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6 Week Challenge Recap & What’s Next

A personal blog post – and what happens if you set your goals too low.

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Read More or Die (+ 1st Quarter Stats)

Okay, so it has been way too long since I updated. I spent several weeks battling a nasty flu, and then scrambling to get some Dutch studying in, in order not to make a fool of myself at the Leuven language festival. On the down side, because of that flu I only managed 70 hours. On the bright side, Dutch is so freaking easy for a German speaker that even putting in 70 hours was enough to be able to have any everyday conversation in Dutch, to understand 95% of Dutch books or Dutch TV news and 90% of Dutch soap operas or movies. The language festival finally did go well, feedback for my lecture was good, I attended lectures on Sinhala, Tshiluba and Czech and I had some nice conversations in Dutch with people on the side. I also took the chance to buy Dutch, French and Chinese books.

After the festival, I got sucked into the new 三国 TV Series, which is loosely based on the “Romance of the Three Kingdoms”. It’s not a romance at all, it’s about history and chivalry, and it’s considered one of the “four great classics” of Chinese literature. Considering how much literature has come from China, making it into eternal memory as one of the uncontested top 4 has to count for something, so I recommend anyone to have a look. Either way I’ve been watching a lot of Chinese video with Chinese subtitles and it’s helping. About a week ago, while hosting a Couchsurfer from France (yay French practise!), I first noticed a Chinese voice in my head. That is, whenever I was mentally phrasing something, the Chinese translation would pop into my head without any effort of mine. Before, I always had to translate and carefully plan anything I wanted to say in Chinese. This is a major milestone!

I believe I may have overdosed on vocabulary study for Chinese. Following my success bringing my character level up to 3000 in a single year, I’ve been religiously using Anki for Chinese, and I’ve taken weekly classes online with a private teacher. During class, we spent half an hour working with the Boya Chinese textbook and half an hour in free conversation. I do not think that I’m presently getting enough exposure though, especially when it comes to things modern people might say (as opposed to phrases that can only be used by time travellers, which I’m learning from 三国).

This is why I’ve decided to participate in the “Read More or Die” aka Tadoku challenge this April. It’s very simple: read as much text in your target language(s) as possible for one month and try to outdo the other participants in number of pages read. You can participate even if you know that you won’t place near the top; this is just a way to utilize your competitive streak for motivation. Time is running out to register – if you think you can out-read me, sign up quickly!

My stats from January 1st until March 31st:
49 hours of French
109 hours of Mandarin
2 1/2 hours of Greek (hope to remedy that)
8 hours of Swahili (need to work on that too)
70 hours of Dutch
1/2 an hour each on Italian and Arabic

Good news: I’ve already almost reached half of last year’s time spent on Mandarin and 1/3 of last year’s time spent on French. Very happy with that. Bad news: I really wanted to spend more time on Dutch and on my maintenance languages.

In April, I will focus on reading Chinese, Dutch and Greek. I may start dabbling in Spanish, because Spanish is next on my list of beginner languages to learn. I also absolutely have to squeeze in at least one month of Listening-Reading for Russian before July because I’ll be going to the IJK in Kiev and I want to see how far Listening-Reading can get me.



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