3 Simple Habits to Improve Your English Every Day for FREE

16,115 views ・ 2021-08-30

RealLife English


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

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You might have a nephew, for example, you don't  see it for a few months and then you see him and  
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it's like, "Wow he's changed! He's a  completely different person," you know? 
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Because they grow so fast, right? And kind  of the same thing when you're learning a lot,  
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you kind of, you're too myopic,  you're too close to your own self  
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and your learning you can't see  your own improvement, right? 
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Unless you kind of step back  and see those snapshots, right?
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Welcome back to Beyond  Borders! Today you will learn  
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three powerful habits for success with  RealLife English CEO Justin Murray.
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Justin, welcome to the show! 
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Aw yeah! What is up, Ethan? I've  been really looking forward to this.
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And if you would like to understand  fast speech, be understood by  
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anyone and connect to the world just like  RealLifer Steve who says that our lessons  
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help him to take his learning outside of the  classroom and immerse himself in English. 
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Then I want to help you on your journey too, but  I can only do that if you hit the Subscribe button  
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and the Bell down below, so that you  don't miss any of our new lessons.
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I was just curious if there's any way that you  think that practice could be applied to learning  
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a language, so for example for English  learners is there a way they can be more  
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meticulous with the data of their learning to  see patterns and to to cultivate improvements. 
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Yeah, definitely I think it goes back to like you  and I teaching you know, we had our students do  
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their learning logs, like what are you doing  every day, just documenting it, like how much  
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you are you doing of each activity, how much  you're listening, how much you're speaking,  
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how much you're writing, what  are you doing every day, right? 
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Just that's really important for motivation first  of all. I mean it just makes you do it. This is  
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part of your process makes you reflective, right? Setting goals it's kind of the same thing, you set  
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those goals, you plan ahead, you make sure it  fits into your life, but I would say there is  
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that angle too, like being data driven in your  learning, like how much are you listening and how  
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does this reflect and improve listening ability. How much you're speaking,  
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how does this reflect in your ability to  speak better, more clearly, more confidently. 
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Because ultimately you need to do it every day.  We know that, right? Like anything that you  
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want to be at your best at rather than just  an amateur. I mean if you want to turn pro,  
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you want to make it a part of who  you are, you need to do it every day. 
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And it doesn't need to be like speaking every  day, that can be hard to find that opportunity,  
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unless you download the RealLife App, and  go and press that button and connect with  
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partners from all around the world, right? But yeah, that's actually keeping it simple,  
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having a four minute conversation, you know? Having a four minute conversation,  
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that's once per day, really simple,  write it down in your in your log. 
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But yeah, going back to just the main ideas is  making sure that you're cultivating a nice mixture  
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of activities: listening to podcasts, watching TV  series, talking with people, think really deeply  
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about what you want to accomplish and even imagine  yourself at the end of your life, all the people,  
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your friends, your family, your workmates,  the people from your spiritual community,  
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what are they going to say at your funeral? And to think really where are you going and so  
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that really puts things into perspective to write  a mission, a clear mission, to really refine it  
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and then keep coming back to that and so that's  one thing you can do when you're journaling. 
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You can refine that mission,  you can come back to it.
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Another thing they talk about in that book as  well is breaking your life into dimensions,  
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right? So you think about your body, your  mind, your spirit, your social life and so. 
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This is something I do, so I kind  of like having each dimension,  
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like my spiritual practice: meditation.  From there it's like my exercise, right? 
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So it's like my health and vitality and  there's work as well, so it's like my craft  
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and calling and each of those areas I kind of  clarify what I want for my life and of course  
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there's a social aspect of everything, and then  there's the learning aspect of everything, right? 
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So it's like you constantly need to be learning  to be curious, to be developing, and this is  
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where reading books comes in, but apart from  that journaling is like really useful because,  
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I mean, first of all there's  so much you can do in there, 
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and it's like each each page of your journal  is a canvas. So you can do gratitude practice,  
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just sit down and think about, "Hmm,  what am I grateful for in my life?"
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There's a ton more for you to learn with Justin  and other incredible teachers and experts.  
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You can get the full interviews from Beyond  Borders anywhere where you listen to podcasts. 
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However I would recommend that you listen on the  RealLife English App. It is the only place where  
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you can get a transcript for the full episode and  learn all the most important vocabulary and more. 
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Plus, many learners like you tell me that they  are frustrated that they don't have anyone to  
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practice what they are learning with. Well on  the RealLife App you can have conversations in  
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English with people from all around the world at  the touch of a button and discover new cultures. 
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So if you are ready to step outside the  classroom and live your English then  
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download the app now by searching for RealLife  English in the Apple App or Google Play Store  
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or simply click on the link up  here or down the description below.
