How To Trick Yourself Into Good (Japanese) Studying Habits

You know how it’s hard to quit bad habits? Biting your nails, drinking, eating too many cookies, yadda yadda (sure, you could take it to be the Seinfeld reference if you want)… But I bet you didn’t realize you have a ton of good habits as well. Brushing your teeth (well, not all of you have this), putting away the dishes, going running, etc.

Now, I’m not saying that creating a habit to study Japanese on a daily basis is easy (it’s not!), and that’s why I’ve compiled a few sneaky things that will “trick” you into studying Japanese and getting yourself into a good habit. It all comes down to analyzing what makes habits into habits, and taking advantage of those things so that you can create a habit without actually having a… habit.

Why Look At Habits?

I think you may think the answer to this is self explanatory, but give me an opportunity to try and create a revelation for you anyways.

Now, I’m not trying to get you to form (actual) good study habits. Perhaps that will be the outcome if you try the following techniques out, but that’s not the end goal. I’m only going to try to help you trick yourself into studying by using certain aspects of “real” habits that you can implement on your own. It’s not easy to form a good habit. It is, however, easy to trick yourself into thinking you have a good habit, and if you do it enough it may just become a reality.

Sure, it’d be easy to say “you should study every day” (and I suppose I do say that), but here’s how you’ll be able to get there, one little victory at a time.

Creating Action Associations

Riddle me this, Batman. Is it easier for a smoker to stop smoking on vacation or at home?

Answer: On vacation. Why? Because there are fewer action associations with smoking.

At home, there are so many reminders that the smoker should start smoking. Ash trays, porches, rooms that are particularly good for smoking, etc. Over time, associations are built up. If I see this, I think “oh, I often smoke there… I should smoke a cigarette.” On vacation, however, none of that exists. There are no associations with Smoking & the hotel pool, for example. That’s not to say there won’t be reminders (ash trays, other people smoking, etc), but there certainly are fewer associations like this.

You can trick your mind into doing something like this with your Japanese studies, as well. I do this with my work time. If I’m at the local cafe, it means I work on TextFugu (and nothing else). If I’m not working on something, I try to do it away from my desk. I’ve created boundaries in my life where I force myself to only do certain things in certain areas. Although this won’t work immediately, you can also choose to separate certain things and associate them with certain places (or things). Some examples of what you could do with Japanese studies:

  1. A particular bean bag that you only sit on when you are studying Japanese.
  2. A colored light bulb you turn on only when you study Japanese.
  3. Certain music you play during Japanese study time, and nowhere else (I’d vote Mozart).
  4. A certain part of the house that’s a Japanese study area.

And so on…

The idea is to create associations with things and associate those things with Japanese study (and only Japanese study). Now, this won’t necessarily get you to study (at least, not before you’ve created these associations), so let’s take a look at some other habit-forming trickery that will get you to study. Then, all you have to do is apply this section when you do study and create some action associations. Before you know it, you’ll walk by your beanbag and say, “oh yeah, I study Japanese there. I should study Japanese,” and you’ll become a Japanese studying rock star.

Writing Down Exactly What You Plan To Do

Did you know that if you write down exactly what you’re planning to do you’ll have a 75% higher chance that you’ll actually do it? I’ve used this with all sorts of things, and it works great.

Here’s how you do it.

  1. Figure out what it is you want / need to do (it’s really important that you want to do something. If you don’t want to do it, well, you’ll find a way not to do it, so I can’t help you much there). I’m guessing the thing you want to do is study Japanese, because that’s what this article’s all about.
  2. Get a piece of paper (I’d recommend writing this by hand… there’s just something about writing by hand that makes things feel more solid) and a pen/pencil.
  3. Write down exactly what it is you plan to do. This includes, when you’ll do something (down to the minute), where you’ll do it (one the beanbag?), how you’ll do it (I’ll use TextFugu to learn Japanese, of course! DOI), and what you’ll do (I’m going to study kanji XYZ in this study session).

The more specific you get, the better all this works. When you do this, for some reason you get something special stuck in your mind. When the time comes, you’re way more likely to get out the study tools and get studying. I definitely challenge all of you to give this a try, even if it’s with something else in your life. This trick is incredibly useful.

For me, I use it check e-mail (though, sometimes I’m bad and break this rule). Although I don’t include the “place” in my plan, every morning I decide what time I’ll check my e-mail. For example, this morning I said I’d check my e-mail at 9am, and that’s exactly what I did. Most days I choose a time that’s around 1pm or 2pm, and limit the amount of time I have. So, in the morning I’ll write down: “Checking e-mail between 2pm-3pm today.” Then, when 2pm rolls around, I’m checking my e-mail and I stop at 3pm. For some reason, when I do this, it totally stops me from worrying about e-mail the rest of the day. When I don’t do this, I check e-mail every 30 minutes (definitely a bad addiction).

For you, you could come up with something like this for your Japanese studies:

From 2pm-3pm today, I will sit down at my desk and open up my kanji book. I am going to study the kanji 食, 飲, 県, 急. I will learn the on’yomi and kun’yomi of them, as well as three common  vocab that use each one of those. At 3pm I will stop studying and go do XZY.

See how incredibly specific that was? The more specific you can make these, the more likely you’re going to actually do them and follow through. Doing this essentially creates a fake habit in your brain. Really, all habits do is tell you what you should do and when you should do it. By writing down exactly what you’re going to do and how you’re going to do it, you’re tricking your brain into thinking this is something you always do in this place and at this time. It’s really great brain hackery, if you ask me.

