跟读练习: Sitting All Day Is Killing You — Here’s What to Do About It | Manoush Zomorodi | TED - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
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Do you ever close your laptop at the end of a long day and feel like you have just enough energy to crawl over to the couch to scroll on your phone or watch a show?
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Do you ever close your laptop at the end of a long day and feel like you have just enough energy to crawl over to the couch to scroll on your phone or watch a show?
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Or maybe both at the same time?
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Yeah. During the pandemic, that was all I wanted to do and I couldn't understand why.
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I was safe, I was healthy, why didn't I want to close my laptop and go dance around the living room?
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Where did all my energy go?
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I'm a journalist.
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My specialty for the last 10 years has been trying to understand how our tech habits change us as people, and so I decided I was going to find out why sitting in front of a screen makes us feel so exhausted.
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Because we have all heard about the mental effects, right?
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But what about our physical health?
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Well, as I quickly learned, looking at screens has not only reshaped our days, it is reshaping our bodies.
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According to researchers at Johns Hopkins, every day, the average 19-year-old moves about as much as the average 60-year-old.
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Over the last 20 years, rates of type 2 diabetes in young people have doubled.
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Three in four American adults has a chronic illness.
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Many of those are preventable.
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At least one chronic illness.
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And the WHO says that this is a global problem.
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They predict that by the end of the decade, which is not that far away, this lifestyle will likely lead to 500 million new cases of preventable conditions like heart disease, obesity and diabetes, costing governments 27 billion dollars a year.
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Typing, swiping, scrolling, sitting.
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This is the rhythm of our modern life.
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But I don't know about you, I can't throw away my phone, right?
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Like, I can't go off the grid.
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So how can we stay connected without slowly destroying our health?
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That was the question running through my mind when I came across this guy.
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Keith Diaz is a physiologist at Columbia University Medical Center, and he has spent his entire career trying to figure out how little can we get away with moving so that sitting doesn't kill us, basically.
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And in 2022, he published a small study that gives us a great idea.
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He found that just five minutes of gentle movement every 30 minutes had dramatic effects.
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It slashed blood sugar and blood pressure.
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In another study, he found that inactive people who traded 30 minutes of sitting for 30 minutes of movement every day could lower their risk of a premature death by 18 percent.
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And so maybe you're like, "Yeah, I worked out this morning, so I'm good." Or maybe you're like, "Phew, I'm so glad I got that standing desk." I am so sorry, but no.
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(Laughter) If you sit or stand for the majority of your waking hours, your health is in jeopardy too.
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"Don't stop working out," Keith told me, but he said, what you have to do is break up these long stretches of sedentary screen time.
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When he told me this, I was like, really?
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Like, how big a difference can these movement breaks make for someone who is, you know, relatively healthy?
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I decided I would join the study.
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So one day I went to his lab and I sat and worked on my laptop for eight hours straight.
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The next day I took those movement breaks every half hour or so.
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They checked all my vital signs and the results were actually quite extraordinary.
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My glucose was cut nearly in half.
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My blood pressure was down by five points, and my mood was so much better.
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The science was clear, but like, what did it matter if no one could actually do these movement breaks?
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Like it was easy in the lab.
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Somebody tapped me on the shoulder and led me over to the treadmill.
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So we decided to ask people, out in the world, out in real life, to see if they could do it.
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We, our teams at NPR and Columbia, combined forces to create a podcast and a global clinical trial called the Body Electric study.
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And over 20,000 people signed up.
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We had to cap it at 20,000 people, and they could choose a movement dose, so they could move five minutes every half hour, five minutes every hour, or every two hours.
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They could dance around the house, they could pace on calls, they could walk the dog, they could take out the trash, it didn't matter.
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They just had to break it up, break up those long periods of sitting.
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And you guys, I was so excited.
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I was like, we are going to launch a movement for movement.
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Yeah, I've got a way with words.
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(Laughter) But I am not going to lie, those first few days were so tough.
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It takes a lot of intention and a little rebellion to upend a world that is quite literally built around screens and chairs.
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But when people figured it out, when they started getting those breaks into their lives, they started having breakthroughs.
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They told us that they felt less pain.
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They told us that they had more energy.
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They said that they felt more positive about life in general.
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In the end, of the people who started taking movement breaks, 80 percent managed to stick with them for two solid weeks.
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And yes, this was a self-reported study with a lot of very motivated participants.
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Hello public radio.
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But still, the data showed that the more often they took breaks, the better they felt.
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People who went outside got an extra boost.
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Some people lost a few of those stubborn pounds, and most people actually liked taking the breaks.
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But the biggest surprise to me was that the breaks did not hurt their productivity.
