Luyện nói tiếng Anh bằng Shadowing qua video: The Great American Exit: From Living in Cars to Leaving the U.S.

C1
Millions of Americans are living in their cars right now,
⏸ Tạm dừng
170 câu
Nếu các câu quá ngắn hoặc quá dài, hãy bấm Edit để chỉnh sửa.
1
Millions of Americans are living in their cars right now,
2
not because they want to,
3
but because they have to.
4
This is a shocking statistic for the wealthiest country in the world,
5
but it's the reality.
6
In some cities, the number of people living in their cars is up 45% over the past 10 years.
7
In California, the number of people living in their cars has doubled.
8
I avoided the unreasonable cost of housing in San Francisco by sleeping in a converted Nissan MV200.
9
Mike Phillips is the senior director at a non-profit that operates safe lots around San Diego County.
10
He said this epidemic is affecting normal, everyday people.
11
If they're homeless for the first time,
12
they're sort of coming to terms with what's happened and their new status.
13
And all they have left is their car.
14
When I saw the scale of this,
15
it really made me stop and think.
16
Not just about the expensive cost of housing,
17
but about the bigger picture.
18
Because this isn't just about homelessness,
19
it's about how expensive life in America has become.
20
So in this video, I'm going to share with you why this is happening and how people are getting out of it,
21
including leaving the country altogether.
22
It's a constant struggle to have any kind of,
23
not even just privacy, just being left alone.
24
There are five main reasons that people are forced into living this way.
25
First, you have the general economic climate in America,
26
which stems from our government's policy choices,
27
the pandemic, and getting involved in foreign wars.
28
Then you have private equity funds buying up affordable housing around the country.
29
This has resulted in an estimated 7 million unit shortfall in affordable housing.
30
Also, super PACs who use large amounts of money to influence politicians and government policy,
31
making it hard to pass legislation that can solve the housing crisis and affordability problem for everyday Americans.
32
Then you have general inflation and the overall rising cost of living worldwide.
33
That affects everything from food to rent, utilities, and more.
34
Next is stagnant wages.
35
National rents are up 30 to 50 percent since 2020,
36
yet median wages grew only 12 to 15% in the same period.
37
But the crazy thing is,
38
having a full-time job no longer prevents homelessness or protects you from poverty.
39
Over 53% of people living in vehicles report having a full-time job.
40
Some even work multiple jobs and still can't afford a home.
41
The problem isn't being jobless,
42
it's that wages haven't outpaced the cost of living crisis.
43
As one person commented online,
44
this is what happens when wages stay flat but rent doubles.
45
Now this story hits home for me because a lot of my family members
46
and ancestors grew up in poverty and in trailer parks.
47
So the fact that even this type of affordable housing is becoming unreachable for everyday Americans is very distressing.
48
The cost of living in America is one of the three main reasons
49
that people come to me for help living abroad and it's become more and more common in the past two years.
50
I'm not saying that this is the only answer because moving to another country requires resources.
51
It requires time, planning, and saving.
52
So it's not something that's viable for everyone,
53
but it is something that millions of Americans are considering,
54
which I talked about in a video just a few weeks ago
55
that I'll link to this video and you can watch next.
56
Moving abroad is something that everyday Americans are thinking about and planning for.
57
Many of them can barely get by right now
58
and make ends meet and they've realized that they won't be able to maintain their lifestyle when they retire.
59
I've helped thousands of people relocate and what I'm seeing now is a significant shift in people looking at their budgets,
60
looking at their cost of living,
61
and realizing that they can get by and make ends meet now,
62
but it won't necessarily be the case when they get to retirement
63
or maybe they're already retired and spending more than they receive each month.
64
What people want to do is protect their quality of life before it disappears
65
because you can genuinely live well in other countries for $1,000 to $2,000 per month
66
when you could easily need double that to get by in the United States.
67
The poverty line in America is about $16,000 per year for a single person and $33,000 for a family of four.
68
On the contrary, the income requirements to get a long-term visa to live in a foreign country,
69
such as somewhere in Latin America,
70
Europe, or Southeast Asia, start at $1,000 per month or $12,000 per year.
71
And in countries like the Philippines,
72
Bolivia, and Albania, you can live on even less than that per month.
73
So the first problem we have here are the stagnant wages in the U.S compared to the rapidly rising cost of living.
74
And then we have the overall housing crisis.
75
A cost of housing in the United States has been steadily increasing since 1940.
76
According to Zillow, the average rent in the U.S for all property types is $2,000 per month.
77
That's two to four times the average monthly wage in many other countries.
78
In America, the average monthly wage of a US worker in 2026 is under $5,000 per month,
79
which is still in the top 10 of incomes globally.
80
So why can't people pay rent?
81
Well, that's just one cost that's gone up along with food,
82
gas, utilities, and health insurance.
83
A general guideline is to spend no more than 30% of your income on your rent.
