3 Simple Habits to Improve Your English Every Day for FREE

16,141 views ・ 2021-08-30

RealLife English


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

00:00
You might have a nephew, for example, you don't  see it for a few months and then you see him and  
0
160
3680
00:03
it's like, "Wow he's changed! He's a  completely different person," you know? 
1
3840
3120
00:06
Because they grow so fast, right? And kind  of the same thing when you're learning a lot,  
2
6960
4160
00:11
you kind of, you're too myopic,  you're too close to your own self  
3
11120
4080
00:15
and your learning you can't see  your own improvement, right? 
4
15200
2480
00:17
Unless you kind of step back  and see those snapshots, right?
5
17680
2160
00:23
Welcome back to Beyond  Borders! Today you will learn  
6
23120
4400
00:27
three powerful habits for success with  RealLife English CEO Justin Murray.
7
27520
5840
00:33
Justin, welcome to the show! 
8
33920
1520
00:36
Aw yeah! What is up, Ethan? I've  been really looking forward to this.
9
36400
2480
00:39
And if you would like to understand  fast speech, be understood by  
10
39520
4080
00:43
anyone and connect to the world just like  RealLifer Steve who says that our lessons  
11
43600
5200
00:48
help him to take his learning outside of the  classroom and immerse himself in English. 
12
48800
4880
00:53
Then I want to help you on your journey too, but  I can only do that if you hit the Subscribe button  
13
53680
5840
00:59
and the Bell down below, so that you  don't miss any of our new lessons.
14
59520
12320
01:14
I was just curious if there's any way that you  think that practice could be applied to learning  
15
74400
4640
01:19
a language, so for example for English  learners is there a way they can be more  
16
79040
4400
01:23
meticulous with the data of their learning to  see patterns and to to cultivate improvements. 
17
83440
6480
01:31
Yeah, definitely I think it goes back to like you  and I teaching you know, we had our students do  
18
91120
5840
01:38
their learning logs, like what are you doing  every day, just documenting it, like how much  
19
98000
4800
01:42
you are you doing of each activity, how much  you're listening, how much you're speaking,  
20
102800
3200
01:46
how much you're writing, what  are you doing every day, right? 
21
106000
2720
01:48
Just that's really important for motivation first  of all. I mean it just makes you do it. This is  
22
108720
4400
01:53
part of your process makes you reflective, right? Setting goals it's kind of the same thing, you set  
23
113120
4160
01:58
those goals, you plan ahead, you make sure it  fits into your life, but I would say there is  
24
118240
6640
02:04
that angle too, like being data driven in your  learning, like how much are you listening and how  
25
124880
5200
02:10
does this reflect and improve listening ability. How much you're speaking,  
26
130080
2800
02:13
how does this reflect in your ability to  speak better, more clearly, more confidently. 
27
133600
3680
02:17
Because ultimately you need to do it every day.  We know that, right? Like anything that you  
28
137280
4080
02:21
want to be at your best at rather than just  an amateur. I mean if you want to turn pro,  
29
141360
5920
02:28
you want to make it a part of who  you are, you need to do it every day. 
30
148000
2960
02:30
And it doesn't need to be like speaking every  day, that can be hard to find that opportunity,  
31
150960
5120
02:36
unless you download the RealLife App, and  go and press that button and connect with  
32
156080
3440
02:39
partners from all around the world, right? But yeah, that's actually keeping it simple,  
33
159520
5440
02:44
having a four minute conversation, you know? Having a four minute conversation,  
34
164960
3520
02:48
that's once per day, really simple,  write it down in your in your log. 
35
168480
4320
02:52
But yeah, going back to just the main ideas is  making sure that you're cultivating a nice mixture  
36
172800
5600
02:58
of activities: listening to podcasts, watching TV  series, talking with people, think really deeply  
37
178400
6320
03:04
about what you want to accomplish and even imagine  yourself at the end of your life, all the people,  
38
184720
5600
03:10
your friends, your family, your workmates,  the people from your spiritual community,  
39
190320
4240
03:14
what are they going to say at your funeral? And to think really where are you going and so  
40
194560
4640
03:19
that really puts things into perspective to write  a mission, a clear mission, to really refine it  
41
199200
5040
03:24
and then keep coming back to that and so that's  one thing you can do when you're journaling. 
42
204800
4080
03:28
You can refine that mission,  you can come back to it.
