Luyện nói tiếng Anh bằng Shadowing qua video: Kristen Bell on Living with Depression and Anxiety | Body Stories | SELF

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I have to know how my brain works in order to catch it from doing bad things.
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I have to know how my brain works in order to catch it from doing bad things.
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Because the brain is really tricky and it will tell you things that aren't true.
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And so knowing that I would remember a negative experience more than I'd remember a positive,
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I would really make it my mission to go,
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okay, but the positive experiences with that person were equal.
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I'm gonna choose to let that negative experience go.
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What is your anxiety?
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It's hard to put into words,
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honestly, and it feels different at different times.
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When my anxiety is high,
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it feels like an absolute inability to make decisions.
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Like, I would rather not do something than decide what to do.
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And it's almost paralyzing, which is odd,
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because it seems like it's simple.
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Do you want to go on a walk or sit on the couch and watch TV?" And I'm like,
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I can't figure that out.
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I don't have the brain power.
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It feels like decision fatigue.
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And then depression is different.
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My version of it feels very restricted,
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like if you're trying to put on a latex glove that's way too small for your hand.
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Also, it sort of coincides with this feeling of not being excited about anything,
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which, again, on a day when you feel great or even normal,
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you can get excited about things.
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Like you're like, oh, I'm gonna have pizza today,
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or I'm gonna see a friend today,
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or any, all of the fun things about life.
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And when I'm having depression,
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it's like none of those things are exciting or seem worth it.
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So there's this real disconnect because I know,
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logically, that should be a feeling that induces some happiness,
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but it's like my depression will not let me recognize those feelings.
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At 40, I don't believe anything should be taboo anymore.
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Like I talked to my kids about sex,
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and yes, they're very young,
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but they wanted to know how they got here
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and we talked about it and they were grossed out
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and left the room and that's fine but I think
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that anything that's taboo
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and hard to talk about should be some of the first
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priorities you should be talking about with the support systems in your life.
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I wish that I had known as a person in the public eye to talk about it publicly at an earlier date.
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I had been
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acting and you know doing publicity for a while
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and I was at the stretch the last stretch of two movies of a press tour
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and I'd done all these interviews
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and I was lying in bed about to do Sam Jones
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which is a long-form interview like it's like a 45 minute to an hour sit down
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so you better be prepared to talk right
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and I said to my husband God I have nothing to
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talk about I feel exhausted like I've I've said every story about my life.
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And he said, why don't you talk about your struggle with anxiety and depression?
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And it was a huge light bulb.
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I was like, have I never, I've never done that.
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I was experiencing the same thing that everyone else was,
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which is like, well, just don't talk about that.
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And then I just felt so inauthentic and irresponsible to have been presenting this bubbly,
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happy person, which is someone that I cultivate and I nurture and I try really hard to exist as.
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And I just wasn't being honest with the people,
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like the girls who may look up to me.
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And so I was like,
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okay, I'm just gonna talk about it.
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And so I don't even think that Sam knew,
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but during that interview I was like,
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actually, you know, for a period of my life,
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and periods, and often, and sometimes just on a random Wednesday,
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I feel this way.
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And then we started to get more in depth and I found myself really happy to be admitting all of it.
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And the response I got from that interview was astounding to me.
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So many people saying, I've felt that way too.
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Thank you for saying it out loud.
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You gave me the courage to say it out loud,
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which I mean, I did practically nothing other than do what I should do,
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which is be honest and authentic.
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And it really, it was a huge turning point in my life.
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I just felt a huge sense of responsibility.
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And so I kept talking about it and I talk about it a lot.
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And here we are.
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And here we are.
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I started noticing a feeling of being disconnected when I was probably 18 or 19.
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I moved out of Detroit and to New York when I was,
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I just turned 18.
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I was like two weeks into being 18.
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And I was so excited,
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it was all I wanted to do.
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I was going to NYU,
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I was studying musical theater,
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I was living in this beautiful melting pot cultural city and seeing Broadway shows each night.
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And it was wonderful.
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And I just felt like if I wrote my life down on paper,
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I had so many opportunities,
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so much privilege, so much access to happiness,
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and yet my feelings were not that.
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As an 18 year old living on her own in New York City,
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I should be like, yes.
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Like it should be so exciting, but it wasn't.
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I felt like I was sort of followed by this weird dark cloud
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that just didn't allow me to see all the happiness around me.
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And I was lucky that I felt in my bones that that wasn't how I,
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I hate to use the word should,
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but should be feeling or how I could be feeling, I guess.
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And I was lucky enough that my mom had sat me down and had a conversation with me and she said,
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hey, just a quick heads up.
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I experienced these feelings sometimes.
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Your grandmother experienced these feelings sometimes.
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She's a nurse.
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And so she recognized that there could be a hereditary component to a serotonin imbalance.
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And she said, if you start to feel any of these things,
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just know there are a variety of ways
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that you can reach out to people or try to fix it and you don't sort of have to live like that.
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It's such a hard thing to talk about like I don't like
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that there's any sort of stigma to it but I get it.
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It's a weird thing to talk about because it's not an affliction that you can see.
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It's like a hard thing to I guess diagnose and also acknowledge
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and a lot of families or support systems or anyone in your life,
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they don't know how to talk about it,
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especially if they aren't themselves feeling it.
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I think I had an upper hand
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because my mom had explained it to me in a very medical way early on and I was like, oh, okay.
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It sort of armed me with the information about what could happen and maybe it never will,
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but if it did, there's access to help.
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I knew that there were all of these ways like talking to a friend,
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finding a therapist, talking to a psychiatrist or a psychologist,
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and just knowing that changed everything for me.
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Even if you're not experiencing any mental health issues,
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I would hope that you would walk through life being open and ready to be a shoulder if someone needs you.
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Because the reality is we're not all born the same.
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Some of us are born with a ton of confidence and then some are born really timid.
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And I just feel like,
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maybe this is just my maternal instincts talking,
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but I just don't want anyone to feel like they don't have a support system.
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So if we collectively as a society,
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like self-care, this whole idea,
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should also include caring about each other.
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You know, it has to obviously be on the person to identify the feeling and say I need help.
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But then I think it has to be on the people around them that love them to say,
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okay, let me see if I can support you,
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you know, even if that's just checking in once in a while.

