跟读练习: The FASTEST Way to Lower Stress | English & Chill with Jennie | English Podcast - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
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Hi, my dear friends.
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Hi, my dear friends.
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It's Jenny here.
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How are you feeling right now?
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Maybe today has been one of those long, heavy days.
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Nothing dramatic happened, and yet your mind still feels full.
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A conversation you keep replaying.
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A task you haven't finished.
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A message you still haven't answered.
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A future you keep worrying about.
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And somehow, everything starts to feel bigger at night.
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Have you ever noticed that?
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The same problem that seemed manageable in the afternoon suddenly feels overwhelming when the room gets quiet.
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I think many of us know this feeling.
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During the day, life keeps moving.
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Work, school, messages, people, There are so many things competing for your attention that stress sometimes stays in the background.
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But at night, when the world becomes still, your thoughts get louder.
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The unfinished things come forward.
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The things you pushed aside finally return.
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And because your mind is tired,
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it becomes harder to hold perspective.
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A small issue starts feeling like a huge problem.
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A simple uncertainty becomes a life crisis.
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I remember nights like this too.
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Lying in bed, staring at the ceiling, and suddenly replaying everything.
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Something a friend said.
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Something I forgot to do.
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Something I'm afraid might happen next week.
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It's strange how the mind works.
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At 2 p.m it feels like, I'll handle it tomorrow.
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At 2 a.m it feels like everything is falling apart.
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But here's something gentle I want you to remember.
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Not every thought that visits you at night deserves to be believed.
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Sometimes stress feels bigger at night because your mind is exhausted,
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not because the problem is actually bigger.
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A tired brain often loses proportion.
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This is why social media can make it worse.
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You open Instagram or TikTok before sleeping.
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You see other people looking productive, happy, successful, peaceful.
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And suddenly, your own worries start expanding.
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Why am I behind?
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Why am I not doing enough?
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What if I never figure this out?
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The mind begins building stories.
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Stress feeds on imagination, especially future imagination.
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The conversation that hasn't happened yet.
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The failure that hasn't happened yet.
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The rejection that hasn't happened yet.
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And the body reacts as if it's already real.
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That's why nighttime stress can feel so intense.
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It is not only thoughts.
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It becomes sensation.
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A tight chest.
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A restless stomach.
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Heavy breathing.
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A mind that refuses to slow down.
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Maybe you just needed someone to say this.
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The night often magnifies what the morning can shrink,
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not because your feelings are invalid,
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but because exhaustion changes perception.
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So before believing everything your stressed mind tells you tonight,
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ask yourself softly, is this a real problem right now,
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or a tired mind making it feel bigger?
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Sometimes that single question can already begin to soften the weight.
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Because the first step to lowering stress is realizing that not every nighttime thought is the truth.
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I want to share something simple but powerful.
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When stress rises, the fastest way to lower it is often not through thinking more.
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It begins with the body.
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I think this surprises a lot of people.
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When we feel stressed, our first instinct is usually to solve it in the mind.
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We analyze.
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We replay.
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We search for answers.
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We try to think our way out.
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But stress is not only mental.
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It lives in the body first.
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A tight jaw.
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Fast breathing.
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Heavy shoulders.
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A restless chest.
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Hands that won't stay still.
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The body is often reacting before the mind even fully understands what's happening.
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That's why calming the body first can be the fastest reset.
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Because once the body feels safer, the mind often follows.
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I remember once having a day where everything felt like too much.
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Messages coming in, deadlines, a conversation that stayed in my mind.
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I sat there trying to think through all of it,
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and And somehow it only made the stress worse.
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Then I did something much simpler.
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I stopped.
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I put my phone down.
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I stood up.
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I walked slowly to the window.
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And I took one deep breath.
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Then another.
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Not dramatic.
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Just slow.
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That small pause changed more than all the overthinking had.
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There's something important here.
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The body listens to rhythm.
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If your breathing is fast,
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your nervous system often reads that as danger.
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If your breathing slows, the body begins to receive a different message.
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We are safe right now.
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That's why one of the fastest ways to lower stress is to slow the body down physically.
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A few slow breaths.
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Relaxing your shoulders.
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Unclenching your jaw.
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Standing up and walking for two minutes.
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Drinking a glass of water.
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Stepping away from Instagram or TikTok.
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These things may seem too small,
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but small physical signals can change your internal state quickly.
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Even a short walk helps.
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Sometimes stress keeps looping because the body has nowhere to release the energy.
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Movement gives that energy an exit.
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This is why people often feel clearer after walking,
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stretching, or even cleaning their room for 10 minutes.
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The mind gets quieter when the body is allowed to move.
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I once read a quote from John Kabat-Zinn,
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You can't stop the waves,
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but you can learn to surf.
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I love that because stress is often like a wave.
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If you fight it with more mental force, it can rise higher.
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But if you regulate your body first,
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the wave begins to lose momentum.
