Home Forums TextFugu Advice and Motivation?

This topic contains 3 replies, has 3 voices, and was last updated by  Pierre 9 years, 5 months ago.

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  • #47977

    Airi
    Member

    I have posted my intro in the intro forum. >.< (The CORRECT one!) But, I wanted to know how some of you get your motivation to keep learning, especially for those of you who don’t plan on visiting Japan any time soon but still want to speak it.

    #47982

    マーク
    Member

    If you haven’t started yet, start! Textfugu for me has been very motivating, because everytime you click that ”next” button, a whole new world opens up. After a while you really look back at how much you’ve already learnt.

    A good motivation could be to understand anime series without subtitles (although that’s rather hard). For me just being able to read characters that had been foreign for me all my life is already a huge accomplishment! :)

    猫は可愛いです!
    #47991

    Airi
    Member

    Yes, that makes sense! I think one of the things that has kept me going is how good it is for your brain to learn a new language, too!

    #48034

    Pierre
    Member

    Myself I live in Hong Kong and can’t wrap my head around all their horrible Cantonese/Mandarin, Traditional/Simplified, so at least Japanese, simple to pronounce and learn, makes me do HUGE progress in Chinese compared to before (before was 0 – english only). I can finally impress my girlfriend with all the signs I can recognise, and even some sounds I can say.

    Joke aside, accessing a mysterious culture is great, Japanese people are a bit isolated from the english-speaking world (I’m from France, we are a bit isolated too, since like the Japanese, we don’t speak english much), and being able to read their stuff, understand their spirit, is fascinating !

    I also believe spending a bit of money on it helps, to justify your investment, you continue to learn even when it becomes hell.

    Having learned english for 10 hard years in France, listening to podcasts, watching movies, reading grammar books, turning all my life into a little America, I know it’s very hard to become fluent but oh so rewarding. So if Japanese is your first language, keep up and in a few years you’ll look back with tears in your eyes, living in Japan even maybe, and wondering how you could even have hesitated.

    • This reply was modified 9 years, 5 months ago by  Pierre.
    • This reply was modified 9 years, 5 months ago by  Pierre.
    • This reply was modified 9 years, 5 months ago by  Pierre.
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