Many of the people that I talk to
about learning Japanese are in the earliest steps of the process.
Unfortunately, most of them have some interesting
notions for what is required in order to learn Japanese, and clearing
up some of those excuses
misconceptions will help the people that really want to learn. This was
originally going to be a single post, but it's turned into a series. This is the third post in the series, click here for the first post or here for the second post.
I want to learn Japanese, but I don't know where to start...
This is a difficult hurdle in the language learning process: taking
that first step. I've tried to make simplified pages and guides to
give a step-by-step procedure for learning Japanese, but in reality
everything tends to happen all at once. You'll be learning kanji as
you learn vocab, and you'll likely have to relearn the kana a lot
during the first few months. It's all connected, so it's hard to learn any one part separately.
However, I have found that one thing in particular is essential –
the most important thing of all, and what you should do as your first
step: Get started immediately. Right now. Just do something.
I think that most people believe that an ultimate method
for learning Japanese exists, and if they just keep looking they'll
find it eventually. They look and look, and look some more, but never
find the ultimate method, and then they get distracted and forget
about learning Japanese for a week or two. When they remember their
desire to learn, they go back to the hunt. The same process happens
again. It makes me sad.
Some nights I just can't handle it... |
What you should realize is that no ultimate method exists,
and looking for it is just detracting from time that you could be
using to learn. Let's face it, no single method will work for every
person, so how could you ever know which one is best for you? Nobody
can tell you what method is best for you; it's something you have to discover through trial
and error. So how can you go about finding the method that will work
for you? By just getting started with something, anything.
Trust me, you'll know if the method isn't for you, and when you come
to that realization you'll have new insight into what method is
for you.
In my own case, I started learning Japanese with Rosetta Stone. I
thought, “Hey, immersion, that sounds cool!” and went on my merry
way in learning. But with the way the program worked, I couldn't
remember most of the words for long – and I noticed that the
program never went back to old material. I found myself repeatedly starting over and redoing lessons. I was getting nowhere.
Then another realization hit me – I was learning Japanese in
romaji, and a quick Google search informed me that real Japanese is
never written in romaji.
"But EVERYONE loves the roman alphabet!" |
After a solid month of studying in Rosetta Stone, I admitted that I
was learning nothing and that I would start again – this time with
the kana. So I found a website with a flashcard teaching system for
kana and began learning. I discovered that I liked learning from
flashcards and example sentences, but I had major doubts: “I spent
an entire month learning with Rosetta Stone before I realized
it was crap, so how can I be
sure that this is real Japanese?”
It was this question that led me to begin reading manga in
Japanese. Here was Japanese written by and for native Japanese
speakers, so it had to be real. In reading manga, I found that
kanji were way more important than my beginning Japanese websites had
told me, so I looked for a focused method for learning them all. The
Remembering the Kanji books by Heisig caught my eye, and I
devoted myself to studying with that method. Ever since then, I have
continued to learn by immersing in real Japanese, and I've always
been guided to what I needed to know.
The kanji for kanji. |
The point of that story is that just by
attempting to learn Japanese and remaining open to new methods I was
able to find the system that worked for me. That's the system I write
about here, and hopefully some of the ideas will work for you as
well. That's really all there is to it: just pick something and go
with it. If you just keep going, you'll find that none of your effort
is ever truly wasted. Improve your methods for learning as you
improve your Japanese.
Photo credits:
All rights reserved by tiffany michele
Some rights reserved by Zen Len
Some rights reserved by japanese-kanjisymbols
Yes, this is very true. I believe most people get intimidated by the apparent difficulty of the language and don't really want to put the effort into learning Japanese. They start to avoid the main subject and rather waste time looking for a ''perfect method'' as you just said, or complaining about the difficulty of learning Japanese.
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