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Maybe you just needed someone to say this.
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You do not need to solve your whole life in this moment.
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First, help your body feel safe.
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Then think, not the other way around.
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So right now, as you're listening, try something with me.
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Drop your shoulders.
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Take one slower breath than usual.
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Unclench your jaw.
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Feel your feet where they are.
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Sometimes the fastest way to lower stress is not a new idea.
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It is a calmer body that allows the mind to breathe again.
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Once the body begins to calm,
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the next thing we need to look at is the mind.
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Because stress often survives through repetition.
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The same thought, the same fear,
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the same mental movie playing again and again.
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I think many of us do this without even noticing.
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A small problem happens, and then the mind keeps returning to it.
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You replay the conversation.
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You imagine what you should have said.
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You predict everything that could go wrong next.
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You build ten future scenarios.
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By the end of the day,
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the original problem may still be small,
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but the thought loop has made it feel enormous.
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I remember once sending a message that was a little more honest than usual.
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Nothing dramatic.
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Just something clear and direct.
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But afterward, my mind kept circling it.
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Did that sound rude?
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What if they misunderstood me?
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What if they're upset?
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For hours, my mind kept replaying the same scene.
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The message had already been sent.
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Nothing outside was changing.
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But inside, the loop kept feeding itself.
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This is what stress often does.
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It confuses repetition with progress.
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The mind makes us feel like we are working on the problem.
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But many times, we are only rehearsing fear.
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Thinking about something repeatedly is not always problem-solving.
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Sometimes it is emotional self-amplification.
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The more you repeat a thought,
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the more real and urgent it begins to feel.
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especially late at night, especially after scrolling on Instagram or reading too many opinions online.
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A single worry can quickly become a story.
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What if this one mistake ruins everything?
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What if I'm falling behind?
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What if this means something bigger about my life?
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Do you see how quickly the mind expands?
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One moment becomes a life narrative.
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That's why one of the fastest ways to lower stress is to stop feeding the loop.
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Not every thought deserves another round.
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Sometimes the most helpful question is,
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is this thought helping me act or only making me spiral?
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That question creates space.
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I once came across a quote from Eckhart Tolle that stayed with me.
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Stress is caused by being here but wanting to be there.
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I think part of the thought loop comes from trying to mentally control what has not happened yet.
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We imagine future conversations, future failures, future outcomes.
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And the body reacts as if they are already happening.
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Maybe you just needed someone to say this.
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You do not need to solve imagined futures.
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You only need to respond to what is real now.
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Sometimes the fastest way out of stress is to interrupt the loop with one grounding sentence.
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This is only a thought, not a fact.
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Or, nothing new is happening right now.
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That sentence can break the cycle.
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Because stress grows when thoughts keep circling.
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Peace begins when you stop giving every worry unlimited airtime.
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So today, notice the loop.
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Then gently step out of it.
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Sometimes one interrupted thought can change the emotional direction of your whole day.
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Sometimes when stress builds up,
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we think the solution has to be something big.
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A weekend away.
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A perfect routine.
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A long conversation.
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A complete life reset.
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But honestly, some of the fastest relief comes from something much smaller.
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One small reset.
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I've noticed that stress often keeps growing because nothing interrupts it.
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The body stays tense.
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The thoughts keep circling.
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The same environment keeps feeding the same feeling.
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That's why even a tiny change can shift your emotional state.
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I remember one afternoon when everything felt heavy.
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Messages were coming in.
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My mind was replaying a conversation.
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I had too many tabs open,
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both on my laptop and in my head.
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I could feel the stress rising.
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Instead of trying to push through, I did something simple.
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I closed the laptop.
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I stood up.
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I walked to the kitchen and made tea.
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That was it. But something changed.
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The sound of the water boiling.
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The warmth of the cup in my hands.
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The short distance between my desk and the kitchen.
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It gave my mind a break in pattern.
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And sometimes that is exactly what stress needs.
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A pattern break.
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Stress loves continuity.
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Same posture.
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Same thought.
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Same environment.
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Same pressure.
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A reset interrupts that.
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It can be incredibly small.
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Wash your face.
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Open the window.
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Change rooms.
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Take a five-minute walk.
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Stretch your shoulders.
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Put your phone away for 10 minutes.
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Step outside and look at the sky.
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These actions may seem ordinary,
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but they tell your nervous system that the moment has changed.
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And once the moment changes,
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your mind often changes with it.
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Even something as simple as putting distance between yourself and Instagram or TikTok can create relief.
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Sometimes the fastest way to lower stress is not to solve the issue.
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It's to stop giving your brain more stimulation.
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I once read a quote from Thich Nhat Hanh.
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Feelings come and go like clouds in a windy sky.
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I love that image because stress often feels permanent in the moment.
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But many emotional states are more temporary than they seem.
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Sometimes they simply need space to move through.
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A reset creates that space.
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Maybe you just needed someone to hear this.
