跟读练习: If you think you're broke because you're lazy or stupid, watch this - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
B2
You work hard.
352 句
如果句子过短或过长,请点击 Edit 进行调整。
1
You work hard.
2
YouTube vlogging is just so so hard.
3
You're not stupid.
4
The gap between you and your goal is simply work and it's hustle.
5
So why are you still broke?
6
In today's video I'm gonna tell you something
7
that is either gonna make you a lot of money or seriously piss you off and honestly it's probably gonna do both.
8
You see I'm gonna walk you through the five broken beliefs
9
that quietly keep people stuck for years even without them realizing it
10
and chances are you have at least one of them right now.
11
Because most of you watching this aren't broke because you're lazy.
12
And you're definitely not broke because you're stupid.
13
You are broke because of what you believe about money.
14
Look, I don't know how much you know about cars.
15
Maybe you're not as much of a car geek as I am.
16
But every single high performance car has something called an ECU.
17
And that stands for Electronic Control Unit.
18
It's pretty much the brain of the car.
19
It decides how much power gets released,
20
how hard the machine pushes.
21
Look, I have cars in my garage that are genuinely dangerous.
22
But if someone went in and tweaked that ECU,
23
these cars would go into limp mode.
24
And in that moment, all of that power,
25
all of that engineering locked away,
26
not because anything's broken, but because the system thinks it needs to protect itself from something that it doesn't trust yet.
27
And your brain works exactly the same way.
28
You see, most successful people aren't sitting there with some magical IQ that you don't have.
29
Okay.
30
I've met a lot of rich people,
31
some incredibly smart, but a lot of them surprisingly average
32
and a few that honestly genuinely make you question how they even got there in the first place.
33
But what they all have in common is they think about money completely differently than regular people.
34
And over time, I started to realize that building wealth isn't really an intelligence game.
35
It's more of a game of beliefs,
36
the beliefs you have around money,
37
around risk, around opportunity, and even yourself.
38
And your belief system is your ECU.
39
The problem is that most of you watching this are running terrible settings.
40
You are basically sitting in limp mode without even realizing it.
41
And I'm going to fix that for you today while we go on this little night drive.
42
So with that being said, let's get into it.
43
Now, the first broken belief is probably responsible for killing more potential than anything else in this video.
44
And what makes it dangerous is that it actually feels productive in the moment.
45
So let's see if you recognize yourself here.
46
You want to start a business and immediately your brain starts sprinting 10 steps ahead.
47
Well, what if I don't understand taxes?
48
What if I need employees?
49
What if I can't manage people?
50
What if it scales too quickly?
51
What if I fail?
52
My friend, you haven't even made your first dollar yet.
53
Yet you're sitting here trying to solve problems that don't even exist.
54
And while you're busy creating all these imaginary scenarios in your head,
55
the one thing that would actually move your life forward never gets done.
56
And I've noticed something very funny over the years because people assume uncertainty disappears once you start making money.
57
They think that there's some magical point along the journey where you wake up and you suddenly think,
58
right, I finally understand this whole business thing now.
59
That never happens.
60
That point never comes.
61
Let me tell you from personal experience.
62
When I was making nothing,
63
I had no clue what I was doing.
64
At $10,000 a month, no clue.
65
At $100,000 a month, same thing.
66
At a million dollars a month,
67
honestly, I still felt the same way.
68
The uncertainty never really goes away.
69
You just become more comfortable operating without having to have every single answer
70
and eventually you realize something that most of the things you spend months worrying about never actually ended up happening.
71
And the few things that did actually end up happening,
72
well, you figured them out.
73
OK, not because you were prepared,
74
but because reality forced you to become prepared.
75
Nobody learns how to manage a team before they have one.
76
Nobody learns about taxes before making money.
77
No one knows exactly what they're doing before they begin.
78
You solve problems when those problems become real.
79
So if you can take away one thing from this,
80
let it be this.
81
Stop trying to solve for level 10 while you are still at level one.
82
And that brings me to the second broken belief.
83
And this one, actually, now that I think about it,
84
might even be more dangerous than the first one because it's got nothing to do with action at all.
85
It's got to do about how you fundamentally think about money in of itself.
86
You see, this broken belief,
87
I wish someone had explained to me earlier in life.
88
Most people have a really strange relationship with money.
89
And I don't mean they spend too much or they save too little.
90
I mean, they attach emotions to it.
