If you’re wondering why you’re not fluent yet - this might be the reason...

37,854 views ・ 2021-03-30

Accent's Way English with Hadar


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Would you ever consider learning a dance move by simply watching the dancer dance?
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Or would you consider learning how to ride a bicycle by simply reading
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a book about how to ride a bicycle?
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Probably not, right?
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So why do you think that learning English without speaking and saying the words
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is going to help you become fluent?
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Here's the thing.
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When it comes to speaking another language, we are, basically,
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building new speaking habits.
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We move away from the old speaking habits that we've had, which is our
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native language, whether it's sounds or words - even words are just utterances.
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And we are used to saying a certain word at a certain
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situation, and that is a habit.
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Right?
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So, even learning new words, definitely when it comes to sounds, what you're
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doing is your learning a new habit.
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You're acquiring a new habit.
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And I have a full lesson coming up about habits and language
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learning, because there's a lot that we need to unpack there.
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But for today, I want you to understand that a habit is
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something that you do automatically.
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You don't want to think about it, you don't want to plan for it, you
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don't want to be intentional about it.
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That is what makes it effortless.
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We have good habits.
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We have bad habits.
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That's up for discussion.
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But, you know, when you speak your own language, you don't think about
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the words, they just come to you.
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Right?
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It's automatic.
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And in English, sometimes that's the case, and sometimes it is not.
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So, what I want to talk about today is how to bridge that gap from, you
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know, when it's not habitual to making it your own and making it a habit.
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Let me tell you a little story.
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When I was in acting school, we had dance classes.
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I'm not a dancer.
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I often say that I have like a movement dyslexia, because when
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people tell me to put the right elbow on the left knee, I would take
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my ear and put it on my shoulder.
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Because I just don't get it.
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I get totally confused.
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Really.
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Like, in yoga classes, I'm the one who does the postures, and then
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looks at everyone else to see what they're doing to make sure that I'm
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not messing up, and usually I am.
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So, imagine me going into this dance hall with all these Broadway dancers to be,
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and they've been trained all their lives.
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And I'm like, maybe I had tap dancing of the age of six.
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And they're all like, one, two, three, seven, five, ten, you know?
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And I'm like, uh, okay, what do I do with my body?
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And the teacher would teach all these fancy dance moves,
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like Broadway dance moves.
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And I would be the last one to get it.
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Everyone would kinda like pick it up right away, and look awesome in the mirror.
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And I would feel so sluggish, and awkward, and weird.
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So, what I had to do is, of course, I had to work a little harder.
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Because it was harder for me.
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I felt like, you know, if I have an obstacle, it doesn't mean that it's
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not possible, it just means that I need to tackle it differently.
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It's not as natural as it is for my friends, who have been trained.
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Right?
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They're natives in dancing.
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And I wasn't.
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So, what I did was, I got into the habit of learning all of the moves by
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repeating them again and again and again.
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Sometimes with the help of friends, because I couldn't remember them.
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So, I had to take it slower.
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And I really had to get it into my body.
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And the same thing, I gave you that example of the beginning, is
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that when you ride on your bike and you don't think about it.
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You don't think about keeping your balance, you don't think about paddling.
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It's just something that happens, it's automatic, that's habit already.
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Your body knows what to do.
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But that wasn't the case when you first started learning
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how to ride a bicycle, right?
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That wasn't the case when you first started learning how to swim, and what to
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do with your body, and how to stay afloat.
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So, all of these things that we now take for granted, were challenging
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for us at a certain point.
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But the way for us to make it our own and to develop the muscle
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memory was simply through practice.
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And this is the interesting part when it comes to English learning.
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Because I see it so often, and I used to teach it like that - "Okay,
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here's a new thing, let's learn it.
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Let's solve a few questions.
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Great, let's move on."
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It is really impossible.
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You really have to feel it in your mouth and in your body, and understand
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how you connect this - what you've just learned in perceived - to
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this, what comes out of your mouth.
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And this is a whole another practice that you need to take seriously.
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Repetition is important.
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This is why I've developed the Pronunciation Confidence Technique,
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that I use in my teachings.
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Because it's not just, you know, repeating it for the sake of repeating it.
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It's intentional repetition, that allows you to get this new word, or sound,
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or grammatical structure into your body, right, like into your system.
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And you make it your own.
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And you say it again, and again, and again.
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And a lot of people say, "Okay, I feel repetitive.
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It's like robotic.
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What's the point?
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I only need to use it in context."
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But here is the thing.
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When you repeat something, like I do in the Sprints - and I'm going to
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link to my Sprints in the description, because I think it's an effective
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way to put this idea into practice.
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What you're doing with repetition is that you're telling yourself that
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it's okay for you to use this word.
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You're telling your brain and you're telling your muscles
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how to use this structure.
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So, you leave out the analytical part of the brain, so you don't need to
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think about, "I need this word", or "This is how this word is structured."
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And you simply do it again and again and again, until it becomes automatic,
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until you develop a muscle memory.
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Right?
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So, it's not just with dancing, or singing, or
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playing the piano, or swimming.
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It's about speaking a second language, as well.
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And the sooner you understand that and surrender to it, and do the work
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necessary, the easier it's going to be.
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So many of my students report that after doing the Sprints for 10, 20, 30 days,
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the words just come out of their mouth.
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They use a certain structure without thinking about it.
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Why?
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Because it's already in the muscle memory.
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Your body already knows how to use it.
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It's just now connecting it in the right circumstances, or the right situations.
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So, that's what I wanted to share with you today, basically.
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That learning how to speak a language is exactly like learning how to dance,
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to play basketball, to play the piano.
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There's like the understanding of how it all goes together.
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But there is also the recognition that small parts need repetitions.
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Because we don't have the confidence using it in our speaking.
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So, whatever you're learning, whatever you're learning - sounds, words,
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vocabulary structures, phrasal, verbs, idioms, expressions - whatever you're
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learning, don't leave it on the paper.
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Don't say it once and move on.
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Say it again, and again, and again, and again.
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Just the act of saying that one phrase, and then use it in context, and then maybe
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think of yourself using it in certain situations, like associate an imagery
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or something that can connect this word to that visual thought or idea, right?
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And then you will see that you start using all of these things a lot more.
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Okay.
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So, let me know in the comments, first of all, if that resonates with you.
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And if you have any questions for me, please, feel free to ask.
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And also, if you have any other ideas or suggestions of what our community can do
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while learning and practicing English, to move it from just content consumption to
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implementation, to putting in the work.
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Okay?
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Good.
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So I'm going to link to a few other videos that are going to be relevant, if you're
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interested, right here in the description.
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And in the meantime, thank you so much.
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You can find me at @hadar.accentsway on Instagram if you want to connect.
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And have a beautiful day, and I'll see you next week in the next video.
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Bye.
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