Daily English Pod
Daily English Pod is a space for learning English beyond grammar and textbooks.
During the week, you’ll learn practical vocabulary, expressions, idioms, and real-life English, the language people actually use in everyday conversations, emotions, and work.
On weekends, we slow down. Through ideas from psychology, philosophy, and real human experience, we explore language as a way to better understand life, emotions, identity, and growth.
This podcast is created by Jale, an English teacher with 13 years of teaching experience and a Master’s degree in Applied Linguistics from Canada, who teaches with patience, clarity, and care, and believes learning works best when students feel seen, respected, and safe to think aloud.
The goal is simple but meaningful: to help you understand English deeply, use it confidently, and connect it to your real life. English here is not just a skill. It’s a gentle companion for clearer thinking, honest expression, and deeper human connection.
Daily English Pod
The good old days
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The good all days
We use it when we remember a time that seems happier, simpler, or more peaceful than now.
Example:
She often talks about the good old days at university —
the friendships, the freedom, the late-night conversations.
But she forgets how anxious she felt about the future
and how unsure she was of herself back then.
Hello and welcome to a weekend episode of Daily English — where we try to grow, in English and in life.
I chose today’s topic especially for the weekend. Because weekends are when many of us slow down… and when we slow down, we often start looking back.
We think about the past. About earlier versions of ourselves. And we hear this thought quietly appear: “Life was better back then.”
There’s a reason this feeling shows up so strongly — and it has a name in psychology.
It’s called rosy retrospection.
Rosy retrospection means that our brain remembers the past as better than it actually was.
Over time, memory becomes selective. It keeps the warm moments and slowly fades the stress, confusion, and uncertainty.
The present feels busy, unfinished, demanding. The past feels complete.
And the brain prefers what feels complete.
That’s why the past can look so attractive — especially when the present feels heavy.
In everyday English, we often talk about this feeling using the phrase: “The good old days.”
We use it when we remember a time that seems happier, simpler, or more peaceful than now.
But often, we’re not remembering the full picture.
An examples
She often talks about the good old days at university —
the friendships, the freedom, the late-night conversations.
But she forgets how anxious she felt about the future
and how unsure she was of herself back then.
Here’s something important to remember: The good old days often feel good not because life was easier — but because that chapter is finished.
The past isn’t asking anything from us anymore. The present is.
And unfinished things always feel heavier than finished ones.
So this weekend do you find yourself missing the past? If yes, be gentle with yourself please
You’re not failing at the present. You’re just human — remembering selectively.
And maybe, one day, you’ll look back at this time and call it the good old days too.
Thank you for being here today. See you tomorrow.