84
But as you just saw,
85
in many cases, rent can make up 50% or more of your monthly income.
86
In 230 plus US cities,
87
a basic one bedroom requires 40% or more of the median workers income
88
and many landlords require you to make three times the monthly rent plus pay rent and security deposits up front.
89
That can easily add up to $5,000 to $10,000 in cash,
90
which many people simply don't have available.
91
The first thing that people typically do in this scenario is go into survival mode
92
and I think about that in three levels
93
when it comes to what to do in the U.S plus a fourth level which is actually leaving the country.
94
Level one is survival mode.
95
So this is where people live in their cars,
96
go couch surfing, and go into extreme budgeting and downsizing mode.
97
This is where at least two to three million Americans are living right now.
98
Level two consists of domestic alternatives like moving to cheaper states,
99
house hacking or getting roommates,
100
or working remotely in the U.S.
101
So earning a California salary while living somewhere like rural Arkansas where the cost of living is a lot lower.
102
Level three is sustainable communities.
103
This is an interesting movement
104
that I've come across where we have a growing number of
105
people who are opting out of the toxicity of the modern day American lifestyle.
106
They want to quit their jobs,
107
spend less time on devices,
108
and go back to the basics of community and work-life balance.
109
These people aren't going off the grid completely.
110
They're still using technology and living in the modern world.
111
They're simply trading corporate America for entrepreneurship and trying to find a balance with more affordability and a higher quality of life.
112
They're advocating for building their own towns in middle America to hit the reset button like this gentleman from the Retribalize project.
113
What are we going to do?
114
What are we going to do about AI coming for all of these jobs,
115
housing prices out of control, the atomization in society.
116
I was just talking to a guy from McKinsey the other day and he's ready to like quit his job,
117
move out to the boonies and start a business with us.
118
The fourth level is moving to another country for a lower cost of living.
119
Now, moving abroad isn't free.
120
It takes a lot of time,
121
resources, planning, flexibility, and savings.
122
But what I'm seeing more
123
and more often is people coming to me at least six to 12 months before they'd like to move abroad,
124
in some case a few years before,
125
because they want to plan for a future where they might not be able to stay in the United States.
126
If you decide to move abroad,
127
you will have to save up for a flight,
128
shipping or storage, rent and relocation costs,
129
but you don't have to be rich or have a golden passport to move abroad for a better life.
130
The chart on the screen shows example income requirements to get a visa to live long term in a foreign country.
131
As a general rule, the income thresholds for retirement or passive income visas are lower than digital nomad and remote work visas,
132
and options in Latin America and Southeast Asia are typically more accessible and flexible than those in Europe,
133
Australia, and New Zealand.
134
Once you arrive and get settled in country,
135
your monthly cost of living can range from $800 to $1,000 per month,
136
especially in places like Southeast Asia,
137
such as Vietnam, Cambodia, Indonesia, and the Philippines.
138
Or you could spend from $2,000 to $5,000 per month to live in Latin America or Europe.
139
But the reality is
140
that you can live comfortably in a foreign country for the same cost of rent in the United States.
141
In Argentina, the cost of living for an expat is around $1,000 per month.
142
In Bulgaria, it's about the same.
143
In Germany, you can live on $2,000 to $3,000 per month.
144
And in Thailand, many expats live on around $1,200 to $1,500 per month.
145
In comparison, in the United States,
146
the average spending per household ranges from $66,000 to over $140,000 per year.
147
That's anywhere from $5,000 to $12,000 per month.
148
And I've heard figures much higher than that.
149
What we're seeing right now isn't just a housing issue,
150
it's a quality of life crisis in the United States
151
and it's really causing people to look in the mirror
152
and really ask themselves what they want and expect from life and if they're satisfied with their situations in their home country.
153
People want stability, they want affordability,
154
they want safety, and they want to be able to get health care without going bankrupt.
155
and when they can't find that in their home country,
156
millions start to look elsewhere.
157
So if you're watching this video and thinking,
158
I just need to get out of here, that's valid.
159
But the next step isn't booking a flight tomorrow.
160
It's figuring out where you'd actually enjoy living,
161
what kind of lifestyle and climate you want,
162
where you can afford and qualify for a visa,
163
whether you can fit in culturally or learn a new language and whether this is something that fits your lifestyle long term.
164
If you're thinking about making a change whether it's moving cities
165
or states or changing countries the earlier you're able to start planning ahead the better.
166
Next I'll link to a video right here with the exact steps
167
that you can take if you're thinking about leaving the United States,
168
and I'll also link to a couple videos with the most affordable places to live in the world.
169
And if you're serious about moving abroad and you'd like some help from me,
170
you can always reach out to us at travelingwithkristin.com slash relocation.

