside the airport in the thick evening heat and thought — well.
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Let's see what happens...
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I found a cheap guesthouse three blocks from the airport — the old-fashioned way, by walking until I saw a sign and knocking on the door.
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Eight dollars a night.
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A narrow room with a ceiling fan, a firm mattress, and a window that looked out onto a wall.
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Perfect. I charged my phone using the guesthouse owner's charger — she offered before I even asked, with a smile that required no shared language — and then I went out into the city with no destination, no map, and no plan whatsoever.
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And that is where the night actually began...
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I want to tell you something about Hanoi.
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Hanoi is not a city that greets you gently.
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It does not ease you in.
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It does not make itself easy or comfortable or immediately understandable.
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Hanoi hits you — all at once, from every direction — and then waits to see what you do.
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The streets of the Old Quarter are narrow and loud and completely alive.
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Motorbikes flow through them like water — not chaotic, not dangerous exactly, but utterly indifferent to the existence of pedestrians.
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Food stalls line the pavements, their plastic stools spilling out onto the road.
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The smell of pho and charcoal and exhaust and something sweet frying somewhere mixes in the air into something that shouldn't work but absolutely does.
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Neon signs.
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Karaoke music leaking through a doorway.
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A grandmother sitting on a low stool, peeling vegetables with the focused calm of someone who has been doing this specific thing in this specific spot for forty years.
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Two old men playing chess under a streetlamp, completely unbothered by the noise around them.
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I walked for two hours without stopping.
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Not toward anything.
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Just through.
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Just looking.
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Just letting the city happen around me...
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Around nine o'clock, I found myself at the edge of Hoan Kiem Lake.
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Hoan Kiem — which means Lake of the Returned Sword — sits in the heart of Hanoi's Old Quarter.
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At night, it is lit softly from below, its water dark and still and impossibly calm in the middle of all that urban noise.
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I sat on a bench at the edge of the water and watched the city move around me.
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Families walking slowly around the lake.
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Young couples sitting close together on the low stone walls.
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A group of teenagers doing a K-pop dance routine on the open plaza — perfectly synchronized, completely unselfconscious, absolutely magnificent.
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An old man doing tai chi alone near the water's edge, moving so slowly he seemed to exist slightly outside of normal time.
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I had nowhere to be.
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Nothing to do.
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No agenda. No schedule.
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No list of attractions to tick off.
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For the first time in longer than I could remember — I had nothing to manage.
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And something happened in that stillness that I didn't expect.
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I relaxed. Completely, fully, physically relaxed — in a way that I almost never do when I travel with a plan.
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When there is always a next thing.
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Always a booking to honor or a sight to reach or a time to keep.
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Here, there was only now.
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Just this bench.
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Just this lake.
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Just this city doing exactly what it would have been doing whether I was there or not.
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And I thought — this is what it feels like to actually be somewhere, instead of just visiting it...
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I got hungry around ten.
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I followed my nose — which, in Hanoi, is genuinely the best navigation tool available — and found myself down a narrow alley, outside a small restaurant that had no English menu, no tourist photos on the wall, and no empty tables.
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A woman about my mother's age looked up from behind the counter, assessed me quickly, and pointed to a plastic stool at the end of a communal table.
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I sat down.
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She brought me what everyone else was having — a bowl of bun cha.
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Grilled pork patties and slices of pork belly, served in a sweet and slightly sour broth alongside a plate of fresh rice noodles and a generous pile of herbs.
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A small dish of spring rolls on the side.
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A bottle of something cold.
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I had not ordered any of it.
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She had simply decided what I needed.
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She was right.
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I ate slowly, watching the table around me.
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A group of four men sharing a bottle of bia hoi — the light, cheap local beer served fresh from the barrel.
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Two women having a conversation so animated their hands were doing half the talking.
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A teenage boy doing homework in the corner, entirely unbothered by the noise.
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The man next to me caught me watching and raised his glass.
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I raised my water bottle.
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He laughed.
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Said something in Vietnamese I didn't understand.
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I shrugged and smiled.
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He shrugged and smiled back.
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And somehow — in that small, wordless exchange — I felt more connected to another human being than I had in weeks of traveling with a full itinerary and a perfectly planned route.
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That is the thing about having no plan.
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You stop moving through a place and start actually being in it...
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After dinner I walked some more.
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Down streets I had no names for.
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Past temples I couldn't identify.
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Through a night market where someone tried to sell me a hat I didn't need and I bought it anyway because the woman selling it had a laugh that made saying no feel like a mistake.
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I sat for a while at a small bia hoi corner — one of Hanoi's famous street-side beer stations, where plastic stools are set out on the pavement and cold beer costs almost nothing and everyone seems to have been there for hours.
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I ordered a glass and sat and watched and listened to a city that had been doing exactly this — living loudly, warmly, unhurriedly — for a thousand years.
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At some point, a young man sat down next to me.
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He was a student, he said, in careful English he was clearly proud of.
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He was practicing for a job interview.
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Could he practice with me?
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We talked for an hour.
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He told me about his family — his parents who had sacrificed everything for his education.
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His dream to work in technology.
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His nervousness about the future mixed with a quiet, steady confidence in his own ability that I found genuinely moving.
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I told him about the missed flight.
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He laughed so hard he nearly fell off his stool.
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Then he said — maybe you needed to miss it.
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I thought about that for a long time afterward...
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I walked back to the guesthouse around midnight.
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The city was quieter now — not silent, never fully silent, but softer.
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The motorbike streams had thinned.
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A few food stalls were closing, steam rising from their pots in the cool night air.
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A dog was asleep in the middle of the road, and the occasional passing motorbike curved around it gently, without honking.
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I lay on my narrow mattress under the ceiling fan and looked at the ceiling.
