@misc{10481/112703, year = {2026}, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/10481/112703}, abstract = {Interpreting demands more than advanced cognitive skills: interpreters must follow and reformulate speech in real time amid fast delivery, variable accents and disfluent, non-ideal input. Yet training often relies on slow, standardized speech that encourages a narrow focus on semantic decoding and leaves students underprepared for the turbulence of real-life language use. Drawing on phenomenological accounts of language and mindfulness-based body–mind training, this chapter proposes an embodied pedagogy of listening centered on the preverbal stages of speech perception. Through short mindfulness practices and an adaptation of the Jean Georges Ernst Method, students learn to attune to rhythm, timbre and acoustic texture before moving to lexical and propositional meaning. The aim is to loosen the tightrope of idealized input and help future interpreters ride the waves of spoken variation, reclaiming human listening as a core professional competence in an age of AI-mediated language processing.}, publisher = {Frank&Timme}, keywords = {Mindfulness}, keywords = {Interpreting training}, keywords = {Embodied listening}, title = {Loosening the Tightrope: Mindfulness, Phenomenology of Language an Embodied Listening in Interpreter Training}, author = {Serna Martínez, Elisa}, }