Tải Ứng Dụng

Có tính năng chấm điểm câu của bạn bằng AI

TRENDING

Phổ biến

Về Bài Học Này

Bài học này sẽ giúp bạn hiểu rõ hơn về tình hình thực tế của những người đang sống trong xe ở Mỹ, lý do phía sau hiện tượng này và những khó khăn mà họ phải đối mặt. Qua đó, bạn sẽ được tiếp cận các từ vựng và cụm từ liên quan đến chủ đề này, từ đó cải thiện kỹ năng nói tiếng Anh của mình. Thực hành shadow speech sẽ giúp bạn nắm bắt nhịp điệu và ngữ điệu của người bản xứ, qua đó nâng cao khả năng giao tiếp.

Từ Vựng & Cụm Từ Chìa Khóa

  • Sống trong xe - Living in cars
  • Chi phí nhà ở - Cost of housing
  • Khó khăn về kinh tế - Economic struggle
  • Người vô gia cư - Homeless people
  • Chính sách của chính phủ - Government policies
  • Lạm phát - Inflation
  • Tín dụng cá nhân - Private equity funds
  • Chỗ ở giá rẻ - Affordable housing

Mẹo Thực Hành

Khi thực hành shadowing tiếng Anh với video này, bạn nên chú ý đến tốc độ và cách diễn đạt của người nói. Shadowspeak là một phương pháp tuyệt vời để cải thiện khả năng nghe và phát âm. Bắt đầu bằng cách nghe kỹ từng đoạn ngắn và lặp lại ngay sau đó. Nếu video có âm thanh nhanh, hãy dừng lại sau từng câu và đảm bảo bạn có thể nhại lại một cách chính xác. Điều này không chỉ giúp bạn cải thiện phong cách nói mà còn làm quen với ngữ điệu tự nhiên của người bản xứ.

Ngoài ra, hãy cố gắng chú ý đến ngừng nghỉ và cách nhấn mạnh của người nói để có thể áp dụng vào phong cách giao tiếp của riêng bạn. Hãy luyện tập hàng ngày và nhớ rằng việc phát âm và ngữ điệu đúng sẽ giúp bạn tự tin hơn trong việc giao tiếp.

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.