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It's not waking up every day and believing that  loving what you're doing, because it's not always  
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fun, right? Sometimes it's difficult, it's hard,  you know, just like running, waking up and going  
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for a long run and you're hurting and you don't  want to and you failed, your body sore, right? 
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Kind of the same thing-- like lighting that fire,  you know? Having that fire, keeping that lit,  
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keep staying passionate about it,  um, there's a deliberate practice,  
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which is actually mastering the skills, and  I felt like we didn't really give it a go. 
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We had a lot of things going for us at that  time, right? But we were immature, like we had  
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too much going on, we were trying to do events,  we were trying to do podcasts, we were trying to  
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do the, you know, YouTube videos, trying to do  like blog posts and we were a small team, right? 
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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  
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to learn, so I would say like just coming back  and having that humility, looking at ourselves  
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taking responsibility for our own failures,  right? And then experimenting, you know, 
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if something's not working, if Plan A doesn't  workm try Plan B, if Plan B doesn't work try Plan  
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C, keep going. And if you keep doing, if you keep  doing the same thing you get lost in that and that  
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becomes the path to failure because you're not  experimenting, you're not changing, but if you're  
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changing and experimenting, that gives you hope. Because you start building, you start building new  
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strategies, you start discovering new paths,  for example, like in that same time period  
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there was reason for hope because we  we had started Learn English with TV  
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Series. Perseverance is the answer, right? So it's really hard to say, um you know,  
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when the right time to keep going isn't when the  right time to quit is, but in our case there was  
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just a lot going well and I thought we really  hadn't like learned and grown to the point where  
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we were really masters of our own craft. And that we needed to really give it an  
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honest chance before we could stop and say "Oh  this didn't work out and feel good about it." 
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Yeah and we're always learning, it's  not like we've figured it out now and  
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and we're just laying back and waiting for the  the money to roll in, or the success to roll in,  
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or whatever the case is. It's like always  an uphill battle but it's one, I think like,  
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you said it's the passion that we've cultivated,  that passion that we're willing to keep rolling  
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the boulder up the hill in some sense, even  when it's difficult we're willing to push. 
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And something else you said there, the  focus too, at that in that moment that  
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was like about four and a half years ago or so  that we stopped doing the podcast for a while,  
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dedicate yourself and focus yourself on  something, even if it's maybe-- it's not the  
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absolute best thing, but just the fact that  you're showing up every day or every week,  
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whatever the case is, and you're doing that, you  know, you're continuing to do it, um like you said  
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until you've become a master of it in some sense.
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I want to know are there any habits that you  have found to help set you up for success.  
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Is there something you absolutely have to  do every day like journaling or meditating?  
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Comment it down below for me and your fellow  learners and see what other people have said.  
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Maybe you will discover an exciting new hobby. 
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Now let's see what Justin's  final favorite habit is.
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It's just so much to be grateful for and  if you sit down and make a practice out of  
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actually just writing it down, even just a couple  minutes a day, uh it's actually scientifically  
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proven that it's going to drastically change  your general feeling of well-being in life. 
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It's kind of like, I've read that we're evolved  for to feel fear, to look out for danger,  
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right? To constantly be kind of  pessimistic. But gratitude kind of  
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trains your brain to be like velcro for  the positive things, because normally  
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we're like velcro for the negative things, right? We have a built-in negativity, but we can train  
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our brain to be positive about things  and to kind of deflect the negativity.
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Yeah, most of our default program tends to be to  complain about things when things aren't going  
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exactly how we want them to go. When we feel  something is unfair a lot of us will default to  
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complaining or to feeling victimized and I  think when you start practicing gratitude  
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it really helps you to flip that around, so that instead of complaining maybe if  
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you you start complaining about something you  catch yourself you can turn that into, "Well,  
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what am I grateful for in this situation or  this moment?" or whatever the case is, and if  
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you can-- I think having the concrete practice  of doing it every single day, like writing it  
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in your journal or just taking a few minutes  to reflect on it at the same time every day,  
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that can be really good to build a habit but  then you can start to branch that out and  
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to try to think of it in other moments of your  life, if you find yourself complaining or you  
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find that you feel something is unfair or  whatever the case is even before a meal  
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like you can stop close your eyes and just  like just connect to yourself, connect to the  
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moment connect to the food, the smells, the  presence of the people that are around you. 
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I think it's very powerful if you can make that a  practice, it's mindfulness in some sense, right?  
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I think you're right Ethan, and it's so true.  I think it comes back to this idea that we have  
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total control over what we focus on in any  given moment, so maybe they are judging you  
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but if you're not thinking about that, that  doesn't have to hinder your connection with  
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them. It's about what you say, right? It's  about what you do that opens the connection.
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