跟读练习: Being “the Strong One” Gets Exhausting | B2 English Shadowing - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
B2
Being the strong one often sounds like a compliment.
168 句
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Being the strong one often sounds like a compliment.
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People say it with respect, sometimes even with admiration.
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They see someone who does not break easily,
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who handles pressure calmly, who shows up for others again and again without complaining.
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From the outside, it looks like power,
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like stability, like emotional maturity.
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But what people do not always see is the quiet cost behind that role.
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Over time, being the strong one can become deeply exhausting,
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not because strength itself is a problem,
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but because of the expectations,
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the silence, and the emotional weight that come with it.
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At first, this role usually does not feel like a burden.
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It often begins naturally.
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Maybe you were the older sibling who had to be responsible.
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Maybe you were the friend who listened better than others.
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Maybe you learned early that staying calm and reliable made life easier for everyone around you.
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People start depending on you,
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and slowly, without even noticing,
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you become the person others turn to when things fall apart.
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In many ways, it feels meaningful.
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You feel needed.
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You feel trusted, and for a while, that feels good.
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However, the problem begins when this identity becomes fixed.
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When people always see you as the strong one,
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they also begin to assume that you do not need support.
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They assume that you are always okay,
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even when you are not.
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They stop asking how you feel,
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not because they do not care,
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but because they believe you can handle everything on your own.
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And this is where the emotional imbalance starts to grow.
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You give more than you receive,
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not intentionally, but gradually and over time, that imbalance becomes heavy.
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One of the most exhausting parts of being the strong one is the pressure to maintain that image.
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When people rely on you to be calm,
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to be stable, to be the solution,
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it becomes difficult to show vulnerability.
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You may start to feel like you are not allowed to break down,
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not allowed to be confused,
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not allowed to feel lost.
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Even when you are struggling inside,
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you tell yourself to stay strong because that is who you are supposed to be.
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And the longer you do this,
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the more disconnected you become from your own emotions.
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This does not mean that strong people do not feel pain.
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In fact, they often feel it deeply.
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The difference is that they have learned to hide it well.
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They smile when they are tired.
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They give advice when they themselves are unsure.
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They support others while quietly carrying their own emotional weight.
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And while this may look impressive from the outside,
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it creates a silent loneliness that is hard to explain.
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There is also a subtle kind of fear that comes with this role.
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It is the fear of disappointing others.
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When people see you as strong,
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they build expectations around that image.
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You become the reliable one,
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the stable one, the one who will always figure things out.
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And once those expectations are in place,
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it becomes harder to step out of them.
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You may worry that if you show weakness,
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people will see you differently.
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You may worry that you will lose the respect or trust you have built.
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So instead of asking for help, you keep everything inside.
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Over time, this emotional suppression can become dangerous.
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Not in a dramatic way,
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but in a slow, quiet way.
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Feelings that are not expressed do not disappear.
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They build up.
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Stress becomes constant.
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Fatigue becomes normal.
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You start to feel emotionally drained,
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even if your life looks fine from the outside.
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And sometimes,
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you do not even realize how tired you are until you
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reach a point where you simply cannot keep going in the same way.
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Another important aspect is that being the strong one can affect your relationships.
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When you are always the one who supports others, the dynamic becomes one-sided.
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People come to you with their problems,
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but they may not think to ask about yours.
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Not because they do not care,
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but because they're used to seeing you in a certain role.
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And if you never express your own needs,
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they may never realize that something is missing.
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This creates a quiet emotional gap.
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You are surrounded by people,
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but you may not feel truly understood.
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You listen to others deeply,
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but you are not always heard in the same way.
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And over time, this can lead to a sense of isolation.
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You may begin to feel like no one really knows what you're going through
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because you have never shown that side of yourself.
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There is also a deeper psychological layer to this.
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Many people who take on the role of the strong one develop a strong sense of responsibility for others.
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They feel like they have to fix things to help to be available.
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Saying no becomes difficult.
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Setting boundaries feels uncomfortable.
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And as a result, they often take on more than they can handle.
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They carry not only their own emotions,
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but also the emotions of others.
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At some point, this becomes unsustainable.
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Human beings are not designed to carry everything alone.
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Strength does not mean being able to handle everything without support.
