跟读练习: Career Strategy For People With Too Many Interests - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

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You know what's funny?
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You know what's funny?
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Most people spend their whole lives trying to figure out what they're passionate about.
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They're searching, soul searching, taking personality tests, asking themselves, what's my purpose?
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And then there's you.
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You don't have that problem.
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Your problem is the complete opposite.
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You're interested in everything.
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You want to learn guitar and start a podcast and get into digital marketing and maybe learn to code.
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And you've been thinking about that photography course.
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And what about starting that blog you've been planning for two years?
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Yeah, that's the problem, isn't it?
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People call it being a multi-potentialite or a scanner or a renaissance person, and they make it sound cool and special.
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But let's be real for a second.
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Most of the time, it just feels like you're scattered, like you're standing at a buffet with a hundred dishes, and you're trying to eat everything at once, and you end up tasting nothing properly.
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I've been there.
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I've started so many things I was passionate about.
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I've got half-finished courses.
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I have personally tried machine learning, web development, graphic designing, e-commerce, digital marketing, and many failed YouTube channels.
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At one point, I was convinced I was just lazy or broken or something.
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But here's what I figured out, and this is probably going to save you years of frustration.
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You don't have a passion problem.
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You have a strategy problem, the real issue nobody talks about.
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See, the world is designed for specialists.
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The whole system, school, career, success stories.
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They're all built around people who pick one thing and go deep.
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Be a doctor.
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Be a lawyer.
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Be a software engineer.
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Pick your lane.
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Stay in it.
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Become the best.
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That works great if you're wired that way.
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But what if you're someone with multiple interests?
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The system makes you feel like you're doing it wrong.
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Like you need to just pick something and stick with it.
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And so you try.
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You pick something.
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Let's say graphic design.
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You go hard for three months.
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You're learning Photoshop, watching tutorials, doing practice projects.
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You're feeling good.
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Then you get curious about something else.
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Maybe it's video editing or writing or investing.
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And that new thing feels exciting and fresh and the graphic design starts feeling like a chore.
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So you switch and the cycle repeats.
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Now pay close attention to this though.
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The problem isn't that you have too many interests.
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The problem is you're treating them all like they're supposed to become your career.
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And that's the trap.
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You think every interest needs to turn into something big.
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Every hobby needs to be monetized.
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Every skill needs to become your identity.
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And when you can't commit to one thing 100%, you feel like a failure.
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But there's a different way to look at this.
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Alright, I will share the strategy.
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It's stupid simple, but it works.
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Step one, stop trying to pick one thing.
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I know, I know, everyone's telling you the opposite.
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Find your niche.
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Focus is everything.
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But listen, you've tried that, right?
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How'd that work out?
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You're fighting your nature.
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It's like telling a dog not to chase squirrels.
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You can train it, sure.
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But it's going against instinct.
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Instead, accept that you're someone with multiple interests.
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That's not a bug and think of it as a feature.
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The goal isn't to kill off your other interests.
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The goal is to organize them in a way that actually moves your life forward.
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Step two, separate your interests into three categories.
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Grab a piece of paper.
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Seriously, do this.
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List out all the things you're interested in or want to learn.
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Everything.
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Don't filter yourself.
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Now put them into three buckets.
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Bucket one, the moneymaker.
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This is the one skill or interest that has the most realistic potential to pay your bills in the next one to three years.
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Notice I didn't say your passion.
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I didn't say the thing you love most.
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I said the thing that can make money.
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This might be something you're already decent at.
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Maybe it's writing, coding, video editing, or sales or marketing.
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Pick the one that checks these boxes.
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You're already somewhat good at it.
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There's actual demand for it.
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You don't hate it.
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That's your anchor, the thing you're going to prioritize above everything else for the next year or two.
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Bucket two, the soul stuff.
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These are the things you do purely because they make you feel alive.
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Maybe it's painting.
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Maybe it's hiking or cooking or reading philosophy.
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What is important here is that you are not trying to monetize these.
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These are not side hustles.
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These are the things that keep you sane.
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These are your hobbies and hobbies are allowed to just be hobbies.
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I know the internet tells you to turn your passion into profit, but honestly, that's how you ruin the things you love.
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Let some things just be for you.
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Bucket three, the curiosity shelf.
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Everything else goes here.
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All those random interests you want to explore someday.
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Learning Japanese, getting into astronomy, studying stoicism, whatever.
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These stay on the shelf.
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You're not saying never, you're saying not now.
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And that's okay.
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They'll still be there when you have more time and mental space.
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Step three, go all in on bucket one.
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This is where most people with multiple interests mess up.
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They try to give equal attention to everything.
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They split their time 50-50-50.
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Yeah, I know the math doesn't work.
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That's exactly the problem.
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You can't build momentum that way.
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You can't get good at anything that way.
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So what I want you to do is for the next six to 12 months, your bucket one skill gets 80% of your productive energy, maybe more.
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That doesn't mean you work on 80% of your waking hours.
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It means that when you sit down to actually work on building your future, that's where your focus goes.
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Let's say you have two hours a day for productive work.
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Give 90 minutes to your moneymaker skill, take courses, do projects, build a portfolio, network with people in that field.
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Treat it like it matters because it does.
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This is the thing that's going to give you freedom.
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Once you're making decent money from this skill, whether it's freelancing, a job, or a small business, you buy yourself options.
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You buy yourself time to explore other things later.
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Step four, schedule your bucket to stuff like appointments.
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Now, our soul stuff, the things that make life worth living, you don't abandon those, but you also don't let them eat up all your productive time.
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Put them in your calendar, literally.
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Sunday morning journaling and Wednesday evening painting.
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Friday night reading.
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Treat these like non-negotiables, but also recognize what they are, their recovery.
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They're the things that keep you from burning out on your main focus.
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And you know what's the beautiful part?
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When you stop pressuring these activities to become something bigger, you actually enjoy them more.
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You read books because it feels good, not because you're trying to become some motivational speaker or guru, though they are not bad.
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Step 5, revisit and rotate.
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Here's where it gets interesting.
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You're not locked into this forever.
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This isn't a prison sentence.
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Once you've built some real momentum with your bucket one skill, once you're making money, once you've got some stability, you can reassess.
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Maybe in a year you decide to shift focus.
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Maybe your moneymaker becomes something you can do in less time and you pull something off the curiosity shelf into bucket one.
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Maybe you combine two interests in a way that creates something new.
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The point is you're not trying to do everything at once anymore.
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You're being strategic.
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You're building in sequence, not in chaos.
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So why this actually worked?
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Let me tell you what happens when you do this.
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First, you stop feeling guilty all the time.
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You stop beating yourself up for not focusing because you are focusing just on one main thing while keeping space for the rest.
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Second, you actually start getting good at something.
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When you give one skill 80% of your attention for six months, you make real progress.
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You go from interested in marketing to I can run Facebook ads that actually convert.
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the difference between dabbling and developing expertise.
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Third, you build confidence.
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Every little win in your main area gives you proof that you're not just a scattered mess.
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You're someone who can commit and deliver.
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That confidence bleeds into everything else.
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And fourth, this is the big one.
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You create options for yourself.
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Money gives you options.
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Skills give you options.
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Once you've got those, you can start playing with your other interests from a position of strength, not in desperation like, oh, that guru said there's more money in this or that field.
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Now listen closely because this is something no one tells you.
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I'm going to level with you.
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If you try to chase every interest equally, you're going to be 35 years old, still figuring things out, still jumping from thing to thing, still broke, still frustrated.
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I'm not saying that to be mean.
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I'm saying it because I've watched it happen.
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Hell, I almost let it happen to me.
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The people you admire who seem to do everything.
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The ones with multiple businesses and hobbies and skills, they didn't start that way.
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They built one thing first.
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They got good at one thing.
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They made money from one thing.
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Then they expanded.
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So now you're not behind or broken, but you do need to make a choice about what gets your focus right now.
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So here's what you're going to do after this video.
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Grab that piece of paper, make those three buckets.
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Be honest with yourself about what goes where.
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Pick your bucket one, The thing that's going to be your main focus for the next 6-12 months.
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Not forever, just for now.
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Then set up your week.
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Block out time for your moneymaker.
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Schedule your soul stuff.
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Let everything else rest on the shelf.
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And then, this is the hardest part, actually stick to it.
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Not forever, just for this week.
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Then next week.
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Then the week after that.
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You don't need to have it all figured out.
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You just need to stop trying to do everything at once.
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Your interests aren't going anywhere.
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They'll be there.
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But your time, energy, and that one shot at building something real, that's limited.
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So use it strategically.
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You got this...
📱