91
They make every decision around it worse.
92
Look, we all grew up hearing things like money changes people.
93
Rich people are greedy.
94
More money, more problems.
95
And after hearing stuff like that for years,
96
you don't even realize it.
97
But eventually, you start attaching meaning to money itself.
98
You start treating it like it's good or bad,
99
like it has some sort of personality.
100
It doesn't.
101
Okay, money is infrastructure.
102
It's just a tool.
103
That's it.
104
Look, let me explain it like this.
105
Think about electricity for a second.
106
You don't have an emotional relationship with electricity. Do you?
107
You don't sit there staring at a light switch and go,
108
wow, electricity is amazing.
109
Yes, you understand it.
110
Yes, you use it.
111
Yes, it serves a purpose.
112
And that relationship you have with electricity is the same way money should work.
113
Okay.
114
Look, I've noticed something very interesting over the years.
115
The people who build serious wealth usually aren't the people obsessing over money every five minutes.
116
I know that sounds funny to hear.
117
It's not the people refreshing their bank account 10 times a day.
118
They are not emotionally attached to every number moving up or down because when you are emotionally attached to money,
119
you start making emotional decisions and emotional decisions are never a good thing.
120
Look, you start to panic when things go down.
121
You become overconfident when things go up.
122
You spend when you should save.
123
You save when you should invest.
124
And usually those decisions end up costing you more than whatever number was sitting in your bank account.
125
Look, I get it.
126
I remember in the earlier stages of my career,
127
I remember checking my bank account constantly.
128
Every increase felt amazing.
129
Every drop felt painful.
130
But eventually I started to realize that the problem was never the number itself.
131
It was the meaning that I was attaching to the number.
132
So here's what I want you to do.
133
I want you to open up your banking app right now.
134
I want you to look at your balance and just pay attention to what you feel.
135
Is it stress?
136
Is it relief?
137
Is it excitement?
138
Is it anxiety?
139
Whatever it is, label it, okay?
140
Write it down because that reaction you just had tells you more than you think.
141
You cannot fix a relationship you have not diagnosed properly.
142
And that actually brings me to the third broken belief.
143
And this one's quite scary because a lot of what you think is you
144
is really just beliefs and patterns that you have picked up over the years.
145
Look, let me ask you this.
146
If no one on earth could see your life,
147
no Instagram, no friends, no strangers,
148
no one to impress, would you still buy the same things?
149
The same apartment, the same watch,
150
the same car, the same clothes?
151
Because here's something that I've noticed whilst living in a lot of these large metropolitan cities.
152
London, Dubai, New York.
153
A lot of financial decisions people make aren't actually financial decisions.
154
They're social decisions.
155
People tell themselves they're buying something because they deserve it.
156
Okay.
157
Or because it will motivate them or because they finally want to enjoy life.
158
But underneath it, a lot of times it's actually something else.
159
Okay.
160
They're just performing.
161
And it's unfortunate because the audience that they're performing to cares a lot less than they think they do.
162
Okay.
163
Now, before someone clips this up and says,
164
oh, Eman says, don't buy nice things while I'm riding around in a Rolls Royce.
165
Look, I'm not saying don't buy nice things.
166
I like nice things.
167
I like fast cars.
168
I like nice watches.
169
I like traveling lavishly.
170
I don't think there's anything noble and pretending as if money doesn't matter.
171
But there is a huge,
172
huge difference between buying something because it genuinely improves your life
173
or because you genuinely love it compared to buying something
174
because you want to signal status or before you prioritize the other things in life that matter.
175
Look, let's not even talk about property,
176
let alone property for myself.
177
I bought my mother a $4 million house cash,
178
no loan, no mortgage, nothing cash before I bought my first car.
179
So then yeah, later on in my career,
180
if I want to buy nice things or buy nice toys, good.
181
I deserve it.
182
And you deserve it too.
183
But just make sure A,
184
it's for you and B,
185
make sure it's done appropriately.
186
And at the right time in your career,
187
you need to understand the place it comes from.
188
Okay.
189
Those are two very different ways to go about your purchases.
190
Okay.
191
One comes from enjoyment or celebration.
