跟读练习: I used to overthink everything, and this changed it. - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
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You're lying in bed, staring at the ceiling.
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You're lying in bed, staring at the ceiling.
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Your body is ready to sleep,
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but your brain, your mind is running a marathon.
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It's stuck replaying the conversation from three days ago,
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dissecting every word, every pause.
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Why did you say that?
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Did I sound like an idiot?
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Or maybe you're about to start something new,
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something you are actually excited about,
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but before you can even take the first step,
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your brain thinks about a hundred different the worst case scenario.
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You tell yourself you're just being thorough.
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You're just planning, preparing, problem solving.
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But what if that's a lie you're telling yourself?
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What if all this thinking isn't getting you to a better solution,
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but is actually keeping you from any solution at all?
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There's a thief that has been quietly robbing you blind.
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It doesn't take your wallet or your TV.
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It steals something so much valuable.
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It steals the joy that you could be feeling right now.
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It seals your ability to just move forward,
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to take a chance and to live the life that is waiting for you.
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This thief is overthinking.
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And today, we are not just going to talk about it.
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We are going to learn how to catch it,
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disarm it and take back your mental space for good.
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Also, I want to say thank you to this person who asked today's question.
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This video is actually started from that question.
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So let me read the comment first.
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The comment from our friend was,
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I have something I want to ask.
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How do you manage not to overthink too much about what's happening around you?
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Sometimes I make small mistakes in the way I communicate and I also tend to overthink everything around me.
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If you were in my position,
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what do you think you would do better or differently?
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Personally, I often write in a journal to a lot of self-reflection and try to turn inward,
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but I still find myself stuck in the same mental loop sometimes.
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Thank you so much.
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So let's talk about it and welcome back to this episode of This is Hazel.
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First of all, overthinking is not a personality trait.
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It's not who you are.
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It's just a learned mental habit,
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like repetitive program that feels productive but actually goes nowhere in psychology
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that breaks this overthinking process down into two types first rumination
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which is replaying the past and second worry which is imagining future threats
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and this fifth is very convincing because it tells you
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if you just think a little bit more you'll find a perfect answer.
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It disguises itself as preparation.
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It makes you believe that if you imagine every worst case scenario,
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you'll somehow avoid them.
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But that's not true.
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This habit turns simple decisions into overwhelming ones.
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It replays your mistakes over and over again.
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It fills your nights with noise when you're supposed to be resting or sleeping.
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And maybe the worst part is,
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It takes away your present.
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You can be sitting with your friends,
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but you're not really there.
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You're replaying something you said at work,
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worrying about something that hasn't even happened yet.
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Like your body is there, but your mind isn't.
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And over time, it drains your energy,
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increases your anxiety, and eventually leaves you with the feeling of too afraid to make a move,
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so you can't make the move.
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Okay, to stop this, we need to understand why it happens.
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Overthinking isn't your brain trying to sabotage you.
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It's actually trying to protect you.
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It's not totally a bad thing.
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Back then, being able to analyze threats,
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learn from the past, your mistakes,
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unprepared for the future was essential for survival.
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That part of your brain is actually very useful.
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You need to know what's coming and you need to know what to learn from the past, right?
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You need to know if something goes wrong or some things might be your threats.
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Today is different.
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Now your brain reacts to things like a text message,
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a deadline, or slightly awkward social moments.
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So in the end, how much you think,
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how much we worry, and how much time we spend on it,
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that's something we need to decide and regulate ourselves.
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Because this overthinking is actually a function,
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a capability of our mind, not just anxiety.
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So it's all about control.
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Your brain is trying to create a sense of control when things feel uncertain but instead it just keeps you stuck.
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But the good news is this is learned which means it can be unlearned.
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And trust me, I'm a huge control freak too.
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Honestly, I might not even be the best person to make this video but these things helped.
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Okay, so the goal for us isn't to eliminate the thoughts.
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I think it's impossible, I think.
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It's to change your relationship with them.
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Okay, the step one.
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Notice and label The first step is simply awareness You're not judging it,
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you're just observing it When you name it,
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you create the space between you and the thought You are not the thought,
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you are the one noticing it And that weakens its power And step two,
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schedule your worry Yes, set aside a specific time to worry About like 15-20 minutes a day During that time,
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let yourself think freely write things down, analyze them, feel everything.
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In the comment, this friend mentioned journaling and that actually helped me too.
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For me, I tend to think I need to solve the problem to move on.
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I need to have the solution to be okay with it.
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But before that, organizing my emotions really helps.
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Journaling doesn't always give me solutions,
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of course, which is like my feelings,
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but it gives me the space to understand what I'm feeling and why I'm feeling this.
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And when the time is up, you stop.
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When worries come up outside that time,
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you tell yourself, I'll think about it later.
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I know it's hard.
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It's not easy.
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But interestingly, after some time passes, the emotional intensity fades.
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Solutions come more naturally after that.
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Step three, take action.
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Overthinking is strongest when you're not taking action.
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So the solution is simply move.
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Whatever it is, do it for five minutes.
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This small action breaks the thinking loop and most of the time,
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those five minutes turn into more.
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If possible, take connection that moves you closer to solving the problem.
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If not, maybe just call someone who can help and
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if even that feels like too much just go outside
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and take a walk
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that counts too overthinking quietly steals your life the goal isn't
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to have no thoughts it's to become someone who can manage
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them to acknowledge them to notice them delay them act anyway
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and come back to the present that's enough don't try to do everything at once just pick one thing
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and let me know in the comments which steps stood out to you
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and if you have your own way
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or a better way of managing your mind of course i'd love to hear
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that too um it was nice to talk to you i talked to you
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but yeah see you next time and bye
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You're going
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to Did it get hurt whatsoever?
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We can make it better Tell me,
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boy, now wouldn't that be sweet?
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背景与背景
在这段视频中,讲者探讨了一个许多人面临的共同问题——过度思考。很多时候,我们躺在床上,思绪却无法平静,总是回忆起过去的对话,或者担心未来的种种可能性。这种心理状态并不是与生俱来的,而是一种因环境和习惯而形成的思维模式。通过这个视频,讲者希望帮助大家识别并克服这种过度思考的习惯,从而更好地享受生活的每一刻。
日常交流中的五个关键短语
- “我总是在想太多。” - 认识到过度思考是一个常见问题。
- “这是我的反思过程。” - 强调自我反思的重要性。
- “我需要专注于现在。” - 提醒我们活在当下。
- “担心无济于事。” - 指出过度担忧无法带来解决方案。
- “采取行动是关键。” - 鼓励实践和行动取代思考。
逐步影子跟读指南
为了有效地练习英语口语,利用影子跟读(shadowspeaks)的方法非常有用。以下是一个简单的步骤指南,帮助你克服视频中的过度思考示例。
- 准备工作:观看视频并仔细倾听讲者的语气和节奏,用心感受他们的情感。
- 选择短语:从视频中挑选出五个你认为有用的短语,确保它们适用于日常交流。
- 跟读练习:重复讲者的话,尝试模仿他们的发音和语调。每次播放视频时,暂停并跟读那一个句子。
- 自我录音:将自己跟读的声音录下来,回放并与讲者的声音进行比较,找出差异。
- 日常应用:在日常生活中尝试使用这些短语,通过实际交流来巩固学习。
通过这样的影子跟读练习,你可以有效提升英语口语能力,克服过度思考的困扰,逐步建立自信,迈向更流畅的交流。
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。