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I had seen no famous temples today.
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No museums.
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No organized tour.
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I had eaten at a restaurant I couldn't name and couldn't find again.
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I had bought a hat I didn't need.
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I had sat on a plastic stool and talked to a stranger for an hour in a city I had never planned to spend the night in.
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And it had been — genuinely, completely, surprisingly — one of the best evenings of my trip.
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Maybe of many trips.
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I fell asleep thinking about what the student had said.
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Maybe you needed to miss it...
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We spend an enormous amount of energy trying to control our experiences.
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Planning, preparing, researching, optimizing.
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We read reviews before we choose a restaurant.
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We check the weather before we go outside.
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We map out our routes before we start walking.
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We try — constantly, exhaustingly — to ensure that things go the way we want them to go.
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And there is nothing wrong with that.
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Planning is useful.
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Preparation is sensible.
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But sometimes — the plan is also a wall.
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A wall between you and the unexpected.
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Between you and the spontaneous.
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Between you and the version of an experience that could never have been predicted or planned or found in any review or guidebook.
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The best meal I had in Hanoi was one I didn't order.
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The best conversation was one I didn't arrange.
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The best moment was sitting on a bench at the edge of a lake with nowhere to be, watching a city live.
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None of that was in the plan.
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Because there was no plan.
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And I think that is true of life, not just travel.
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Some of the best things that have ever happened to you — were they planned?
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Or did they arrive sideways, unexpected, through a door you didn't know was open?
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The job you didn't apply for but somehow got.
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The friendship that started from a random seat next to a stranger.
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The conversation that changed something in you — that you walked into without knowing it would.
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Life, like Hanoi, rewards the person who is willing to put down the map sometimes.
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To walk without a destination.
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To trust that the city — the world — has something good waiting that you couldn't have found if you were looking too hard for something specific...
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Before we get to today's vocabulary, I want to say something to those of you learning English.
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I know the feeling of wanting to have the perfect sentence ready before you speak.
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Of wanting to know exactly the right words before you open your mouth.
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But language — like travel — rewards the brave ones.
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The ones who speak before they are ready.
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Who try before they are certain.
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Who walk into the conversation without a map and trust that they will find their way.
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You will stumble sometimes.
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You will get lost sometimes.
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But getting lost — as I learned in Hanoi — is not always a problem to be solved.
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Sometimes it is exactly where you needed to be...
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Now let's look at today's key vocabulary.
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Word number one.
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Spontaneous.
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Spontaneous means happening naturally and without planning — arising from a natural impulse rather than from external pressure.
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For example, the best experiences in Hanoi were completely spontaneous — unplanned and unexpected.
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Word number two.
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Itinerary. An itinerary is a detailed plan or schedule for a journey — a list of places to visit and things to do in a specific order.
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For example, for the first time, I had no itinerary.
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And it was the most freeing feeling I had experienced in years.
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Word number three.
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Communal. Communal means shared by a group of people — belonging to or used by a community.
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For example, I sat at a communal table surrounded by locals, and somehow felt immediately at home.
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Word number four.
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Unselfconscious.
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Unselfconscious means not worried about how others see you — natural and free from awkward self-awareness.
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For example, the teenagers danced with completely unselfconscious joy, entirely unbothered by who was watching.
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Word number five.
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Optimize. To optimize means to make something as good or effective as possible — to find the best version of something.
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For example, we spend so much energy trying to optimize our experiences that we sometimes miss them entirely.
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Word number six.
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Spontaneous.
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I already used that one — let me give you a different one.
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Word number six.
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Indifferent.
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Indifferent means having no particular interest or concern — not caring one way or the other.
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For example, the motorbikes moved through the streets utterly indifferent to the existence of pedestrians.
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Word number seven.
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Sideways. Used figuratively, sideways means arriving in an unexpected, indirect, or unplanned way — not straight on, but from an angle you didn't see coming.
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For example, the best things in life often arrive sideways — through doors we didn't know were open...
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We have reached the end of today's episode.
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And I hope — somewhere in these past eighteen minutes — Hanoi gave you something.
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Not just a picture of a city.
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But a feeling.
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The feeling of putting down the map.
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Of sitting somewhere new with nowhere to be.
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Of trusting that the unexpected — the missed flight, the wrong turn, the restaurant with no English menu — might just be the beginning of the best story you've ever told.
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You don't have to go to Hanoi to feel this.
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You just have to be willing, once in a while, to let go of the plan.
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To walk without a destination.
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To sit still long enough for something unexpected to find you.
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To say yes to the plastic stool and the unnamed dish and the stranger who wants to practice his English.
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Because that is where the real stuff lives.
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Not in the perfectly planned itinerary.
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Not in the five-star review.
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Not in the optimized, researched, pre-approved experience.
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It lives in the unplanned hour.
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The wrong turn that led somewhere right.
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The night you had no plan — and found exactly what you needed.
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Thank you so much for spending this morning with me.
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If tonight's story took you somewhere unexpected — please give it a like, share it with a friend who needs to hear that it's okay to let go of the plan sometimes, and subscribe so we never miss a morning together.
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I'm Gavin. Put down the map.
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Trust the city.
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See what finds you.
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And I will see you next week.

