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In this episode of The A to Z English Podcast, Xochitl and Jack help out a listener who is anxious about having an accent when speaking English.
Dear Xochitl and Jack,
I recently moved to an English-speaking country to pursue my studies, and while I’m confident in my academic English, I find it challenging to engage in casual conversations with native speakers. I often feel self-conscious about my accent and worry that I might not be understood clearly. How can I overcome this fear and improve my spoken English in informal settings?
Sincerely,
Accent Anxieties
Transcript:
00:00:00
Jack
Hey A-Z listeners, this is Jack here.
00:00:03
Jack
And if you would like to become a an exclusive subscriber to the show, you can hit the link in the description and that will take you to our Red Circle page, where for $1.99 a month you will get access to an extra two or three episodes each week.
00:00:23
Jack
And be careful, don’t hit that donation button if you want to become an exclusive subscriber because the donation button is just a one time donation. However, the exclusive subscriber button will give you access to the extra two or three episodes.
00:00:42
Jack
Each week.
00:00:44
Jack
So make sure you hit that exclusive subscriber button if you want access to the extra episodes.
00:00:52
Jack
Now let’s get on with the show.
00:00:55
Jack
Welcome to the A-Z English podcast. My name is Jack and I’m here with my co-host social. And today we are.
00:01:03
Jack
Doing a dear social and Jack episode where one of our listeners has written or sent us an e-mail.
00:01:12
Jack
With some kind of problem that they need help with and it is something language related and so.
00:01:18
Jack
Uh, and I know I know what you’re going to say already, because I’ve read this before, so I can kind of predict what your answer is going to be social. But I I like I you’ve said this before and I I like it so much. I I hope you say it again. So here’s the here’s the letter. Here’s Social and Jack.
00:01:36
Jack
I recently moved to an English speaking country to pursue to pursue my studies.
00:01:43
Jack
And while I’m confident in my academic English, I find it challenging to engage in casual conversation with native speakers. I often feel self-conscious about my accent and worry that I might not be understood clearly.
00:02:01
Jack
How can I overcome this fear and improve my spoken English in informal settings? Sincerely.
00:02:10
Jack
Accent anxieties.
00:02:13
Xochitl
Alright, acts and anxiety. Well, I think the fear that you’re having is really valid. It’s really normal. I think anyone who learns a new language feels this way. I know I certainly did when I moved to Korea. I’m going to tell you.
00:02:28
Xochitl
The way that you’re going to see the most improvement.
00:02:32
Xochitl
Is jumping head first just nose diving into that fear?
00:02:39
Xochitl
And trying your hardest anyway. Yes, there will be uncomfortable and awkward moments where people don’t understand what you’re saying. Yes, sometimes people might correct you, some people might be jerks and make fun of your accents. I had people laugh at me in Korea to my face.
00:02:55
Xochitl
Yeah, it stings a little bit, but how many languages could they speak fluently so you know, most of the time, any. Yeah. Most of the time, people who can speak two languages fluently are not going to be the same people laughing in your face because they can appreciate how difficult it is to learn a second language. And they’re going to be respectful.
00:03:02
발표자
Yeah.
00:03:02
Jack
Yeah, yeah.
00:03:15
Xochitl
About it.
00:03:16
Jack
And what? What does your mom say about people that speak two languages?
00:03:21
Jack
Do you remember? Ohh you forgot. Ohh OK. God love. I’ll never forget this because your mom, your your mom said like what? The only thing that means is when when you have an accent it just means that you can speak two languages.
00:03:22
Xochitl
I forgot Jack.
00:03:34
Xochitl
And.
00:03:37
Xochitl
Right, right. That’s true.
00:03:38
Jack
You know that’s, that’s all it means. Like if you have an accent and you’re speaking English with an accent, it just means you speak multiple languages. You’re you’re smart, you’re, you know, more than the the people you’re talking to, you know.
00:03:46
Xochitl
Right. And that’s part of.
00:03:50
Xochitl
Right, so don’t be ashamed. Just.
00:03:53
Xochitl
Just launch in there and I don’t hold back. I know it can be daunting. I know it can be embarrassing, but you’ll never learn if you don’t try. And I see this with my mom and her sisters. I see that. I think my mom.
00:04:08
Xochitl
All her sisters and her moved to the US around the same time and started learning English around the same time. But my mom? Really.
00:04:18
Xochitl
Kind of launched into using it. She didn’t really care what people said. She wasn’t embarrassed if people made fun of her accent or said they couldn’t understand her. And I think that that’s what led her to develop her English the best because she wasn’t bothered by the comments or the people making fun of her. And in Korea, it stung me a little when people made fun of my accent.
00:04:40
Xochitl
Laughed at me.
00:04:43
Xochitl
And then I shook it off and I was like, hey, I’m trying my best here so that I have nothing to be embarrassed about. So don’t hold back.
00:04:51
Jack
I think it’s interesting that you’re, you know, of your, your mom and her sisters, not everyone developed at the same rate because I’m assuming, you know, and this is.
00:05:03
Jack
Uh.
00:05:04
Jack
I think this.
00:05:05
Jack
Is a correct assumption.
00:05:06
Jack
It’s not. They’re all equal, and they’re all of equal intelligence. You know? They’re, they’re all you know, they’re, they’re they’re cognitively very, you know, healthy or whatever. And there there’s no, there’s no. The issue is not it’s not that it’s it’s an attitude.
