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  • Hello. This is 6 Minute

  • English from BBC Learning English.

  • I'm Sam. And I'm Neil.

  • There are a million songs about falling in love and just as

  • many about being broken-hearted. Do you remember the first time

  • you fell in love, Sam?

  • Ah, yes. I was 14 and it seemed like every word of every love song

  • had been written just for me.

  • Well, there's a strong connection between music and love -

  • as Shakespeare famously wrote,

  • "If music be the food of love, play on". In this programme,

  • we'll be meeting a singer-songwriter who used music to express her feelings

  • of falling in love, and

  • later to mend her broken heart when the relationship ended. And

  • as usual, we'll be learning some new vocabulary as well.

  • But first, I have a question for you, Neil.

  • Your mention of Shakespeare reminds me of Romeo and Juliet,

  • his famous lovers who fall in love,

  • despite their fighting families only to die tragically young.

  • But in which Italian city was Romeo and Juliet set?

  • Was it a) Florence, b) Venice or c) Verona?

  • I think it must be one of the world's most romantic cities: Florence.

  • OK, Neil.

  • I'll reveal the answer later in the programme. Julia

  • Jacklin is an Australian singer-songwriter

  • whose song, 'Don't know how to keep loving you' reached number eight

  • in the Australian pop charts. Her song lyrics

  • explore feelings of falling in love, as well as the pain of breaking up.

  • Julia's songs are written from experience. Several years ago,

  • she quit her banned in Australia and bought a one way ticket to London

  • to be with her boyfriend and soulmate -

  • the person who she felt a special romantic connection with.

  • But things didn't work out as she'd hoped

  • and she found herself alone and working in a depressing job.

  • Julia turned to music, pouring her feelings of lost love

  • into the songs which later became her first album as a successful musician.

  • So when BBC

  • World Service programme, The Conversation, spoke with her,

  • they asked Julia, what she would tell her younger self.

  • The one thing that was just very heartbreaking for me at that age

  • was kind of adult cynicism.

  • I guess. About love.

  • I found that really difficult. You know, now

  • when like a young person is like really in love at 14,

  • I know that as an adult, all your instincts are telling them

  • to like, you know, that it's probably not going to work, you know, and that

  • like, just relax or whatever,

  • but I remember at the time just desperately wanting

  • to be validated by adults and not be told that I was being stupid.

  • I don't know, I'd probably just be like

  • "Yeah, go for it."

  • Many teenagers have a romantic ideal of everlasting love, often in contrast

  • to the beliefs of adults, which Julia calls 'cynicism' -

  • the belief that something will not be successful,

  • or that the people involved are not sincere.

  • The young Julia wanted to feel 'validated' - to get confirmation

  • that her feelings were worthwhile and valued.

  • She wanted someone to tell her 'go for it' - a phrase used to encourage a person

  • to do whatever it takes to make something work.

  • Young love is delicate and it's easy to be pessimistic.

  • I mean, how many couples do you know,

  • Sam, who met as teenagers and stayed together for the rest of their lives?

  • I don't know many, it's true.

  • Neuro-scientist, Doctor Lucy Brown

  • is co-creator of The Anatomy of Love - a website

  • exploring the science of romance.

  • She thinks we need to be more realistic about falling in love,

  • as she explains here to BBC

  • World Service's The Conversation.

  • I wish someone had said, you know

  • love is wonderful. Yes, go for it.

  • But heartbreak happens.

  • You know, and maybe this isn't going to last.

  • Maybe it is, but maybe isn't, and

  • just realise that it can be one of the most devastating experiences

  • in you're life. But

  • you're going to get over it.

  • Doctor Brown thinks it is important to know that

  • relationships can end in 'heartbreak' - feelings of great sadness

  • as if your heart is broken -

  • especially after the end of a romantic affair.

  • But she also wants young people to know that, whatever happens, they can 'get

  • over it' - feel better again after something has made them unhappy.

  • Falling in love is one of the great experiences in life

  • and developing the strength to face whatever happens

  • makes it more likely that the story ends happily.

  • Unlike the tale of Romeo and Juliet.

  • I think it's time to reveal the answer to my question, Neil.

  • In which Italian city does the story of Romeo and Juliet take place?

  • I said it was Florence.

  • So, was I right?

  • Well, Florence is a romantic city.

  • But the correct answer is Verona.

  • Verona was little-known in Shakespeare's time, but nowadays,

  • thousands of tourists visit the sites connected with the story,

  • including the famous balcony where Romeo declared his eternal love.

  • OK, let's recap the vocabulary we've learned.

  • Starting with 'soulmate'.

  • The special person who you feel a strong, romantic bond to.

  • 'Cynicism' describes the belief

  • that something will not work out successfully.

  • If you are 'validated',

  • you get external confirmation that your actions, ideas

  • or feelings are worthwhile and valued.

  • You can use the phrase 'go for it' to encourage someone

  • to make whatever efforts are necessary to get something done.

  • 'Heartbreak' describes feelings of great sadness as if your heart is broken.

  • And finally, 'to get over something' means to feel better again

  • after something has made you unhappy.

  • Once again, our six minutes are up,

  • but there's time for one more famous saying,

  • and I think it is good advice:

  • 'Better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all'.

  • Bye for now. Goodbye.

Hello. This is 6 Minute

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A2 初級 美國腔

Can music mend a broken heart? - 6 Minute English

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    Kerry 發佈於 2022 年 12 月 07 日
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