192
And the one comes from insecurity
193
and insecurity gets expensive very fast i can tell you
194
that as i said i made tens of millions of dollars
195
before i bought my first car now honestly looking back i
196
actually wish i'd bought a car earlier i think like i actually think
197
that would have been good for me
198
and i probably should have treated myself earlier
199
but maybe the reason i didn't was honestly i was just genuinely loving building
200
so much okay i enjoyed building i enjoyed seeing the numbers go up okay
201
and i think that's simply because when your motivation becomes internal okay you stop needing these external reminders that you're successful.
202
And that's what a lot of people miss.
203
Okay.
204
If you're making your first $100,000,
205
your biggest problem shouldn't be whether you should upgrade your car or not.
206
Your biggest problems are a lot more boring.
207
Okay.
208
Renewing that client, hiring that first employee,
209
launching a new marketing funnel.
210
Trust me, one bad month can still hurt you.
211
Okay.
212
One client leaving can still hurt you.
213
Those are real problems, not trying to impress some people online.
214
Okay.
215
So here's what I want you to do.
216
I want you to open your banking app again and go through your last month's spending.
217
Find one purchase and just ask yourself honestly,
218
would I have still bought this if no one on earth could have seen it?
219
Because that's usually where the truth is hiding.
220
Okay, you don't need to cancel everything,
221
but name it, call it out,
222
write it down, because the moment you can label the pattern,
223
you are already in the process of breaking it.
224
And that brings me to the fourth broken belief.
225
And this one gets interesting because on the surface, it actually looks responsible.
226
It's the belief that you tell your grandma over dinner and she immediately nods and says,
227
good, better safe than sorry.
228
And I promise there's an actual point I'm trying to make.
229
So let me ask you this.
230
How many decisions in your life right now are being made because you're trying to avoid losing rather than trying to win?
231
Think about it.
232
Okay.
233
People stay in jobs they hate because it feels safe,
234
because it comes with health insurance,
235
because their parents told them that stability matters.
236
Because look, I already spent four years on getting a degree and then they don't start their own thing because,
237
well, you know, what if it doesn't work out?
238
They don't post content because they're scared that the people they went to school with might judge them.
239
Oh, well, they don't move countries.
240
They don't ask that girl out.
241
They don't take risks, not because they can,
242
but because they are so busy playing defense all the time.
243
And look, some defense is good.
244
You should wear a seatbelt.
245
You should have savings.
246
You shouldn't put your net worth into some random crypto coin that some guy on Twitter told you about.
247
Okay, look, I'm not saying be reckless,
248
but I did realize something quite early on.
249
No one builds an extraordinary life by only trying not to lose.
250
Okay, it doesn't work because when you're constantly playing defense,
251
your brain starts optimizing for comfort instead of opportunity.
252
You stop asking what's the upside and you start asking what's the least painful option?
253
Those are very different questions.
254
Look, when I moved my base to Dubai six years ago,
255
people thought I was insane.
256
When I started YouTube 11 years ago,
257
people thought I was insane.
258
When I dropped out of school at the age of 17,
259
people thought I was insane.
260
If I had spent my entire life trying to remove all the risks before making a move,
261
I would probably still be sat twiddling my thumbs waiting for permission.
262
The people you look up to, they're not fearless, okay?
263
I have met more than enough successful people to tell you that.
264
These people still feel uncertainty.
265
They still doubt themselves.
266
They still get anxious.
267
The difference is they don't allow that fear to make the final decision because at some point,
268
you realize something.
269
Playing defense only protects what you already have.
270
Playing offense is what actually changes your life.
271
And the worst part is that people spend their entire lives protecting a life that they don't even like.
272
And that brings us onto the fifth and final belief.
273
And I wanted to end on this one because out of everything that we've covered today,
274
this is the one that's probably cost people the most.
275
And look, we all know how the saying goes, time is money.
276
Look, I need you to be really honest with yourself for a second.
277
How many times in the last year have you convinced yourself
278
that But this next thing was going to be the thing to finally change your life.
279
The new business model you saw on YouTube,
280
that new AI tool that someone on TikTok said was replacing their entire company.
281
The new guy on Twitter posting a screenshot saying he made $83,000 in 14 days doing something that you've never heard of before.
282
Look every few weeks, it's something different.
283
And every time you see it,
284
your brain lights up like it's a casino machine.
285
This is it.
286
This is what I've been missing.
287
Everything changes now.
288
So you start learning more about it.
289
You update your Instagram bio.
290
You tell three of your friends that you're starting something new.
291
And then a week later you quit.
292
And by the way, it's not because you actually gave effort and it didn't work out.
