ฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษด้วยเทคนิค Shadowing จากวิดีโอ: Life is too short to be scrolling 860 hours a year

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Every year, the average person spends 860 hours scrolling on social media.
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Every year, the average person spends 860 hours scrolling on social media.
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For reference, that's equivalent to non-stop scrolling 24 seven for 36 days straight.
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But that level of consumption doesn't just steal your time and your life,
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it also rewires your brain,
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shortening your attention span, and the saddest part,
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making the rest of real life feel kind of boring and flat.
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You sit at dinner with friends and feel kind of bored,
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you go for a walk and your hand reaches for your phone automatically,
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And you even bring your phone with you to scroll on the toilet because going without just feels too boring.
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The hobbies that you used to love feel dull and unappealing.
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And so you keep scrolling just a bit more just to feel something.
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And this is the exact vicious cycle that we get stuck in
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because the thing that we reach for to feel something is exactly the thing making us numb in the first place.
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If you're new here, my name's Izzy.
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I'm a mum, tech co-founder and Cambridge trained doctor.
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In this video, we'll walk through the neuroscience of how scrolling on social media makes real life feel flat and a simple,
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actionable, three-part framework that I've been using,
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which I call the three Rs,
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to retrain your brain to actually enjoy real life again.
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As a companion for this video,
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I've also put together a completely free guide linked in the description down below.
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So without further ado, let's dive in.
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So what exactly is digital anhedonia?
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Digital anhedonia can be defined as the diminished ability to find pleasure and enjoyment in real-world experiences after prolonged digital saturation.
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Essentially what that means is our brains have become so saturated and bombarded with hyper stimulating,
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fun brain candy in the form of social media,
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but then real life kind of just seems a bit mid compared to that.
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There are three key symptoms of digital anhedonia.
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I'll go through each of them and see if any of them might be showing up in your own life.
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Firstly, you start to feel bored by in-person events or activities or hobbies that used to genuinely interest you.
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Secondly, and this is sort of the flip side of number one,
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whenever you're not in front of a screen scrolling on social media,
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you feel kind of flat.
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And number Number three, you start to avoid tasks that require more effort.
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So these are things that take a bit of work that don't give you an immediate gratification reward.
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They just start to feel even more unappealing.
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And this is called mismatched neural expectation.
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Your brain has essentially been recalibrated to crave rapid dopamine hits
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instead of investing time into actually putting in the effort for something that then has a delayed reward.
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And all of this is governed by a fundamental principle in human biology called homeostasis.
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is the process through which the body maintains balance through feedback loops.
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One direct analogy from our biology is to imagine yourself at a loud concert where there's really loud banging music,
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the bass is booming, and when you first get there your ears actually kind of hurt a little bit.
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But the more time you spend at the concert,
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the more your ears begin to adjust,
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and music that was loud the first time now sounds actually okay or even normal.
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Then after the concert when you go home,
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you notice that everything sounds a little bit quieter.
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It's harder to hear people,
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things sound more muted and this is because your ears
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and your auditory nerves and your brain has adapted and recalibrated itself to a new set point.
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Using social media has a similar effect on the brain where
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your brain gets used to all these quick dopamine hits and
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so what I've drawn here is essentially a graph showing the reward stimulus that we get in our brains,
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different levels of that for different activities such as having a meal or conversation or going for a walk,
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doing a hobby or scrolling on social media.
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Social media is one of the most stimulating and so the bar is as the tallest.
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The rest are varying heights there, depending on the person.
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If you're somebody who doesn't really use social media,
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then your set point will calibrate around the midpoint of what you spend your time doing.
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And so most of the daily activities actually exceed the threshold for you feeling enjoyment and stimulated by it.
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Maybe some of them will dip below,
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but that's only natural because that's how you maintain that set point there and that homeostasis.
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However, once you introduce a hyper-stimulating stimulus like social media,
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that increases your set point because you spend more time at a high level of stimulation and dopamine and reward,
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your brain recalibrates to expect that and to need that in order to feel something.
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And so then your bar for feeling like you're enjoying something rises.
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And all of these things that you used to be able to find enjoyment from,
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essentially a balanced, healthy, real life, now feel dull.
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And it's actually kind of worrying how visible these effects are on brain scans,
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because people who use social media often end up having reduced activation in two specific parts of the brain,
