跟读练习: 9 Japanese Habits That Quietly Keep You Slim (No Gym Needed) - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

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You spend hours at the gym,
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You spend hours at the gym,
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you cut carbs, you track every single calorie.
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But a few months later,
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you're back where you started.
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That's because 95% of diets fail long term.
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Not because you're lazy, but because your body is wired to fight back.
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When you lose weight, your metabolism slows down,
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and your hunger hormones, like ghrelin, skyrocket.
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Your body doesn't care about your summer goals.
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It only cares about survival.
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But here's what's fascinating.
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Japan has one of the world's lowest obesity rates at just 4.5%.
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That's almost 10 times lower than in the U.S.
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And yet, they eat rice,
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noodles, and even snacks daily.
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So what's going on here?
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What do they know that we don't?
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It's not genetics.
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Japanese and American genes aren't that different.
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It's not smoking, Japanese men actually smoke more than Americans,
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and it's definitely not the gym.
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Only 3% of Japanese people even have a gym membership.
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So how do they stay effortlessly slim?
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The answer isn't about dieting harder.
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It's about living smarter.
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And once you understand how,
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you'll realize it's less about willpower and more about design.
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Here are nine science-backed habits the Japanese live by,
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habits that can reprogram your relationship with food without starving yourself or living in the gym.
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Habit 1.
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Train your taste buds early.
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In Japan, food education starts in school.
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Every lunch is planned by a nutritionist,
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made fresh daily, and eaten together in class,
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no vending machines, no processed junk.
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Children grow up tasting real flavors,
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vegetables, rice, fish, and that becomes the foundation of what normal tastes like.
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Meanwhile, American school lunches are run by profit-driven companies,
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tater tots, chicken nuggets, chocolate milk,
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a factory diet that trains your brain to crave sugar.
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The key lesson?
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Taste is a habit.
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You can retrain it at any age.
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Just replace one processed item a week with something fresh.
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Slowly, your brain starts craving real food again.
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Habit 2.
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Healthy Convenience Japan has 15 times more convenience stores than the U.S.,
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but here's the difference.
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Their fast food isn't burgers or burritos.
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It's rice bowls with grilled fish,
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miso soup, or tofu for just a few dollars.
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Convenience doesn't have to mean junk.
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It just means available and easy.
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In psychology, this is called environmental design.
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We think we make choices,
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but in truth, our environment makes them for us.
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Japan simply makes good food the easy default.
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So if you want to eat better,
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don't fight your cravings, change what's around you.
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Habit 3.
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Portion Control Without Pain Japanese culture values moderation.
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There's even a saying, hara hachi boo,
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eat until you're 80% full.
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Meals come in smaller dishes with variety,
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rice, soup, fish, vegetables, so your brain thinks you've eaten more than you have.
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No giant sodas, no all-you-can-eat refills.
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And that matters because portion size directly shapes hunger.
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Psychologically, it's called the unit bias.
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We feel satisfied when we finish what's served,
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not when our body's actually full.
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So, smaller plates equals fewer calories equals no feeling of restriction.
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Habit 4.
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Sugar Awareness Here's another shocker.
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The average Japanese person eats half the sugar an American does.
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Their drinks are smaller.
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A soda can in Japan is 150 milliliters, not 350.
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Desserts are tiny but beautifully made.
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Satisfaction through experience, not volume.
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In one study, people who cut sugar by just 40% for two months started perceiving sweetness as 40% sweeter.
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Your taste adjusts.
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You just have to give it time.
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Try swapping one sugary drink for green tea.
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It's calorie-free, lowers stress, and boosts metabolism.
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Habit 5.
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Structured Eating Most Japanese people eat three main meals at consistent times.
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breakfast before 9, lunch by 1, dinner before 8.
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When your meals have rhythm,
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your hormones follow that rhythm too.
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It prevents random snacking, emotional eating, and late-night binges.
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If your eating schedule is chaotic,
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your brain grabs whatever's nearby, often the worst option.
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Predictability is discipline's quiet twin.
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Start with fixed mealtimes and you'll notice your cravings start to calm down.
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Habit 6.
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Move naturally.
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Here's another difference.
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The Japanese don't work out.
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They move.
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They walk to the train.
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They climb stairs.
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They bike to work.
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Movement is built into their lifestyle.
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Science calls this non-exercise activity thermogenesis,
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small movements that add up to big calorie burns.
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No stress, no guilt, just motion as a part of living.
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Habit 7.
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Slow Eating.
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Eating with chopsticks naturally slows you down.
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It takes about 20 minutes for your brain to signal fullness,
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and by eating slower, you give it that time.
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If you don't use chopsticks, try this.
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Put your fork down between bites.
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Chew.
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Breathe.
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Enjoy.
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You'll eat less and you'll feel better.
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Habit 8 and 9.
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Respect the meal and closing message.
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In Japan, people don't eat on the go.
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No phones, no scrolling, no multitasking.
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Meals are a moment of respect,
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almost like a mini ceremony.
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This mindfulness changes everything.
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When you eat slowly, intentionally,
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you reconnect with your body's signals body's signals, hunger, fullness, satisfaction.
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The Japanese secret isn't a mystery diet.
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It's a mindset, balance, rhythm, respect.
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Because when you stop fighting your body and start listening to it,
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staying slim stops being a battle and simply becomes who you are.
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Which of these Japanese habits would you try first?
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Share in the comments.
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And if you love understanding how culture shapes psychology?
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Hit subscribe for more videos like this.

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关于本课

在本节课中,您将学习如何通过观察和模仿日本人保持苗条的生活习惯,这些习惯包括早期培养味蕾、美食便利性等。通过模仿这些日常习惯,您将能够提高自己的英语口语能力,并更好地理解与饮食和健康相关的词汇和短语。此外,您也将掌握如何灵活运用这些表达方式来丰富您的语言能力,支持雅思口语练习。

关键词汇与短语

  • 饮食教育 (Food Education) - 指在学校或家庭中学习健康饮食的重要性。
  • 新鲜食材 (Fresh Ingredients) - 指未经加工、天然的食品。
  • 味蕾 (Taste Buds) - 我们用来品尝食物的感官。
  • 便利店 (Convenience Store) - 提供快速且健康食物选择的商店。
  • 习惯 (Habit) - 一种经过重复行为而形成的倾向。
  • 健康快餐 (Healthy Fast Food) - 提供营养丰富的快速餐点。
  • 新陈代谢 (Metabolism) - 身体转换食物为能量的过程。
  • 饥饿荷尔蒙 (Hunger Hormones) - 控制食欲的生物化学物质。

练习技巧

使用shadowing技巧来提升您的口语能力。您可以从本视频中选择片段进行模仿,特别注意日本文化中提到的饮食习惯。选择较短的句子,并在播放速度适中的情况下反复练习,确保您能够流利地表达。如需灵活运用语言,请尝试疯狂模仿视频中的语调和节奏,将自己的发音调整为自然流畅的状态。这样,您不仅能够提高发音,还能丰富自己的词汇量。同时,利用shadowspeak的打法,尝试在日常对话中加入这些新学的短语,或在您自身的shadowing site中进行录音,回听和纠正。通过这种方式,您能够有效地增强对健康饮食的理解,同时提升您的英语口语能力,助力您的雅思口语练习。

什么是跟读法?

跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。

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