Timeline
January 2004 Started with a CD course-- Oxford Take Off in Japanese.
Found an adult class that started in
April. (difficult to find courses that start at times other than September). Spent the time before it started teaching myself kana mainly and slowly working through CD course.
The Japanese course is taught through Japanese. Interesting.
September 2004Started writing to someone in Japan (Does wonders for my reading)
September 2005 Took my knowledge on the road with a solo visit to Japan. Well I can survive as a tourist. Be understood and understand enough to get fed, get around and deal with hotels.
October 2005 Started another email correspondence to Japan.
December 2005 took JLPT4
and here I am after 2 and a bit years and 3 years worth of evening classes. (150 hours or so, one third of the way into Japanese for Busy People)
Study
Well, I try to do something each day. aiming for 30 mins to consolidate what I'm learning in class. but I'm a bit scattergun in my approach and interests.
I use
iFlash to try to get vocabulary to stick.
I use paper flash cards and repetitive writing out to learn kanji.
Sunday mornings and Wednesday evenings I spend more time.
Now with Jpod 101 I listen to these walking to work.
I fill dead time at work with Japanese study.
Ability.
Compared to the languages I learnt at school Irish (13 years!!) and French (5 years) I feel I have more ability in Japanese. Probably because I've invested more of myself in it and aren't being compelled to learn it. (Teaching methods have changed and are much more focused on speaking rather than writing languages these days)
Speaking. Slow. I still think in English translate and output. In class I'm ok; outside of class -- Japanese people just won't keep to the script! and as they usually have excellent English so I/we get lazy and revert quickly to English. I also know very few Japanese.
Reading. Slow. Getting better. online with Rikai I can deal with most things and lately I need Rikai less and less. I still even find children's books beyond me in print. I'm slowly working through a Totoro picture book using a dictionary.
Writing. I enjoy kanji and use them whenever I can, even if I'm just copying them. Always use furigana so I can read them back!. I can write maybe 150 or so from memory. With a pen not a computer. Using a brush is too difficult I find.
Listening. also hard. I'm tuning in more and more. The problem is picking out what is important. And finding material that is suitable to my level (thanks jPod101!) I've reached the stage where I can criticise subtitles sometimes. "That's not what they said!!" But if I turn subtitles off I can only really follow films I'm already familiar with.
Future.
I can see myself never giving up. I would love to do a full time course or to study and live in Japan but I can't afford to. (Something I should have done at 18 when I had less responsibilities or something) Hopefully I will be functionally fluent someday. But in the meantime I just plug away at it with what time I can find.
-- There are many roads to nihongo satori
The important thing is to learn and take enjoyment in what you are doing rather than be fixated on how you are doing compared to other people.
In Kyoto behind the Ryoanji where the famous rock garden is I found a tsukubai (drinking fountain) that has a very clever inscription on it that the temple translates as
"I learn only to be contented" Which is nicely ambiguous. and I choose to read it as the only reason to learn is for your own contentment. (whereas the author may have have been encouraging people to learn how to be content) --
(I really like this inscription I have a little quicktime of how it works
here )