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True strength includes knowing when to rest,
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when to ask for help,
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and when to admit that something is too much.
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But for someone who has always been the strong one,
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learning this can feel unfamiliar, even uncomfortable.
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One of the most important realizations is that strength and vulnerability are not opposites.
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In fact, they are deeply connected.
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Being able to say, I am not okay, requires courage.
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Being able to ask for help requires trust.
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And allowing yourself to be seen in your weaker moments does not make you less strong.
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It makes you more human,
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more balanced, and ultimately more resilient.
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Letting go of the need to always be strong is not easy.
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It often requires unlearning patterns that have been built over many years.
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It may involve uncomfortable conversations where you express needs that you have never shared before.
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It may involve setting boundaries,
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even if it feels unfamiliar.
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And it may involve facing emotions that you have ignored for a long time.
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But this process is necessary because constantly being the strong one without any emotional support is not sustainable.
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It leads to burnout, to emotional exhaustion,
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and to a quiet loss of connection with yourself.
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And no matter how capable you are,
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you deserve to be supported too.
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It is also important to understand that people cannot meet needs that they do not know exist.
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If you always appear strong,
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others will assume that you do not need help.
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This is why communication is so important.
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Opening up, even in small ways,
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can slowly change the dynamic.
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It allows others to see you more fully,
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not just as the strong one,
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but as a person with real emotions and real needs.
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In healthy relationships, support should go both ways.
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It should not be one person always giving and another always receiving.
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When you allow yourself to be supported,
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you create space for deeper, more balanced connections.
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You give others the opportunity to care for you in the same way that you care for them.
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There is also a certain freedom that comes with stepping out of this role.
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When you no longer feel the need to always appear strong,
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you can be more honest with yourself.
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You can acknowledge your limits.
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You can rest without guilt.
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You can experience your emotions without trying to control or hide them all the time.
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And in doing so, you build a more authentic sense of strength,
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one that is not based on pressure,
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but on self-awareness and balance.
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Being the strong one is not something you need to completely reject.
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Strength is valuable.
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It helps you face challenges,
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support others, and move forward in difficult times.
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But it should not come at the cost of your own well-being.
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Strength should include flexibility, honesty,
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and the ability to receive support, not just give it.
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At the end of day the goal is not to stop
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being strong the goal is to redefine what strength means it
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is not about carrying everything alone it is about knowing
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that you do not have to it is about understanding
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that asking for help does not make you weak it makes you real and perhaps the most important truth is this.
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You do not have to earn rest,
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care, or understanding by being strong all the time.
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You deserve those things simply because you are human.
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Even the strongest people need support.
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Even the most stable person has moments of doubt.
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And allowing yourself to experience those moments does not take away your strength.
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It completes it.
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关于本课
在这一课中,您将学习如何在面对压力和期待时保持情感的稳定。我们会讨论那些被看作“强者”的人的心理负担,以及他们如何在不知不觉中承担过多的责任。通过练习您将获得有关如何处理这些情感的可用词汇,并提升您的英语口语练习能力,帮助您能够在表达自己的感受时更加自信。
关键词汇与短语
- 强者 (the strong one)
- 责任 (responsibility)
- 情感成熟 (emotional maturity)
- 期望 (expectations)
- 脆弱的 (vulnerability)
- 情感负担 (emotional weight)
- 支持 (support)
- 倾诉 (to confide)
练习建议
在进行shadowspeak和shadow speech练习时,您可能会发现这一课的内容涉及较深的情感主题。因此,有几个具体的建议可以帮助您更好地掌握这一课的内容:
- 注意视频的语速,试着在较慢的节奏下跟读。这样可以帮助您更好地理解每个词汇的发音和使用场景。
- 在影子练习时,尝试使用不同的语调来表达不同的情感。例如,当谈到“强者”的责任感时,使用较坚定的语气,而讨论脆弱时则可尝试较柔和的语调。
- 重复某些片段多次,直到您能够流利地表达出来。shadowspeaks的关键在于反复练习,这样有助于您在真实场合中更自信地使用。
- 将这些关键词汇应用到您的日常对话中,帮助您在与他人交流时更自然地表达情感体验。
在shadow speak的过程中,体会这些情感背后的深意,不仅能提高您的语言能力,也能帮助您更好地理解自己和他人。
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。