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ในวิดีโอนี้ ผู้พูดชื่อ Gavin เล่าเรื่องราวการเดินทางที่เมืองฮานอย ซึ่งเขาไม่ได้มีแผนการที่ชัดเจน แต่กลับประสบกับสถานการณ์ที่น่าสนใจมากมาย เริ่มจากการพลาดเที่ยวบินและต้องหาห้องพักราคาถูกในคืนที่ไม่มีแผนอะไรเลย จากนั้นเขาเริ่มสำรวจเมืองนี้ในคืนที่มีบรรยากาศอันมีชีวิตชีวา ผ่านถนนที่คับแคบ เสียงเสียงในเมือง และกลิ่นอาหารที่หลากหลาย เรื่องราวของ Gavin เป็นตัวอย่างที่ดีสำหรับผู้เรียนภาษาอังกฤษที่ต้องการเข้าใจการใช้งานภาษาในสถานการณ์จริง นอกจากนี้ยังแสดงให้เห็นถึงการใช้ศิลปะการมีปฏิสัมพันธ์ในสังคมด้วย

5 วลีที่สำคัญสำหรับการสื่อสารประจำวัน

  • Let's see what happens... (มาดูกันว่าจะเกิดอะไรขึ้น…)
  • Perfect. (เพอร์เฟ็ค)
  • Can I help you? (ฉันช่วยคุณได้ไหม?)
  • I have no plan. (ฉันไม่มีแผน)
  • What's that smell? (กลิ่นนั้นคืออะไร?)

การใช้วลีเหล่านี้ในชีวิตประจำวันจะช่วยให้คุณรู้สึกมั่นใจมากขึ้นเมื่อฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษในสถานการณ์จริง การเรียนรู้คำและวลีจากประสบการณ์จริงสามารถทำให้คุณเข้าใจการสื่อสารได้ดีขึ้น

คู่มือการฝึกพูดแบบเงาแบบทีละขั้นตอน

การฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษด้วยการใช้วิธี shadow speech หรือลอกเลียนเสียงเป็นวิธีที่มีประสิทธิภาพมากในการพัฒนาทักษะการพูดของคุณ เริ่มจากการฟังวิดีโอนี้อย่างตั้งใจ และทำตามขั้นตอนดังนี้:

  1. ฟังโดยไม่ทำอะไรก่อน — ให้เข้าใจเรื่องราวและบรรยากาศที่จะสร้างความเข้าใจให้กับคุณ
  2. ฟังวลีหรือประโยคที่ Gavin พูดซ้ำสองหรือสามรอบ
  3. พยายามเลียนเสียงในขณะที่ฟังวลี เช่น “Let's see what happens...” พยายามทำตามน้ำเสียงและจังหวะของเขา
  4. บันทึกเสียงของคุณเองขณะทำการพูดแบบเงา — จากนั้นให้ฟังและเปรียบเทียบกับต้นฉบับ
  5. ฝึกซ้ำเป็นประจำ — การทำแบบนี้สม่ำเสมอจะช่วยให้คุณพัฒนาได้ดีขึ้นเรื่อยๆ

โดยการใช้ shadowspeak และการฝึกพูดในวิธีนี้ คุณสามารถพัฒนาทักษะการพูดของคุณได้อย่างมีประสิทธิภาพใน shadowing site ที่หลากหลาย ซึ่งจะช่วยให้การเรียนรู้ภาษาอังกฤษเป็นเรื่องที่สนุกและน่าสนใจ

เทคนิค Shadowing คืออะไร?

Shadowing เป็นเทคนิคการเรียนรู้ภาษาที่ได้รับการรับรองทางวิทยาศาสตร์ พัฒนาขึ้นสำหรับการฝึกนักแปลมืออาชีพ วิธีการนี้เรียบง่ายแต่ทรงพลัง: คุณฟังเสียงภาษาอังกฤษจากเจ้าของภาษาและพูดตามทันที — เหมือนเงาที่ตามผู้พูดด้วยช่วงเวลาห่าง 1-2 วินาที การวิจัยแสดงว่าเทคนิคนี้ปรับปรุงความแม่นยำในการออกเสียง ทำนองเสียง จังหวะ การเชื่อมเสียง การฟังเข้าใจ และความคล่องแคล่วในการพูดได้อย่างมีนัยสำคัญ

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