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You are allowed to pause before continuing.
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Rest is not avoidance.
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Sometimes rest is the most intelligent response.
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A five-minute reset can save you from five hours of spiraling.
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So right now, ask yourself,
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What is one tiny thing I can change in this moment?
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Your posture, your breathing, your room, your screen.
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Sometimes peace does not arrive through a big solution.
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Sometimes it begins with one small interruption that reminds your body and mind.
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This moment can change.
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I want to leave you with one thought that has helped me many times.
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Stress often grows in the space between reality and imagination.
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Not imagination in a creative sense.
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I mean the mind's habit of turning one real problem into ten imagined futures.
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A delayed reply becomes, What if they're upset with me?
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A small mistake at work becomes,
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What if this ruins everything?
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One uncertain moment becomes, What if my whole future goes wrong?
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The mind is very good at creating stories.
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And when stress is already present,
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those stories can feel like facts.
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But they are not always facts.
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That's why one of the fastest ways to lower stress is to gently return to what is actually real.
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What is happening right now?
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Not tomorrow.
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Not next week.
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Not the future version your mind is predicting.
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Right now.
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I remember one evening when I felt unusually overwhelmed.
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I had several things on my mind at once.
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A deadline.
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An unfinished conversation.
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A worry about something that had not even happened yet.
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Everything felt mixed together.
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Then I stopped and wrote down two columns in my notebook.
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Facts and fears.
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Under facts, I wrote.
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One deadline tomorrow.
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One message not yet answered feeling tired.
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Under fears, I wrote.
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What if I disappoint everyone?
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What if this turns into a bigger problem?
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What if I'm not doing enough?
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The difference was immediate.
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The facts were manageable.
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The fears were infinite.
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That's when I realized stress often comes from treating fear as fact.
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And once you separate them,
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the emotional weight starts to soften.
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Sometimes social media makes this worse.
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You see someone on Instagram looking calm, successful and productive.
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And suddenly your own mind starts writing a painful story.
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I'm behind.
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I'm failing.
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Everyone else is doing better.
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But that is often imagination built on comparison, not reality.
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I once read a quote from Byron Katie that stayed with me.
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Reality is always kinder than the story we tell about it.
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I think that is deeply true.
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Reality may still contain challenges,
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but the mind often adds layers that make it far heavier.
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Maybe you just needed someone to say this tonight.
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Not every future fear deserves today's energy.
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Return to what is real.
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This room.
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This breath.
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This moment.
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This one next step.
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Don't rush.
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Good things need roots first.
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Sometimes peace begins the moment you stop living inside imagined disasters.
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So before we end, ask yourself gently.
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What is actually true right now?
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Maybe the answer is simpler than the story in your mind.
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Thank you for spending this time with me.
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If this episode helped you breathe a little easier,
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I'd love for you to stay with this journey.
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Subscribe to Jenny's English Podcast and let this continue to be a place where we grow not only our English,
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but also our peace.
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And before you go, tell me in the comments,
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what helps you lower stress the fastest when your mind feels full?
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I'd really love to hear your answer.
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Bye bye.
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关于本课
在本课程中,你将通过听取简妮的英语播客,练习如何有效应对压力,并提高你的英语口语能力。你将学习到在面对生活中压力和焦虑时,如何找到平静与冷静的方法。在听的过程中,注意简妮的语调与节奏,以帮助你提升英语的表达能力和听力技能。这样的练习将使你在日常交流中更加自信,尤其在雅思口语练习时能够更流利地表达自己的情感与想法。此练习适合希望通过看YouTube学英语来加强英语口语练习的学习者。
关键词汇和短语
- 压力 (stress) - 生活中的一种常见情绪,可以影响我们的心理状态。
- 思维 (thoughts) - 你在思考时所经历的内心活动。
- 未来 (future) - 还未发生的时间,与不确定性密切相关。
- 未完成的事情 (unfinished tasks) - 尚未处理的工作或责任。
- 想象 (imagination) - 思维中创造可能性的能力,有时会导致不必要的担忧。
- 心态 (mindset) - 对待生活和挑战的态度,这可以影响我们如何感受压力。
练习建议
在进行本课的shadowing练习时,建议你先完整收听一次简妮的播客。然后,选择适合你的段落,尝试跟随她的语调和节奏进行重复。在这个过程中,注意她是如何表达情感与重担,模仿这些细腻的语调可以帮助你更好地掌握英语的情感表达。可以通过以下步骤增强练习效果:
- 在安静的环境中练习,避免分心。
- 尝试把播客的速度调整为最符合你听力理解的节奏。
- 在每次重复时,停顿并思考简妮所传达的内容,以积累理解与表达上的深度。
- 记录下自己的语音,回放并与原音对比,寻找改进空间。
通过这些练习,你将能够在英语口语练习中获得收益,特别是在面对雅思口语练习时,通过这种shadowing technique,你的表达会更加自信流畅。
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。