43
208880
2560
03:31
Another thing they talk about in that book as  well is breaking your life into dimensions,  
44
211440
3520
03:35
right? So you think about your body, your  mind, your spirit, your social life and so. 
45
215600
6000
03:41
This is something I do, so I kind  of like having each dimension,  
46
221600
2800
03:45
like my spiritual practice: meditation.  From there it's like my exercise, right? 
47
225120
7200
03:52
So it's like my health and vitality and  there's work as well, so it's like my craft  
48
232320
4240
03:56
and calling and each of those areas I kind of  clarify what I want for my life and of course  
49
236560
5520
04:02
there's a social aspect of everything, and then  there's the learning aspect of everything, right? 
50
242080
4320
04:06
So it's like you constantly need to be learning  to be curious, to be developing, and this is  
51
246400
5840
04:12
where reading books comes in, but apart from  that journaling is like really useful because,  
52
252240
4960
04:18
I mean, first of all there's  so much you can do in there, 
53
258480
3040
04:21
and it's like each each page of your journal  is a canvas. So you can do gratitude practice,  
54
261520
6320
04:28
just sit down and think about, "Hmm,  what am I grateful for in my life?"
55
268720
3360
04:33
There's a ton more for you to learn with Justin  and other incredible teachers and experts.  
56
273360
5760
04:39
You can get the full interviews from Beyond  Borders anywhere where you listen to podcasts. 
57
279680
5120
04:45
However I would recommend that you listen on the  RealLife English App. It is the only place where  
58
285920
6080
04:52
you can get a transcript for the full episode and  learn all the most important vocabulary and more. 
59
292000
6960
04:59
Plus, many learners like you tell me that they  are frustrated that they don't have anyone to  
60
299760
4960
05:04
practice what they are learning with. Well on  the RealLife App you can have conversations in  
61
304720
6320
05:11
English with people from all around the world at  the touch of a button and discover new cultures. 
62
311040
5840
05:17
So if you are ready to step outside the  classroom and live your English then  
63
317760
5200
05:22
download the app now by searching for RealLife  English in the Apple App or Google Play Store  
64
322960
6240
05:29
or simply click on the link up  here or down the description below.
65
329200
3680
05:34
It's not waking up every day and believing that  loving what you're doing, because it's not always  
66
334560
4160
05:39
fun, right? Sometimes it's difficult, it's hard,  you know, just like running, waking up and going  
67
339840
6320
05:46
for a long run and you're hurting and you don't  want to and you failed, your body sore, right? 
68
346160
5200
05:51
Kind of the same thing-- like lighting that fire,  you know? Having that fire, keeping that lit,  
69
351360
4400
05:55
keep staying passionate about it,  um, there's a deliberate practice,  
70
355760
3520
05:59
which is actually mastering the skills, and  I felt like we didn't really give it a go. 
71
359280
5520
06:04
We had a lot of things going for us at that  time, right? But we were immature, like we had  
72
364800
6320
06:11
too much going on, we were trying to do events,  we were trying to do podcasts, we were trying to  
73
371120
4720
06:15
do the, you know, YouTube videos, trying to do  like blog posts and we were a small team, right? 
74
375840
5680
06:21
So it's like, we're trying to do too much, there's  so much we're trying to do and we just had so much  
75
381520
5040
06:26
to learn, so I would say like just coming back  and having that humility, looking at ourselves  
76
386560
3600
06:30
taking responsibility for our own failures,  right? And then experimenting, you know, 
77
390160
3920
06:34
if something's not working, if Plan A doesn't  workm try Plan B, if Plan B doesn't work try Plan  
78
394080
5200
06:39
C, keep going. And if you keep doing, if you keep  doing the same thing you get lost in that and that  
79
399280
4320
06:43
becomes the path to failure because you're not  experimenting, you're not changing, but if you're  
80
403600
3760
06:47
changing and experimenting, that gives you hope. Because you start building, you start building new  
81
407360
4640
06:52
strategies, you start discovering new paths,  for example, like in that same time period  
82
412000
4800
06:57
there was reason for hope because we  we had started Learn English with TV  
83
417600
3200
07:00
Series. Perseverance is the answer, right? So it's really hard to say, um you know,  
84
420800
5440
07:06
when the right time to keep going isn't when the  right time to quit is, but in our case there was  
85
426240
4880
07:11
just a lot going well and I thought we really  hadn't like learned and grown to the point where  
86
431120
5680
07:16
we were really masters of our own craft. And that we needed to really give it an  
87
436800
5520
07:22
honest chance before we could stop and say "Oh  this didn't work out and feel good about it." 