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Bối Cảnh & Nền Tảng

Kristen Bell, một diễn viên nổi tiếng, chia sẻ về những trải nghiệm cá nhân của cô liên quan đến chứng trầm cảm và lo âu. Trong video này, cô không chỉ phản ánh về cách mà não bộ con người hoạt động mà còn khám phá cảm giác khó khăn trong việc đưa ra quyết định trong những lúc lo âu cao độ. Những câu chuyện của cô mang lại cái nhìn sâu sắc về tâm lý con người, đồng thời mạnh dạn phá vỡ những điều cấm kỵ trong xã hội về việc nói về cảm xúc của mình. Điều này rất quan trọng trong việc tạo ra một không gian an toàn để thảo luận và hỗ trợ lẫn nhau trong cuộc sống hàng ngày.

5 Câu Nói Hữu Ích Trong Giao Tiếp Hằng Ngày

  • “Tôi phải hiểu cách mà não của tôi hoạt động” - Nhấn mạnh tầm quan trọng của việc nhận thức bản thân.
  • “Tôi thường nhớ trải nghiệm tiêu cực hơn là tích cực” - Giúp bạn hiểu về tâm lý con người.
  • “Cảm giác lo âu khiến tôi không thể đưa ra quyết định” - Một cảm nhận phổ biến mà nhiều người trải qua.
  • “Trầm cảm của tôi làm cho mọi thứ trở nên không thú vị” - Thể hiện cảm giác mất kết nối với niềm vui sống.
  • “Không có gì nên là điều cấm kỵ” - Khuyến khích mở lòng và chia sẻ cảm xúc.

Hướng Dẫn Shadowing Bước Từng Bước

Để cải thiện kỹ năng nói tiếng Anh thông qua phương pháp shadowing tiếng anh, bạn có thể thực hiện theo các bước sau:

  1. Nghe Kỹ Lưỡng: Xem video và chú ý cách mà Kristen Bell diễn đạt cảm xúc và ý kiến của cô. Tập trung vào ngữ điệu và nhấn mạnh trong câu nói.
  2. Bắt Chước: Ngay sau khi nghe một đoạn ngắn, hãy dừng lại và thử nhắc lại những gì cô ấy nói. Cố gắng sao cho giống với cách phát âm và nhịp điệu của cô ấy.
  3. Ghi Âm: Ghi âm giọng nói của bạn trong lúc thực hành shadowspeaks. So sánh nó với bản gốc để nhận biết các điểm cần cải thiện.
  4. Thực Hành Thường Xuyên: Luyện tập thường xuyên giúp bạn cải thiện khả năng phát âm và khả năng giao tiếp. Hãy đứng lên và tự tin khi nói.
  5. Chia Sẻ và Phản Hồi: Tham gia vào các nhóm luyện nói hoặc tìm kiếm bạn bè để thực hành shadow speech. Nhận phản hồi là bước quan trọng để tiến bộ.

Nhớ rằng, việc luyện nói tiếng Anh không chỉ là về ngữ pháp mà còn là cảm xúc và cách truyền đạt ý tưởng. Hãy dũng cảm bắt đầu ngay hôm nay!

Phương Pháp Shadowing Là Gì?

Shadowing là kỹ thuật học ngôn ngữ có cơ sở khoa học, ban đầu được phát triển cho chương trình đào tạo phiên dịch viên chuyên nghiệp và được phổ biến rộng rãi bởi nhà đa ngôn ngữ học Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Nguyên lý cốt lõi đơn giản nhưng cực kỳ hiệu quả: bạn nghe tiếng Anh của người bản xứ và lặp lại to ngay lập tức — như một "cái bóng" (shadow) đuổi theo người nói với độ trễ chỉ 1–2 giây. Khác với luyện ngữ pháp hay học từ vựng bị động, Shadowing buộc não bộ và cơ miệng phải đồng thời xử lý và tái tạo ngôn ngữ thực tế. Các nghiên cứu khoa học xác nhận phương pháp này cải thiện đáng kể phát âm, ngữ điệu, nhịp điệu, nối âm, kỹ năng nghe và độ lưu loát khi nói — đặc biệt hiệu quả cho người luyện IELTS Speaking và muốn giao tiếp tiếng Anh tự nhiên như người bản ngữ.