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This podcast is narrated using advanced AI voice technology (powered by ElevenLabs) to ensure consistent clarity, natural pacing, and an easy-to-follow listening experience — especially helpful for language learners.
All scripts are written and carefully edited by real humans, combining expert content creation with voice technology to bring you the best of both worlds:
✅ Human intelligence and creativity
✅ AI precision and clarity
We use slow, natural pronunciation and carefully chosen vocabulary to support learners at every level.
In today’s short, powerful episode, Martin and Julia show you how one tiny word can completely change the way you learn English: “yet.”
Have you ever thought: “I can’t do this”… and felt like your brain hit a wall? In just a few minutes, we break down the mindset behind that feeling, using a real story (the infamous guitar F chord) and a simple language “hack” you can start using today.
What you’ll learn (fast + practical):
Exam-oriented bonus (IELTS / TOEFL / Cambridge):
This episode builds high-value speaking material for IELTS Speaking Parts 1–3, TOEFL Speaking tasks, and Cambridge B1/B2/C1—especially for:
✅ Your mission: Leave a comment with ONE thing you “can’t do… yet” in English (listening, phrasal verbs, pronunciation, fast movies, speaking under pressure).
Comments help platforms recommend the show, and they help our learning community grow.
Quick recap: Your brain is not static. Your problem is not insurmountable. You are more malleable than you think—so add “yet” and keep going.
00:00 – The “brick wall” feeling (hook)
00:22 – Welcome + meet Martin & Julia
00:45 – The tiny word that changes everything: “yet”
01:10 – Story: learning the guitar and the F chord
01:52 – The identity trap: “I’m not musical” / “I can’t do this”
02:20 – Fixed mindset explained (simple + clear)
02:55 – C1 word #1: static (meaning + use)
03:25 – C1 word #2: insurmountable (meaning + image)
03:55 – C1 word #3: malleable (meaning + science angle)
04:35 – The one-word upgrade: “I can’t… yet”
05:10 – Weekly challenge: catch yourself and add “yet”
05:50 – Listener question: what can’t you do yet?
06:23 – Final message + goodbye
slow english podcast, your english toolbox, learn english, english listening practice, english mindset, growth mindset, fixed mindset, carol dweck, english self confidence, speak english clearly, english speaking practice, advanced english vocabulary, c1 adjectives, static meaning, insurmountable meaning, malleable meaning, use yet in english, identity statements in english, i can’t yet, real spoken english, ielts speaking vocabulary, ielts speaking part 2 ideas, ielts band 7 vocabulary, toefl speaking practice, cambridge b1 speaking, cambridge b2 speaking, cambridge c1 speaking, pronunciation and fluency, natural english expressions, english motivation, learn faster by mindset
💬 We’d love to hear from you!
If you enjoyed this episode, leave a comment, share your thoughts, or tell us how you’re using these tips to improve your English. Your feedback helps us grow and create even better content for you.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By YOUR ENGLISH TOOLBOX5
33 ratings
This podcast is narrated using advanced AI voice technology (powered by ElevenLabs) to ensure consistent clarity, natural pacing, and an easy-to-follow listening experience — especially helpful for language learners.
All scripts are written and carefully edited by real humans, combining expert content creation with voice technology to bring you the best of both worlds:
✅ Human intelligence and creativity
✅ AI precision and clarity
We use slow, natural pronunciation and carefully chosen vocabulary to support learners at every level.
In today’s short, powerful episode, Martin and Julia show you how one tiny word can completely change the way you learn English: “yet.”
Have you ever thought: “I can’t do this”… and felt like your brain hit a wall? In just a few minutes, we break down the mindset behind that feeling, using a real story (the infamous guitar F chord) and a simple language “hack” you can start using today.
What you’ll learn (fast + practical):
Exam-oriented bonus (IELTS / TOEFL / Cambridge):
This episode builds high-value speaking material for IELTS Speaking Parts 1–3, TOEFL Speaking tasks, and Cambridge B1/B2/C1—especially for:
✅ Your mission: Leave a comment with ONE thing you “can’t do… yet” in English (listening, phrasal verbs, pronunciation, fast movies, speaking under pressure).
Comments help platforms recommend the show, and they help our learning community grow.
Quick recap: Your brain is not static. Your problem is not insurmountable. You are more malleable than you think—so add “yet” and keep going.
00:00 – The “brick wall” feeling (hook)
00:22 – Welcome + meet Martin & Julia
00:45 – The tiny word that changes everything: “yet”
01:10 – Story: learning the guitar and the F chord
01:52 – The identity trap: “I’m not musical” / “I can’t do this”
02:20 – Fixed mindset explained (simple + clear)
02:55 – C1 word #1: static (meaning + use)
03:25 – C1 word #2: insurmountable (meaning + image)
03:55 – C1 word #3: malleable (meaning + science angle)
04:35 – The one-word upgrade: “I can’t… yet”
05:10 – Weekly challenge: catch yourself and add “yet”
05:50 – Listener question: what can’t you do yet?
06:23 – Final message + goodbye
slow english podcast, your english toolbox, learn english, english listening practice, english mindset, growth mindset, fixed mindset, carol dweck, english self confidence, speak english clearly, english speaking practice, advanced english vocabulary, c1 adjectives, static meaning, insurmountable meaning, malleable meaning, use yet in english, identity statements in english, i can’t yet, real spoken english, ielts speaking vocabulary, ielts speaking part 2 ideas, ielts band 7 vocabulary, toefl speaking practice, cambridge b1 speaking, cambridge b2 speaking, cambridge c1 speaking, pronunciation and fluency, natural english expressions, english motivation, learn faster by mindset
💬 We’d love to hear from you!
If you enjoyed this episode, leave a comment, share your thoughts, or tell us how you’re using these tips to improve your English. Your feedback helps us grow and create even better content for you.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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