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the nucleus accumbens and the orbitofrontal cortex,
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which are both involved in reward and pleasure.
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And so when these study participants were doing anything non-digital,
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their brains were just less responsive and the internal wiring had actually changed.
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And I just wanted to add one thing here because anhedonia is actually one of the symptoms of clinical depression.
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And so if you feel like you resonate with anhedonia,
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but it's not just in the digital context,
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and you also have other symptoms of depression,
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such as low mood or sleep disturbance,
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that kind of thing, then please do get proper help.
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And all of this was born out of essentially during postpartum,
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I found that I was becoming addicted to social media.
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In between waking up every three hours and feeding the baby and doing all of that kind of thing,
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I found myself just reaching for the lowest hanging fruit dopamine hit,
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which was social media.
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And if I actually had wanted to spend my time like that,
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that would have been great, fantastic.
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But deep down, I actually knew that that isn't aligned with the life that I really want to live.
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And so since then, I've been trying to figure out how actually can I live well with social media
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and use it in a way that makes my life better rather than worse.
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And one thing I found reassuring is that if you find yourself mindlessly scrolling like I was,
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it's almost certainly not about you.
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It's actually about the system.
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Because mindless scrolling is actually the result of how our neurobiology has been extensively studied to engineer algorithms
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that can push all of our reward systems buttons perfectly.
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But once we recognize this,
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the good news is that we can actively reverse this engineering ourselves.
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So let's talk about exactly how we can do that.
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There are three R's, reduce, replace, and reframe.
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And so the first R is reduce.
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And here are six concrete tactics that you can apply from today.
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You don't necessarily need to do all of them,
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just pick the ones that feel actually achievable for where you are right now.
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The first one is to turn off all your non-essential notifications.
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Literally go through your phone,
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turn off any app notifications that are just not useful.
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I've turned off all my notifications for all my social media platforms
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because those constant pings are part of this variable reward schedule that's actually keeping your brain on edge.
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Just like how a casino slot machine is so addictive,
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number two is to turn off autoplay if that option's available
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because that feature is literally designed to continue to just feed you content to try to hook you in.
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Number Number three is schedule the times that you actually check social media.
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So maybe set two or three times a day that you actually sit down and you use social media.
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This also means that you don't just let yourself check it throughout the day.
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Maybe you just set a few times in,
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let's say your lunchtime or your evening,
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where you actually check social media and keep the rest of your day social media free.
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Number four, and this one's been a game changer for me,
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is set up some device-free zones.
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For example, the bedroom or the dinner table or like the first hour of your day.
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Maybe just pick one of them to start with.
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And so one thing
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that really changed the game for me was actually moving my phone charger out of my bedroom into my study.
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And so then I would literally have this ritual of putting my phone to bed
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and saying goodnight to my phone and then going to bed.
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And this improved my sleep massively and prevented that scrolling first thing in the morning and also last thing at night.
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Number five is to put your phone display on grayscale mode.
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Because our neurobiology is designed to find color more enticing and interesting and stimulating.
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And so by stripping all of that back and turning it into a black and white phone,
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you maintain all the functionality,
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but it makes it much less appealing and reduces the dopamine hit that you get.
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And number six is a slightly more intense version,
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which is dumb phone mode.
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So apps like Freedom let you cut down your smartphone to simply just calls and texts for a chosen window of time,
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essentially keeping the basic core functionality, but removing everything else.
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Now there's one trap that I want to flag,
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which is that it's easy to assume that reduce means just digital detoxing,
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where they completely disconnect from their devices or social media for a set period of time.
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And there is actually evidence that these digital detoxes make you less dependent on your phone and social media.
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But the same research also highlights that as soon as you return to using social media,
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you can fall right back into the same old pattern.
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So essentially the detox just gives you a little breather from that pattern.
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But as soon as you go back into your old environment without changing anything about your system
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or the way that you approach it,
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everything just snaps back into place and the social media dependence and digital anhedonia resumes.
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Because you're left with this sort of void where you used to scroll on social media,