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People said they got back to their desks and they were able to focus, and they felt that the work they did was actually of better quality.
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So this research is going through the scientific process right now.
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But Keith explained to me some of the reasons why these gentle breaks can have such an outsized impact.
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So when we sit, our arteries get bent at our hips and our knees, kind of like a kinked vacuum hose.
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Blood starts pooling in our legs and our muscles stop contracting.
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But leg muscles need to move, be stimulated, in order to clear out fat and sugar and reduce blood pressure.
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If they don't, over months and over years, that's when those chronic conditions can start to creep in.
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And then there is our posture.
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Sitting compresses the diaphragm.
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We start taking shallow breaths.
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Shallow breaths lead to less oxygen going into our blood and up to our brain.
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Less oxygen in our brain means we get tired and lose focus.
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Feel free to take a deep breath right now if you want to.
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And that is where screens come into the picture.
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So screens can mess with something called interoception.
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Interoception is the body's way of telling you what it needs.
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It needs a snack, it needs to go to the bathroom, it needs to move.
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The more we focus on screens, the less we listen to the signals that our body is sending us.
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Your body could be begging for a break, but what do you do?
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You keep scrolling past the anxiety, scrolling past the exhaustion.
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That eventually can lead to burnout, yes.
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And again, those chronic conditions.
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So how can you start making a change in feeling better?
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Well, first, think about your most sedentary stretches of time and then make yourself a mantra.
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So like if you are a student, you could say, "I'll take an extra lap around the quad before class instead of checking TikTok, so I get to class with more oxygen in my brain and I can actually focus." Or if you work from home, you could decide that on long Zoom calls, "I will march in place in order to manage my glucose and avoid the post-meeting crash." If you're a parent, you could say "I will take a lap around the soccer field once so that I have enough energy to get through the dinnertime chaos." You can have a dance party while you microwave your leftovers.
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You can walk the concourse instead of sitting and waiting for your flight.
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A mix of all these habits will keep your muscles firing and your mood steadier.
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My favorite story came from a 43-year-old woman named Dana, who works in HR.
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So Dana was a type-2 diabetic with all kinds of health issues.
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Her doctor told her she needed to take a long, brisk walk every morning, and she was doing this, but her numbers just were not changing.
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So with her doctor's permission, she decided to join the study.
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She started fitting in movement breaks between all of her meetings, and within a couple of weeks, she told me her blood pressure dropped by 40 points, her cholesterol went down and her doctor told her she could start tapering her insulin.
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She's actually off all of her meds today.
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Yay, Dana, we love you, Dana.
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(Applause) So we know that too much time online is not great for our mental health.
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But it's not just in our heads, it's in our bodies.
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We need movement to be as much a part of our lives as screens are.
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We need our schools, our neighborhoods, our workplaces to give us time and space just to move.
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You can help push this reset forward.
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Take movement breaks.
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And when people look at you like you're weird, just tell them why you're doing it.
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Because you just want to feel a little better.
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Get them to put down their phone and join you.
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Start soon, start small.
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Should we start now?
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Yeah, can we have some music?
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You could do -- you could do the march.
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You could do the shuffle.
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Little hands in the air, if you can't get up.
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Feel it. You're alive.
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You're alive.
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Love you guys.
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(Cheers and applause)
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关于本课
本课的主要目的是帮助学习者理解在屏幕前久坐对身体健康的影响,并通过不同的运动方式来提高身体活动。学习者将通过收听视频中的讲话练习口语及听力,增加词汇量,并且能够用英语表达自己对健康生活方式的看法。此视频为您提供了宝贵的英语学习材料,适合那些希望通过 看YouTube学英语 来提升自己语言能力的学习者。
关键词汇与短语
- 屏幕(screen)
- 久坐(sedentary)
- 健康(health)
- 运动(movement)
- 糖尿病(diabetes)
- 气氛(mood)
- 慢性病(chronic illness)
- 中断(break up)
练习建议
在观看此视频时,注意讲话者的语调和音速。您可以试着进行 英语影子跟读(shadow speech)练习,通过模仿讲话者的发音和语句间的停顿来提高您的语音流利度。建议您在每次录音间隔后暂停,重复您所听到的内容。此外,可以在视频播放速度较慢的情况下重复模仿,从而更好地掌握发音和节奏。使用此 shadowing site 技术,您不仅能提高口音,还能够增强对英语表达的理解。
建议您分段进行练习。例如,可以选择从视频中每个段落提取一到两个句子进行重复,直到您可以流利地说出这些句子。记得时不时休息一下,移动一下身体,保持良好的血液循环,这样可以让您的大脑保持活跃,提高学习效率。
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。