293
It's because the excitement wore off and the reality showed up because here's the truth that no one wants to hear.
294
Making money honestly is painfully, painfully repetitive.
295
It's boring.
296
Okay.
297
It's answering the same emails,
298
fixing the same problems, having the same conversations,
299
doing the same thing over and over again,
300
long after the dopamine disappears.
301
Look, when I first started my agency,
302
I was doing outreach sitting in school,
303
literally sitting in class with my laptop open while my teacher was talking.
304
During lunch, I wasn't hanging out with anyone.
305
OK, I would sit there reading business books or doing more outreach.
306
Then I'd get home and edit videos for my agency clients.
307
It took me hours and hours and hours.
308
OK, no flashy TikTok montages,
309
no fancy Lamborghini in my car,
310
no watch me make 100K in seven days just doing the same boring shit over
311
and over again for months before anything meaningful happened.
312
And that's what most people miss.
313
They think they have a business model problem.
314
Most of the time they don't.
315
They have an attention problem
316
because the person who sticks to one proven thing for five years will absolutely destroy the person who switches every six months,
317
every single time.
318
And here's the thing.
319
It's not because they're smarter,
320
not because they found some sort of magical opportunity,
321
but because eventually repetition turns into skill and skill eventually starts looking like talent from the outside.
322
So look, before you click off this video,
323
I want you to promise me one thing.
324
Figure out which one of these five beliefs is costing you the most right now.
325
Not all five, just one.
326
Because most people watch a video like this and think, that was interesting.
327
And then they do absolutely nothing differently tomorrow.
328
Please do not do that.
329
Pick the one that hits you the hardest
330
and pay attention to it for the next week because once you become aware of these things,
331
you start noticing them everywhere.
332
You notice yourself trying to solve problems that don't exist yet.
333
You notice yourself chasing the next shiny opportunity.
334
You notice yourself making decisions that don't even make sense.
335
And eventually you realize something.
336
You never really had a capability problem.
337
You had a settings problem.
338
That ECU example I gave you, that's you.
339
Okay, you were just running on terrible software.
340
Now, look, I know today's video leaned very heavy into mindset
341
and psychology and a lot less into like actual practical money-making advice.
342
So I know you're sat there thinking, all right, cool.
343
Well, how do I actually start this?
344
Well, I strongly suggest you go check the link in the description.
345
there's a free YouTube video I created earlier in the year.
346
It's probably my most popular video this year
347
and it breaks down a bunch of different business models
348
and it compares the pros and cons to each
349
and it will show you based on your personality type which one makes sense for you to move forward with.
350
I strongly recommend you go check out that YouTube video after this.
351
It should point you in the right direction and with
352
that being said as always I'm watching from afar and I'm rooting for you.
下载应用
AI 为你说出的每个句子打分
TRENDING
热门
本节课介绍
在本节课中,您将通过观看视频“如果你认为你因懒惰或愚蠢而破产,请观看此视频”来练习您的英语口语。该视频讲述了如何打破限制性信念,以实现财务成功。通过模仿视频中的讲述者,您将有机会改善您的听力和发音,同时理解与金钱有关的重要概念。此课程非常适合希望提高英语发音并增强自信心的学习者。
关键词汇与短语
- 工作努力 (Work hard)
- 迷失在信念中 (Stuck in beliefs)
- 电子控制单元 (ECU) (Electronic Control Unit)
- 信念系统 (Belief system)
- 财务成功 (Financial success)
- 风险 (Risk)
- 机会 (Opportunity)
- 阴影说话 (shadow speak) (Shadow speak)
练习建议
为了更有效地使用视频提高您的英语发音和口语能力,我们建议你进行以下练习:
- 尝试shadow speaks,也就是跟读视频中的讲述者。注意他们的语速和音调,尽量模仿他们的语气和表情。
- 在观看时,停下来重复每个短语或句子,确保您能够流利地表达出来,这将有助于提升您的口语流利度。
- 关注发音的细节,特别是在快速转换的短语中,比如“工作努力”和“迷失在信念中”。反复练习这些短语,注意音节的重音。
- 利用慢速播放功能,帮助您更好地理解讲话者的语调和节奏。提高您的发音准度和听力理解能力会让您的英语水平更进一步。
通过观看和模仿,您将能够在实践中更好地掌握这些技巧,提升您的英语能力。让我们一起努力,看YouTube学英语,迈向一个更流利的您!
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。