00:05:10
Xochitl
Yes. Yeah, I would say yes, yeah.
00:05:20
발표자
Thanks.
00:05:24
Jack
Issue almost. You know what I mean? It’s like this. Yeah. Sorry, go ahead.
00:05:28
Xochitl
Oh, go ahead. I was just gonna say her two sisters are are are more shy than she is. And one of them even took formal English lessons far longer than my mom did and got, like, a.
00:05:42
Xochitl
Some kind of I don’t want to say in a degree, but she does. She passed some kind of course.
00:05:48
발표자
Hmm.
00:05:49
Xochitl
Still, if you compare her English and my mom’s English, my mom’s English is far superior, and it really can’t come down to my mom uses it every day. My mom incorporates new words every day. My mom isn’t, like, scared or shy to engage with people in English, and my mom never says I can’t do it. And her two other sisters sometimes have a attitude of like.
00:06:10
Xochitl
Ohh I can. I don’t know if I can. They like more. You know, my mom has a very can do attitude. She’s very straightforward. Yeah, lady and I really think believing yourself and having that confidence it will lead you to be better in the long run.
00:06:24
Jack
This is gonna sound cheesy and cringy, but my basketball coach had a a.
00:06:31
Jack
An expression of a banner that had this expression up hanging in the gym when I was in high school and he said attitude, not aptitude, determines your altitude. And I always remember that, you know, and I think it’s very true.
00:06:44
Xochitl
Right.
00:06:50
Jack
And sometimes we think, oh, I’m not smart enough. Ohh, it’s I’m not good at languages. I’m not this. I’m not that. It’s those are just excuses. It’s like what you’re really talking about.
00:07:01
Jack
Is fear you’re afraid?
00:07:03
Jack
And if you can just put that fear aside and face your fear you, you’d be surprised just what you can accomplish, you know, and I think that we’re and that I think that’s universally true for everything, not just language learning, but just like learning anything.
00:07:03
Xochitl
Right.
00:07:21
Jack
In general is that I think everybody has to start with the kind of incompetent.
00:07:27
Jack
Level. You know when you’re first learning a language you’re like I’m incompetent, but as you just keep fighting and fighting and fighting and and working hard, you become competent and and it’s it’s, you know it it it does feel like a.
00:07:32
발표자
Right.
00:07:43
Jack
Sometimes impossible journey I I think learning a language is kind of like climbing.
00:07:49
Jack
I don’t know Mount Everest or something. You know? You can’t. You can’t look at the peak. You can’t just be like, hey, I just want to jump up to that peak there and then pop back down. You know, it’s like, no, you gotta go to base camp one base camp, two base camp three. You gotta go. You know, you’ve gotta go through all the stages.
00:07:52
발표자
Right.
00:08:09
Jack
First, before you get to the where you want to be, so I think I think anxiety accent anxieties is just feeling a little bit overwhelmed, but it sounds like he or she is already so far down the road.
00:08:26
Jack
Obviously, don’t even think about the accent thing like you’re fine.
00:08:26
Xochitl
Right.
00:08:29
Xochitl
Right, yeah. Don’t be embarrassed. You’re already doing really well in academic English, which is one of the hardest things. Pat yourself on the back and don’t be afraid to.
00:08:39
Xochitl
You know, just put yourself out there because I guarantee that those students that you’re learning with, I mean, you’re learning in a foreign language.
00:08:47
Xochitl
So you pat yourself on the back for that because that’s something I wouldn’t.
00:08:52
Xochitl
Want to do?
00:08:53
Jack
It’s like doing it with like two hands tied behind your back, you know?
00:08:57
발표자
Yes.
00:08:57
Jack
It’s.
00:08:57
Jack
Like and I’ll I’ll like, I’ll. I’ll, I’ll tell you what I’m from Minnesota.
00:08:59
Xochitl
It’s hard.
00:09:04
Jack
And I didn’t even know I had an accent until I moved to California and everybody started making fun of the way that I spoke English. So even as a native speaker, my own accent, I had to change it because I was. So I’m. And now if I had more confidence, if I had had more confidence as a young person.
00:09:24
Jack
I probably would have just kept my accent, but the Midwest accent is very specific as social knows what I’m talking about because she’s from the Midwest as well.
00:09:27
Xochitl
Mm-hmm.
00:09:35
Jack
And when I moved to California, I would say really weird things like that. My pronunciation was really strange and people would be like, where are you from? Are you from, you know, are you from Minnesota? Are you from Wisconsin or something? And and I I thought I was saying it normally, you know. And then I I realized that I wasn’t. And so I even worked on my own.
00:09:58
Jack
Accent as a you know, as an American to have a more kind of generic American accent. So this is, you know, don’t don’t worry about it, you’ll be fine.
00:10:09
Xochitl
Yeah. Don’t sweat yourself. You’ll be OK anyway, if you have any questions, make sure you leave them down below or any comments at A-Z. Englishpodcast.com shoot us an e-mail at AZ englishpodcast@gmail.com and make sure make sure to join who we chat and WhatsApp Group so you can talk to Jack Knight directly. We’ll see you guys next.
00:10:27
Xochitl
Time. Bye bye.
00:10:28
Jack
Bye bye.
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