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You used to find enjoyment from it and now you kind of have nothing.
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And that brings us to the second R, which is replace.
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And actually during my time studying medicine and then working as a doctor,
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one of the things that we really focused on was helping patients to either manage addictions
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or create health forming habits that were beneficial for them and their wellbeing.
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And one similar example is patients who were,
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let's say trying to quit alcohol and drinking.
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Often one of the hardest things for someone who was trying
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to reduce how much they were drinking is going out to dinner with friends and seeing all their friends having drinks.
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And obviously seeing all your friends drinking,
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enjoying themselves, you kind of want to drink as well.
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That's so tempting, but you know that for you,
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you're on a mission to actually reduce how much alcohol you're having,
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whether that's for an actual health condition you have,
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or just you want to have the health benefits of not drinking.
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It can often end up really tempting to just slip back into old habits.
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Because by removing drinking, you've almost left a void where let's say you're at dinner,
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you're getting some food with friends,
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everyone's going, cheers, and you have nothing.
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And so one thing that we would advise here is to think of something that can fill the void.
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And so instead of maybe ordering a gin and tonic,
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they could maybe order a sparkling water with lime
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and make a point of actively ordering something that is non-alcoholic for themselves to enjoy.
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This means that instead of just blocking that activity,
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blocking that energy, you're redirecting it into something else,
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which is a lot easier and smoother than just trying to live with the void.
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And so the same applies here.
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And let's dive into ways that we can actually replace social media and actually fill that void for social media with slower,
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more sustainable ways of enjoying ourselves and finding fun and meaning.
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Before we get into what to fill that space with,
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I quickly want to share about something that's been quite a game changer for creators who want to make money
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and earn online.
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Because when using social media,
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we're in a consumption mode.
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But one of the best things
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that we can do is flip from just consuming to also creating and to create as much as we consume.
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So what if instead the same attention
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that has gone into passively consuming social media instead went into actively creating and building something of your own?
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And that's the foundation of what a creative business is.
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And you probably already have the knowledge to do it,
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even if you don't know it yet.
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For me, the biggest barrier was friction because I had all these separate tools for various online courses,
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my newsletter, my community, but none of them were really designed to connect to each other.
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And that's where Stan comes in,
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who are very kindly sponsoring today's video.
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Stan's store is essentially an all-in-one creator storefront with courses,
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digital products, coaching calls, bookings,
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newsletter, communities, social links, all within one customizable link in bio.
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The setup process is intuitive and straightforward,
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so it cuts out a lot of the faff on your end.
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And I can honestly say this is exactly what I wish that I had at the start of my creator journey.
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This didn't exist at the time,
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and honestly would have saved me a ton of time and energy.
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And if you've already got things set up elsewhere,
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so let's say through Beehive or ConvertKit,
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Stan connects to those too so you're not starting from scratch.
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And with Stan's store, your storefront can pretty much go live in as little as five minutes.
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You can try it completely for free for 14 days using my link in the description down below.
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Now let's get back into the video.
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Our ancestors were primarily hunter-gatherers and they spent literally hours every single day walking,
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gathering food, sitting around fires,
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talking in conversation, making things with their hands.
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And so our reward systems over hundreds of thousands of years have naturally and automatically learned to regulate with that rhythm.
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And so in step two,
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replace, the four capacities
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that I'm about to walk you through are what those activities were actually doing for the brain and for the nervous system.
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And through it all, I'll share a bit about how this links into one of my hobbies I picked up in lockdown,
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which was organic vegetable gardening.
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Skill number one is what I'm calling weight.
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And this is the capacity for delayed gratification.
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You've probably heard of the marshmallow test.
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It's that famous Stanford experiment from the 1970s where kids were made an offer.
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They were offered either one marshmallow right now or they could be given two if they could wait just 15 minutes.
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Scientists kept track of these children over the years as they grew up
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and they found that the ones who were able to wait for
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that second marshmallow were more cognitively and socially competent as teenagers.
