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Mini-Exercise: “When Pressure Steals Your English” 2–3 minutes • gentle awareness practice 1️⃣ Recall a moment when English felt harder than it should have. A meeting, an interview, a conversation — any moment where your mind suddenly tightened. 2️⃣ Notice what changed inside you first. Your breath? Your chest? Your thoughts speeding up? Your voice shrinking? Just observe without judging. 3️⃣ Complete this quiet sentence in your mind: “The pressure rises when I fear that…” Don’t edit it. Don’t fix it. Let the truth finish itself. 4️⃣ Take one slow breath and allow your shoulders to drop. This soft release helps your voice return. 5️⃣ Ask yourself: “What if nothing is wrong with my English — only with the pressure I carry?” That’s enough for today. Awareness is the first moment where your real voice begins to come back.
16 de nov de 2025 10:20
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🌿 In my last article, “The Woman Who Shrinks,” I explored what really happens when confident women suddenly feel smaller in English. It’s not grammar. It’s not fluency. It’s disconnection — a quiet break between who you are and who you become when you switch languages. Today, I’d like to help you feel this shift more clearly — not by studying it, but by noticing it. Below is a simple 3-minute reflection I use with many of my students. It helps you see the exact moment your energy drops — what I call your “shrink point.” No pressure, no judgment. Just awareness. Because awareness is the first step to reconnection. 🎯 MINI-EXERCISE: “The Shrink Point” Duration: 3 minutes 1. Close your eyes and recall a recent English conversation. When did your energy drop? That’s your shrink point. 2. Ask gently: “What was I protecting in that moment?” 3. Place your hand on your chest and say: “I don’t need to protect this version anymore.” That’s where reconnection begins — not in grammar, but in grace. If this reflection resonated with you and you feel ready to explore this work more deeply, you’re welcome to reach out to me through my profile. I don’t promise results to everyone — I choose the students I work with carefully. But if it’s the right moment for you, one conversation can change how you speak, feel, and lead in English.
12 de nov de 2025 07:22
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Mini-Exercise: “The Moment English Became Heavy” Duration: 2–3 minutes Goal: Help you recognize your emotional weight without pressure. Step 1 — Pause for a moment. Take one slow breath and notice how your body feels when you think about speaking English. Step 2 — Answer one gentle question: “When did English stop feeling exciting and start feeling heavy for me?” Don’t overthink it. Just notice which moment comes to mind. Step 3 — Write one sentence: Complete this line in your notebook or phone: “English became heavy for me when…” It could be a meeting, a correction, a comment, or a moment you felt small. Step 4 — Release the judgment. After writing your sentence, say quietly: “This makes sense. I’m human.” Step 5 — Close the loop. Finish with this gentle reframe: “My English is not the problem. My emotional weight is.” That’s enough for today. This small awareness already lightens the load.
11 de nov de 2025 12:09
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A Simple Practice to Try Today Here’s a small 5-minute exercise I use with many of my clients — women like you who’ve spent years studying English but still feel blocked when it matters most. Meet the Speaker Sit comfortably. Close your eyes for a moment. Take a deep breath — in through your nose, out through your mouth. Let your shoulders drop. Feel the air move through your body. Picture your next English conversation. Maybe it’s a meeting, an interview, or even a casual chat. Imagine yourself in that space. See the people, hear the sounds. Listen for the usual thought: “How do I sound?” “What if I make a mistake?” And then — gently — replace it with: “Who is speaking?” Meet her. Who is she — this version of you that already speaks clearly, calmly, with presence? How does she sit? How does she breathe? How does she look at people? Now, say one simple sentence out loud. It can be anything: “I know what I’m talking about.” “I’m ready to express myself.” “My English is good enough for my ideas.” Feel the difference. It’s not in the grammar. It’s in the energy behind it. Reflect. How did your voice sound? How did your body feel? That version of you — that’s the real speaker. She’s been there all along. Many women I meet tell me they’ve spent a decade chasing “perfect English.” And every new course promises that this time, they’ll finally feel confident. But true confidence doesn’t come from mastering every rule. It comes from remembering who you are before the rules. The English you’ve been searching for isn’t outside you — it’s inside the version of you that already knows how to speak, lead, laugh, and connect. You don’t need to become fluent to feel whole. You need to feel whole to become fluent. So, next time you find yourself asking, “How do I sound?” — pause. Ask instead, “Who is speaking?”
10 de nov de 2025 09:24
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