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  • Eat Sleep Dreamers welcome to a very special English lesson because today I'm going to

  • introduce you to my sister. I am super excited. So I'm visiting her at the moment. She lives

  • in the beautiful English countryside and we went for a walk and had a really lovely conversation.

  • And we were talking about our childhood memories so things that we used to do in the past that

  • we don't do anymore and I thought what a great opportunity for you guys to listen to some

  • really natural English conversation. We don't change our accents, we don't try and slow

  • down for you guys. This is really natural British English so listen to us put the subtitles

  • on, ok? If you need a bit of help add the subtitles and yeah I just hope you enjoy it.

  • Eat Sleep Dreamers how are you? Welcome, you might notice I'm with someone. I'm with my

  • sister. Hello. This is my sister Anya or Annie as I like to call her. So I've come out here

  • to the countryside where she lives. We're going for a walk, it's absolutely beautiful

  • around here. The green trees, the leaves, the grass, beautiful British countryside.

  • So we were talking about our childhood memories and I wanted to share that with you guys.

  • Now one amazing thing I remember about visiting Grandma was that she'd make this amazing chocolate

  • pudding and chocolate sauce. I mean that was. The best dessert ever! It was amazing. And

  • she never gave us the recipe. No. And she denied that it was the best dessert ever and

  • even that she used to make it but we used to think it was amazing. Yeah she'd make it

  • for us every time we went there and yeah she never gave us the recipe which we are very

  • upset about. Eat Sleep Dreamers really quickly check out the field here, look at this. English

  • countryside. And a telephone line as well yeah. So yeah Grandma used to cook some amazing

  • food and I think maybe that's one thing that you notice or that you remember as a kid about

  • visiting your Grandma or your Grandfather is just the cooking. What else did she used

  • to cook for us? Lemon chicken. That was amazing and just traditional English food. British

  • food. Roasts and I was going to say lasagna. Lasagna, traditional English food like lasagna.

  • Lamb chops! Lamb chops yep with mint sauce. She was a great cook. Yeah pork chops, she

  • was a great cook.

  • Another memory that I've got is when we were naughty. When Annie and I were naughty our

  • Mum used to give us television bans. Oh huge! Yeah, that was the worst and you used to say

  • 'well I don't care anyway' and she'd go 'ok well that's another day then' and we'd be

  • like 'I don't care about that either' 'right well that's another day'. Oh no! I used to

  • hate that. So yeah, so a television ban. So you'd done something naughty and Mum would

  • say right no television for one day and as Annie said suddenly if you said I don't care

  • then you'd have two days and it would grow and it would just be awful. Yeah and thing

  • is nowadays television ban, I mean my kids don't even really watch tv, you know it would

  • have to be an iPad ban. They would hate that. They would hate that. Some kind of device

  • ban. Yeah. But yeah TV they'd be like seriously whatever. Yeah, we don't care. That was awful.

  • That was the worst and then you know there was that one time that you. Dad was telling

  • you off and he said Thomas come down the stairs and you got yourself dressed up fully in Knight's

  • gear with your wooden sword and you descended the stairs to take on Dad and you made him

  • laugh so much that he forgot what he was angry about. But I was really serious, I was like

  • furious. Yeah of course you were. I was going to attack him. But that's what made it so

  • cute you were only about four. Oh we're going in here. It's so quiet here Eat Sleep Dreamers.

  • Not like in London where it's really noisy. It's so quiet I love it. One day we'll get

  • you out here. I'm not sure, I'm not sure. Move away from London, come and join us and

  • the birds. I could live in the countryside. Yeah for about a day. For a day then I've

  • got to go back to London. Yeah.

  • So do you remember Tom? Every summer we used to spend in Broadstairs? I do, I do yes. Six

  • weeks, we'd pack our bags at the start of the summer, get on the train from Victoria

  • and travel down. It took us two hours because it was a slow chug chug train in those days.

