Time for the vocabulary lesson for “Beliefs.” As always, be sure you’re standing strong. Good posture, big smile. Deep breath, move your body.
Time for the vocabulary lesson for “Beliefs.” As always, be sure you’re standing strong. Good posture, big smile. Deep breath, move your body.
Beliefs Vocabulary Text.docx
Beliefs Vocabulary Text
Hello, this AJ Hoge again. Time for the vocabulary lesson for “Beliefs.” As always,
be sure you’re standing strong. Good posture, big smile. Deep breath, move your
body. Let’s begin.
In this lesson I used a few difficult words. Maybe difficult, maybe not, I don’t know.
Let’s talk about them. Number one is the word trauma. Now trauma is a noun.
Trauma means an injury or a deep hurt. Now it can be physical, for example, if you
break your leg that is a physical trauma. It’s a physical injury. It’s a deep physical
hurt. Trauma can also mean a deep emotional hurt. So something very painful in
your life, you feel very, very sad, for example. Very, very angry, that is also a
trauma, a very painful experience. A painful, emotional hurt, trauma. So again,
that’s trauma. So we have emotional trauma and we also have physical trauma.
So, of course, in this lesson we’re talking about emotional traumas, hopefully
nobody hit you when you’re learning your English, so probably it was emotional
trauma. You felt a lot of stress perhaps when you were learning English in the past
or maybe just boredom. But for some students, I’d say probably for most students,
there are a lot of negative emotional feelings and beliefs about English learning and
altogether I call these English trauma, English pain, English hurt. And so really what
this entire lesson pack, all of this power English lesson pack is about is healing your
English trauma.
Okay, another word we talked about in this lesson, incantation. Incantation.
Incantation is a phrase or a sentence that you repeat again and again and again.
So, for example, “Every day my English speaking is better and better. Every day my
English speaking is better and better. Every day my English speaking is better and
better.” That’s an incantation. You saying it again and again and again. And it has
a little bit of a magical idea, that these words are magical. And you know, actually
they kind of are magical because they change your emotion. They change your
feelings about English, in this case.
So saying that again and again, every day, saying it with emotion, saying it
strongly, “Every day my English speaking is better and better. Every day my
English speaking is better and better. Every day my English speaking is better and
better.” That actually is a little bit magical because it changes your feelings. Your
feelings about English will improve. You will start to believe this. You will believe
your English is getting better. And when you believe it, it will be true. You will be
getting better and better. So there is kind of a magical idea about incantations. By
repeating these things again and again with power, that you are changing your
mind and you’re changing the situation. Almost like magic. So that’s incantation.
It’s the actual sentence that you say again and again.
Another word we use a lot in this lesson is empowering. The verb is to empower, to
empower. So, of course, power is the basic word, power, strength, right? Power,
but to empower, empower means to give power to someone or to cause power to
grow in someone. For example, maybe you have a child, a small child, and every
day you tell the child “You are so smart. You are intelligent.” You tell them again
“You’re intelligent, you’re smart, you’re intelligent, you’re smart.” You tell this again
and again and again, every day for years and years and years.
You are empowering the child. You’re giving them power. Because they will believe
it, after some time they will believe it. They’ll think “Oh, wow, I am intelligent. I am
very smart.” Right? So you’re giving them power. You’re making them feel more
powerful. You are empowering the child. You’re giving power to the child. So to empower is to give power or cause power in someone else. So in this way, these
beliefs empower you. The beliefs give power to you. They cause power in you. So
we call them empowering beliefs. We add the “ing” it becomes an adjective.
Empowering beliefs.
And the opposite of an empowering belief is a limiting belief. And in the lesson I
talked about, limiting means stopping. A limit is something that stops you. It’s kind
of like a border, a boundary. You can’t go past it. So a limiting belief is a belief that
stops you. It prevents you from doing something. So in this case limiting beliefs
prevent you, stop you, from speaking excellent English. The belief stops you. You
could speak excellent English but you have these negative beliefs, you have these
limiting beliefs, and so you are stopped, you are prevented. You cannot do it. So
it’s limiting, limiting beliefs.
Our next word is complicated. Pretty common word, complicated. It’s similar to
complex, complex and complicated, very close in meaning, very similar. And they
are the opposite of simple. So simple and complicated are opposites. Complicated
means not simple. It means there’s a lot of little pieces, alright? If something is
simple maybe there’s just one piece. It’s very easy to understand. But if something
is complicated, there are many little pieces to it, part of it. It’s difficult to
understand all of them.
So some people think English is complicated. Oh my god, nouns and verbs and the
past progressive and the future tense and past perfect progressive and all these
grammar terms and they “Oh my god, it’s so complicated.” And it is complicated if
you learn that way. If you try to memorize, if you try to think about all these little
grammar rules then absolutely, yes, it will feel complicated. But luckily it’s not
necessary. You don’t need to do that. English can feel simple.
Finally, we have the word reference. Reference or references. A reference is an
example. It can have different meanings in different situations, but here it means
an example, a specific example of something. So you have this belief “English is
painful.” And then you have references, you have examples, that prove it. For
example, “In middle school my teacher made me feel stupid.” Right? That’s the
reference, that is the example, the specific reference, the specific example. And
then you have another reference, “I failed my high school English test.” So now you
have two references, your middle school teacher made you feel stupid and you
failed your high school test. Two references, two examples of the belief “English is
painful.” So most beliefs have all these little references, these little examples. You
use the references to prove the belief. So if you question the references you can
destroy the belief. So again a reference is, in this case, a reference is an example, a
specific example of something. And references support beliefs, references create
beliefs.
Okay, that is all, a very short and easy vocabulary lesson for this one. That is all of
the vocabulary lesson for “Beliefs.” Listen to it a few times. Read the transcript, if
necessary. But focus most of your energy on the main speech and on the
mini-story. Those are the two most important lessons. Those are the ones you need
to listen to very often, repeatedly, and learn them deeply.
Okay, I will see you next time.
Beliefs Vocabulary Text
Beliefs Vocabulary Text
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