88
442320
6160
07:29
Yeah and we're always learning, it's  not like we've figured it out now and  
89
449040
3680
07:33
and we're just laying back and waiting for the  the money to roll in, or the success to roll in,  
90
453440
6160
07:39
or whatever the case is. It's like always  an uphill battle but it's one, I think like,  
91
459600
4880
07:44
you said it's the passion that we've cultivated,  that passion that we're willing to keep rolling  
92
464480
5200
07:49
the boulder up the hill in some sense, even  when it's difficult we're willing to push. 
93
469680
4400
07:54
And something else you said there, the  focus too, at that in that moment that  
94
474800
3920
07:58
was like about four and a half years ago or so  that we stopped doing the podcast for a while,  
95
478720
4240
08:04
dedicate yourself and focus yourself on  something, even if it's maybe-- it's not the  
96
484560
4320
08:08
absolute best thing, but just the fact that  you're showing up every day or every week,  
97
488880
4240
08:13
whatever the case is, and you're doing that, you  know, you're continuing to do it, um like you said  
98
493120
4880
08:18
until you've become a master of it in some sense.
99
498560
3200
08:22
I want to know are there any habits that you  have found to help set you up for success.  
100
502640
3920
08:27
Is there something you absolutely have to  do every day like journaling or meditating?  
101
507360
5520
08:33
Comment it down below for me and your fellow  learners and see what other people have said.  
102
513680
4880
08:39
Maybe you will discover an exciting new hobby. 
103
519200
2640
08:42
Now let's see what Justin's  final favorite habit is.
104
522640
3360
08:47
It's just so much to be grateful for and  if you sit down and make a practice out of  
105
527600
3360
08:51
actually just writing it down, even just a couple  minutes a day, uh it's actually scientifically  
106
531680
4080
08:55
proven that it's going to drastically change  your general feeling of well-being in life. 
107
535760
4880
09:00
It's kind of like, I've read that we're evolved  for to feel fear, to look out for danger,  
108
540640
6880
09:07
right? To constantly be kind of  pessimistic. But gratitude kind of  
109
547520
3920
09:11
trains your brain to be like velcro for  the positive things, because normally  
110
551440
6480
09:17
we're like velcro for the negative things, right? We have a built-in negativity, but we can train  
111
557920
3760
09:21
our brain to be positive about things  and to kind of deflect the negativity.
112
561680
4400
09:26
Yeah, most of our default program tends to be to  complain about things when things aren't going  
113
566080
6240
09:32
exactly how we want them to go. When we feel  something is unfair a lot of us will default to  
114
572320
7360
09:39
complaining or to feeling victimized and I  think when you start practicing gratitude  
115
579680
6320
09:46
it really helps you to flip that around, so that instead of complaining maybe if  
116
586000
5520
09:51
you you start complaining about something you  catch yourself you can turn that into, "Well,  
117
591520
4160
09:55
what am I grateful for in this situation or  this moment?" or whatever the case is, and if  
118
595680
6080
10:01
you can-- I think having the concrete practice  of doing it every single day, like writing it  
119
601760
4160
10:05
in your journal or just taking a few minutes  to reflect on it at the same time every day,  
120
605920
3920
10:09
that can be really good to build a habit but  then you can start to branch that out and  
121
609840
6400
10:16
to try to think of it in other moments of your  life, if you find yourself complaining or you  
122
616240
4640
10:20
find that you feel something is unfair or  whatever the case is even before a meal  
123
620880
6160
10:27
like you can stop close your eyes and just  like just connect to yourself, connect to the  
124
627040
4480
10:31
moment connect to the food, the smells, the  presence of the people that are around you. 
125
631520
4160
10:35
I think it's very powerful if you can make that a  practice, it's mindfulness in some sense, right?  
126
635680
10160
10:54
I think you're right Ethan, and it's so true.  I think it comes back to this idea that we have  
127
654800
3840
10:58
total control over what we focus on in any  given moment, so maybe they are judging you  
128
658640
5760
11:04
but if you're not thinking about that, that  doesn't have to hinder your connection with  
129
664400
4640
11:09
them. It's about what you say, right? It's  about what you do that opens the connection.
130
669040
4800
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7