  • A chug chug train, interesting English there Anya! Chug chug, I guess it kind of means

  • a slow train, right? Yeah, it chugged along, it didn't speed along, not like now. And we'd

  • arrive by the sea in Broadstairs in our little cottage and spend the summer just living like

  • little urchins in a t-shirt and a pair of shorts and we'd have all our meals on the

  • beach. Picnic lunches, eggy rolls and then in the evening we'd have a bbq and then fall

  • in to bed absolutely exhausted and wake up in the morning ready for some more fun. Very

  • simple, simple life. Yeah, every summer just the same thing and remember we used to go

  • crabbing. So there are rocks by the beach and you'd go and try and catch crabs which

  • are sort of shellfish? Yeah crustaceans. Crustaceans yeah, and we'd try, we used to try and catch

  • as many crabs as we could and one year we got so many and we gave them names. Barnacle

  • Bill. Lairy Larry. Lairy because he was angry. Yeah, it means angry. So we would catch these

  • crabs and then release them and I remember we used to scream so loudly when we released

  • them because they'd try and like. Catch your toes. Catch you, yeah. And our Mum could hear

  • us screaming from the beach. She'd be sitting in a deckchair on the beach and we'd be miles

  • out on the rocks and she'd be able to hear us scream and know that we'd released the

  • crabs. Amazing!

  • So another fun at the beach activity was the great wave game, do you remember that one?

  • Yeah we used to play this really super fun game where we'd run away, I've forgotten how

  • we play it. So a big wave comes rolling in and you have to run from one spot to another

  • on the beach but as close to the tide line as possible without it getting your feet wet.

  • Yeah that's right. And as the tide came in it got harder and harder so sometimes we'd

  • play it up against the beach wall so we literally had nowhere else to go and this wave would

  • come in and we'd run and if we got our toes wet then we lost so the wave won. And we also

  • used to play the great ball in the sky game. Oh that was a fun one. When our Dad used to

  • stand on this sort of raised platform and hit a ball up in to the air and we had to

  • catch it. There was about you know how ever many of us, a couple, four or five people

  • and if we caught it then we'd get the point and if we miss it he'd get the point and whoever

  • got to ten first won the game and that was always really exciting. I love the way that

  • everything, it used to be the great wave game, the great ball in the sky game. Nothing could

  • ever just be kind of you know low key. It had to be the biggest, the best, the greatest.

  • Yeah, exactly and that did make it extra special being like 'we going to play the great ball

  • in the sky game.' And I remember dad mentioned it in his wedding speech when I got married,

  • he stood up and did a speech and he mentioned the great ball in the sky game and all our

  • friends who used to come to Broadstairs came running up saying your dad mentioned the great

  • ball in the sky game. They loved it! Yeah it was very memorable. I think it's a game

  • that we should continue to play with. We'll move it through the generations definitely.

  • So when we were kids and we had lots of, I just remember birthday parties as children.

  • Yeah. Bit kitchen table filled with children, miscellaneous children, dad getting his guitar

  • out. So our dad used to play the acoustic guitar for all the children and he'd sing

  • these songs, just amazing, like so much fun when you think about it. And he put together

  • a party tape so we'd sing things like Nellie the elephant packed her trunk and went off

  • to the circus. Do you want to sing that for us really quickly? And we also used to have

  • like little mini discos. He used to be a dj, didn't he? Yeah, back in his cooler younger

  • days. Well yeah when he was cool and young. And so he'd play songs like Agadoo. Ohhh so

  • pretty. Countryside! So yeah, I just remember as a kid just dancing and singing and eating

  • chocolate cake. Yeah that was basically your childhood. Yeah, you remember it well. I'm

  • a little bit older Eat Sleep Dreamers. You can't tell though, right? That was a terrible

  • laugh.

  • Guys, how was that? I hope you enjoyed it. Now what I'd like you to do is in the comments

  • below I would like you to try and write a sentence using used to or would telling me

  • about your past habits, ok? So something from childhood, a childhood memory that you have

  • that you can use. So maybe it's something like 'My grandmother used to make the most

  • delicious food' or 'Whenever I went to school I'd always want to sit in the red chair.'

  • Whatever it is, ok? So any childhood memory you have try and use used to or would, out

  • it in the comments below and I'll check it and I'll comment and make sure that it is

  • grammatically correct. And yeah I'll come and say hi and we'll have a little conversation.

  • Ok, so think about your childhood memory then put it into the comments below this video

  • and yeah I'd love to se it and love to have a chat with you. Alright guys, thank you so

  • much for hanging out with me. If you have enjoyed this, please give it a thumbs up,

  • share it with anyone you know that is trying to learn English and yeah if you would like

  • another one, another conversation lesson then please let me know as well. Alright guys,

  • thank you so much for hanging out with me this is Tom the English Hipster and you know

  • what time it is. It's time to take your English to the next level.

Eat Sleep Dreamers welcome to a very special English lesson because today I'm going to

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