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They got better grades and also coped better when it came to frustrating and stressful situations.
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And the skill that that test was measuring,
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which is being able to delay gratification,
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is one of the first skills to be affected when everything is delivered instantly.
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That muscle of being able to wait and delay gratification just kind of atrophies
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and withers away because nothing is asking us to wait anymore.
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We can literally get Deliveroo in five minutes.
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We can instantly get social media dopamine hits.
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All of this is at the tap of a finger.
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So the activities that really help to restore this are the ones where you have to wait before you get a reward.
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Things like reading novels where there's a buildup to the end.
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Things like cooking where you have to plan out a meal,
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get the groceries, prepare everything until you finally get the finished piece.
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And this was something I experienced firsthand in lockdown when I picked up this organic vegetable gardening habit.
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I remember going to the store,
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selecting different packets of seeds,
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going home and preparing the seed trays,
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putting the seeds in them,
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putting them in the right conditions,
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watching them grow, preparing the soil outside to finally have organic vegetables and fruits come from all of this.
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The second skill is a work or what neuroscientists actually call effort proportional reward.
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What happens here is that when you're doing something with your hands and your engagement is sustained over a stretch of time,
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your brain releases dopamine in a kind of slow and steady drip.
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This is a completely different release pattern from the spikes that a social media feed produces.
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And this essentially means that when you're actually doing something that takes some effort,
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you should get a proportional reward to it.
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And so our brains learn that in order to feel a sense of reward,
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we need to put in some work,
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we need to be ready to overcome some level of faff and put in some effort.
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The problem with social media is that it short circuits this whole thing.
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When reward becomes completely effortless,
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all it takes is picking up our phone,
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tapping on an app, and then it sometimes even scrolls for you.
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We don't need to put in any effort for reward.
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And so then our brain loses this ability,
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this skill of actually knowing that,
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okay, we're ready to put in some effort to feel a reward.
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And so activities here to heal this are all about hands-on making,
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things that take effort maybe things like pottery,
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calligraphy, embroidery, and again, linking to the gardening hobby.
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I literally spent days digging up the earth,
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preparing everything to only then feel a sense of reward.
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Skill number three is grow.
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And this is the capacity for what's called effort-based mastery.
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Heavy screen use and social media specifically underuses a region of your brain called the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
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And so the part of your brain
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that is designed to pursue working on skills that are hard to acquire kind of wastes away over time.
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And so the activities that really restore this skill are anything
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that has a learning curve that you can feel across the sessions.
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So things like learning an instrument or learning a language.
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And so to bring it back to the gardening example,
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every single week I was learning more about how the seasons work,
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how soil chemistry and the whole soil microbiome works.
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And so try thinking of some activities that really stretch you to actually engage your brain or learn some kind of skill.
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And number four is move.
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And this is essentially making the most of your body's exercise neurochemistry.
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This one actually works through a completely different mechanism from the other first three.
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But essentially when you exert yourself physically,
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your brain releases something called BDNF,
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which stands for brain derived neurotrophic factor.
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This sounds like a scary long word,
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but essentially what it means is a chemical that encourages new nerve connections
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and new nerves to grow and it's in the brain.
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So kind of like a fertilizer for your brain because it kind of makes it grow.
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And so the activities here that you could bring in is anything that gets you moving.
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For me, I personally love yoga and I'm obsessed with yoga,
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swimming, that kind of thing.
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But you could do running,
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cycling, hiking, brisk walks, strength training.
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You could do martial arts, rowing.
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You could even just go for what the internet loves to call a hot girl walk or maybe dancing,
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salsa, hip hop.
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And again, to bring back the gardening example,
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here I would be outside carrying pots,
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carrying soil, digging the ground,
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getting active, sometimes getting sweaty.
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And so I'd almost always feel really good at the end of it.
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These four things aren't actually fixed to specific activities.
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They're actually about the way that you engage with an activity.
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And so I love this framework for thinking about how we can incorporate activities in our lives