Shadowing English

现已推出移动版,立即下载!

5.0

背景与语境

在这一段精彩的对话中,演讲者提到了许多人在寻找自己职业方向上的困惑。与那些在追寻激情的人不同,有些人则面临一种相反的挑战:他们对各种事物都感兴趣。无论是想学吉他、开播客、研究数字营销,还是报名参加摄影课程,这些多元化的兴趣让他们感到困扰。演讲者用生动的比喻,将这种状态比作在自助餐上面前,试图一次性品尝所有菜品,却最终只尝出一口的无奈,使听众感同身受。

日常交流五大短语

  • “I'm interested in everything.”(我对所有事物都感兴趣。)
  • “I feel scattered.”(我感到散乱。)
  • “What's my purpose?”(我的目标是什么?)
  • “I have a strategy problem.”(我面临的是策略问题。)
  • “You’re treating them all like they’re supposed to become your career.”(你把所有兴趣都当作你的职业发展来对待。)

逐步模仿指导

想要通过观看此视频提升你的英语口语能力,以下是一个简明的模仿(shadowing)指导:

  1. 观看视频:首次观看时,专注于理解整体内容和演讲者的情感。
  2. 分段听取:将视频划分为几个小部分,逐段进行听取,特别注意演讲者的语调和停顿。
  3. 模仿发音:使用shadow speech的方法,尝试跟读演讲者的每句话,模仿其发音、语速和语调。这是提高你口语能力的重要步骤。
  4. 自我录音:将自己的模仿录音下来,回放时听听与原声之间的差距,这能帮助你更进一步地改进。
  5. 重复练习:反复练习同样的片段,直到你能够自如地说出这些句子。可以在这个shadowing site上进行当地的练习,帮助自己在雅思口语中表现更佳。

通过上述步骤,你将不仅能在看YouTube学英语的过程中提升语言能力,还能加深对内容的理解,并更好地融入多样的兴趣与职业规划中。

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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