Daily English Pod
I’m Jale, an English teacher and graduate in Applied Linguistics from Canada. From Monday to Friday, I share short, practical educational podcasts. On Saturdays, you’ll hear an engaging story, and on Sundays, we explore artistic topics. Like a real magazine, these podcasts cover current issues, culture, society, and history in clear, easy-to-understand English. If you’re interested in learning English and understanding the world around you, this podcast is for you. With me, you’ll not only practice English but also gain a broader perspective on the world.
Daily English Pod
Count your blessings
Gmail adress: https:/jaleqaraqan@gmail.com
For checking the transcript: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2379282
Count your blessings
means to notice and appreciate what you already have, instead of focusing on what’s missing.
Examples:
1- She used to compare herself to others, but now she counts her blessings and sees how much she’s grown.
2- When you feel stuck in English, look back at what you can do now that you couldn’t last year — that’s living in the gain.
Hello and welcome to Daily English, where we learn ideas that help us grow — in English and in life. Today’s concept is one that can quietly change how we see progress — in language learning and in life itself. It’s called The Gap and the Gain.
What It Means
When we measure our success by looking forward — at what we don’t have yet — we live in the gap. The gap is that endless space between where we are and where we wish to be.
And the more we focus on it, the more we feel behind. But when we turn around and look back — to see how far we’ve already come — we step into the gain.
The gain is what we’ve learned, who we’ve become, and every small victory that brought us here. Both the gap and the gain exist in every journey. But peace comes from focusing on the gain.
Our Expression of the Day is Count Your Blessings. To “count your blessings” means to notice and appreciate what you already have, instead of focusing on what’s missing.
- She used to compare herself to others, but now she counts her blessings and sees how much she’s grown.
- When you feel stuck in English, look back at what you can do now that you couldn’t last year — that’s living in the gain.
- The happiest people aren’t those who have the most — but those who count their blessings the most.
Are you living in the gap — always chasing the next goal — or in the gain, appreciating how far you’ve come?
It’s easy to see what’s missing. But real joy begins when we notice what’s already here — and who we’ve already become.