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that actually help our brain rot and our brains to heal and recalibrate.
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And so trying to make sure
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that we have a good balance across all four quadrants is
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very helpful for actually rewiring our brain again to be able to enjoy real life.
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And so that brings us to the third R, which is reframe.
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And this is all about reframing
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and redesigning our relationship with how we integrate social media
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and digital stimulation into our lives so that it turns into something
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that helps us to honestly just live a life that we love.
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The first part of this is actually falling in love with being bored.
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Because fundamentally at the heart of all of this is us escaping boredom by going to social media or the digital world.
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And the reason why boredom is so crucial is because it allows our default mode network in our brain to activate.
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When we're bored and not getting any external stimulation or doing something,
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our brain is actually processing and incubating all the ideas
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and thoughts that it's had and trying to connect them in new and interesting ways.
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This is why our thoughts kind of wander.
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This is the default mode network winding its way through all the things
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that have come up in our day and our lives and trying to make sense of it all.
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And this is part of the reason why so many scientific discoveries or moments of creative breakthrough happen during being bored.
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Even JK Rowling apparently came up with the idea for Harry
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Potter during a four hour train ride where she had nothing to do and was just sitting there with her imagination.
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And so to embody this first step,
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next time you feel bored,
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don't necessarily view that as a problem,
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actually view it as a gift.
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Lean into actually embracing the boredom,
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allowing yourself to feel bored and not trying to fix it immediately.
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This might mean going for a walk without headphones and without your phone,
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or even just going to the bathroom without your phone and just sitting and thinking about life for a moment.
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The next thing is to curate for eudaimonia.
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And essentially eudaimonia is this ancient Greek concept of thriving,
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living a life well lived.
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And this doesn't mean joy in the sense of hedonic dopamine hits.
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It's actually deeper than that,
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a sense of holistic thriving, holistic flourishing in life.
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And so what I'd recommend you do here is actually audit your social media.
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One thing I like to put everything on my feed through is almost this good mental nutrition filter,
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where I basically ask myself,
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is this good food for my mind?
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Is this actually what I want to be feeding my mind?
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Is this actually helping me to live a better life?
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So if there's anything that reliably makes you feel worse afterwards,
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so like unnecessary comparison, urgency,
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shame, feeling bad about yourself, that immediately goes.
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There's no space for that here.
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Hit unfollow, mute them, or click not interested,
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and do not engage with it,
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don't like it, don't leave a comment, just leave it be.
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Because if you engage with it,
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that tells the algorithm that you want to engage with more of that kind of content.
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On the flip side, anything that produces real learning,
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connection, inspiration, that actually flows into action in your real life, that stays.
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And by doing this over time and curating the garden of your social media,
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this helps to turn it into a place that actually nourishes you and helps you to actually live your best life.
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And the third step is to use social media as a bridge, not a destination.
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And what I mean by this is to use it to connect you to activities
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or ideas or real life in-person connections rather than using it as a one-stop destination.
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So use your DMs to schedule actual meetups with people,
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not necessarily using them as the conversation in itself.
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Maybe reply to a friend's story with,
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let's actually meet up when are you free,
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instead of just replying with an emoji.
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Join groups or communities through social media and then actually go in person.
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So now that we've gone through the neuroscience of digital anhedonia
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and the three Rs to retrain your brain to enjoy real life again,
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I'd like you to choose two action points that you'll commit to this week.
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Write it down on a sticky note,
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pop it in your notes app,
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WhatsApp it to a friend,
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write it in the comments below.
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The most important thing is that you actually write down your action points and you take action.
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If you enjoyed this video,
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I think you'll like this one over here where I share ways
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that you can romanticize your precious 50,000 hours after work instead of scrolling on your phone.
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Feel free to hit subscribe for more self-development videos every single week.
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And as always, thank you so much for watching.
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Take care of yourselves.
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And remember that the journey is the destination.
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I'll see you in the next video.
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Bye.

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ในยุคดิจิทัลปัจจุบัน ผู้คนใช้เวลาไปกับการเลื่อนดูโซเชียลมีเดียมากถึง 860 ชั่วโมงต่อปี ซึ่งก็คือประมาณ 36 วันติดต่อกันโดยไม่หยุดพัก นี่ไม่เพียงแต่ขโมยเวลาและชีวิตของคุณ แต่ยังส่งผลต่อการทำงานของสมอง ทำให้ความสามารถในการสนใจสิ่งรอบตัวลดลง และทำให้ชีวิตจริงรู้สึกน่าเบื่อ โดยเฉพาะอย่างยิ่งเมื่อกิจกรรมที่เคยสนุกกลายเป็นเรื่องธรรมดาไป คุณอาจรู้สึกเบื่อหน่ายแม้ในงานเลี้ยงกับเพื่อน หรือเมื่อต้องออกไปเดินเล่น การติดสมาร์ทโฟนทำให้การเพลิดเพลินในชีวิตจริงถูกลดทอนลง

5 วลีที่ควรรู้สำหรับการสื่อสารประจำวัน

  • Feeling bored by in-person events: รู้สึกเบื่อหน่ายกับกิจกรรมที่จัดขึ้นจริง
  • Diminished ability to find pleasure: ความสามารถในการเพลิดเพลินลดลง
  • Mismatched neural expectation: การคาดหวังที่ไม่ตรงกันของระบบประสาท
  • Rapid dopamine hits: การกระตุ้นโดปามีนอย่างรวดเร็ว
  • Homeostasis: ความสมดุลทางชีววิทยา

แนวทางการฝึกพูดขั้นตอนต่อขั้นตอน

การพัฒนาทักษะการพูดภาษาอังกฤษเป็นสิ่งสำคัญ โดยเฉพาะในยุคที่การสื่อสารออนไลน์มีบทบาทมากขึ้น เทคนิคที่เรียกว่า shadow speech หรือ shadowspeak เป็นวิธีที่ยอดเยี่ยมในการปรับปรุงการออกเสียงภาษาอังกฤษของคุณ ที่นี่คือขั้นตอนง่ายๆ ที่คุณสามารถทำตามได้:

  1. ฟังวิดีโอหรือเสียงที่คุณสนใจ โดยเลือกเนื้อหาที่เข้ากับระดับภาษาอังกฤษของคุณ
  2. เมื่อฟัง ให้จดบันทึกวลีหรือประโยคที่สำคัญ โดยเฉพาะคำที่ทำให้คุณรู้สึกจับใจ
  3. ฝึก shadow speech โดยการเลียนเสียงที่คุณได้ยิน ทำตามจังหวะและน้ำเสียงของผู้พูดให้เหมือนที่สุด
  4. บันทึกเสียงของตัวเองในขณะที่คุณฝึกแล้วเปรียบเทียบกับต้นฉบับ เพื่อหาแนวทางในการปรับปรุงการออกเสียง
  5. ทำซ้ำกระบวนการนี้อย่างสม่ำเสมอ เพื่อพัฒนาทักษะการพูดและเพิ่มความมั่นใจในการสื่อสารภาษาอังกฤษ

การฝึกฝนอย่างต่อเนื่องจะช่วยให้คุณ ปรับปรุงการออกเสียงภาษาอังกฤษ และเพลิดเพลินกับการมีปฏิสัมพันธ์ในภาษาอังกฤษมากขึ้น อย่าลืมลองใช้ shadowspeaks เพื่อให้การเรียนรู้น่าสนใจและมีความหมายมากขึ้น!

เทคนิค Shadowing คืออะไร?

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

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