Give this a try and let me know how it goes for you!

Writing Down What You Won’t Do

Just like the previous section, this one also involves writing things down. The difference is that you’ll be writing down the things you don’t want to do. There’s only so much time in a day, and there’s always a lot of things competing for your time. You can use the techniques in the above section to come up with things you won’t be doing during the day as well. This leaves more time for other things (like studying your Japanese) and will allow you to focus more effectively when you do start studying Japanese.

Things I sometimes add to my not-to-do list:

  • No checking e-mail except during e-mail checking time
  • No Google Reader (this week, this day, this month, etc).
  • Check Twitter only during lunch time
  • Don’t listen to music while I’m working

And so on. Think of the bad habits you have. Now, write out your not-to-do list. This will trick your brain into thinking you don’t really do those things (or, at the very least, you’ll get an alert in your head the moment you try to do one of these things, and it will say “hey, you said you weren’t going to do that,” so you have time to stop yourself).

Make The Road Easier

Really, when you think about it, habits are habits because they’re really easy to do. Well, they’re not necessarily easy, but at the very least you think they are. They’ve become so ordinary and regular that you go on autopilot when you’re completing these habits. Do you really think about brushing your teeth every night, or do you just kind of… do it? I’m guessing it’s more of the latter. Habits are pretty darn easy to do as long as you actually have those habits. That’s the difficult part.

One thing you can do, however, is make the things you want to be habits easier. For example, if you want to create a good habit to exercise every morning, you should put your exercise clothes out and ready to go the night before. This little thing make sit just a little bit easier to exercise when you really don’t want to early that next morning. Perhaps you could pack your lunch the night before so you have more time. There are any number of things you could do to make the “dreaded” act of exercising easier on yourself, which means you’re likely to do it more often, which means you’re more likely to turn it into an actual habit.

With Japanese, you can do the same thing. A little prep goes a long way. Here are some ways to make Japanese study easier, which in turn will help you make Japanese study into a more regular habit.

  • Decide exactly what you’re going to study next at the end of your previous session.
  • Stop studying when you feel most motivated to keep studying
  • Start reading about what you’re going to study next the day before. Just a little bit, like five minutes will do. This will make it so you’ve already started, and starting is always the hardest part. The next day all you need to do is continue where you left off from your mini study session.
  • Put out the flashcards you’re going to learn tomorrow today. Put them out on their own, though. This is a lot less daunting than putting them on top of a huge stack.
  • Put some paper and pencils/pens out, all ready for studying so you don’t have to do it tomorrow.

Do you notice a pattern in some of these? A lot of them have to do with planning ahead and knowing what you’re going to do the next day. With habits, you always know what you’re going to do next. it’s autopilot, after all. Japanese studies is one of those things where you have to learn something new every day, which makes it much harder to form a habit around. If you take an extra five minutes at the end of every study session and decide exactly what you’re going to do next, you’re making studying the next day 100x easier on yourself. With habits, they’re easy to do because you know exactly what to do. So, with Japanese studies, you’re making habit-forming a lot easier if you figure out what you’re doing next before you actually do it.

What Are Your Tricks?

There has to be a bunch of habit-forming hacks out there that you’ve used and love. Share your secrets in the comments and help others trying to study Japanese, too! :)

P.S. You should make a habit out of following Tofugu on Twitter

P.P.S. Don’t you think your friends need to form better habits too? You should “like” this article by clicking the like button below to share it with them.

  • Jrhoadley2003

    Don't you mean it's easier to stop smoking on vacation rather than harder?

  • http://twitter.com/jyuichi jyuichi

    That confused me too….

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    whoops, yep, that's what I meant. Fixed now, thank you!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Jrhoadley2003 is a smart one, you should listen to him. haha. Fixed now.

  • Andrew

    I keep my kanji flash cards at the head of my bed, so before I go to sleep, it's exremely easy to go over a few kanji (or more than a few). It's turned into a nightly ritual.

  • http://twitter.com/XtcJamie Jamie

    I almost thought only I studied in a bean-bag with a grey colored light bulb while listening to Mozart.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    hahaha

  • Shaquara

    “A place for everything and everything in its place.” I hated when my dad said that to me because he just wanted me to clean my room. But I can see he's right in a lot of ways because lately I've been trying to figure out how to carve out little spaces in my life for all those good habits that I've been struggling to form. This article has definitely helped and given me a few ideas. The best thing to remember is that base programming language for your brain involves all the senses and that includes the internal ones. Good Japanese studying memories should be documented somehow. If you don't have pictures to put up in your Japanese studying area maybe if you have a little journal where you've written down all the good Japanese related times and that you only read in that area.

  • http://twitter.com/Gxcad Ken S.

    To prevent dishes from piling up, I almost always clean one that is dirty right before using it, instead of grabbing a clean one from the cabinet.

    Of course, you COULD just buy only 1 dish…that works too.

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    haha, that sounds awfully philosophical!

  • http://twitter.com/lessa_md Lessa Hime

    When I studied for the Boards I had an entire room I called the “Bat Cave” exclusive for studying. I had a wall where I wrote the entire diagram for all the biochemical cycles I needed to memorize. I'd put tiny post-its shaped like medical tablets to indicated where a certain drug would act upon, and other post-its shaped like lightning to indicate where diseases start. It was crazy, and fast paced of course, but it worked. Haha.

    Great article. I think I should start listening to you and apply this now that I have to study (again) for hospital applications. Haha!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    Oof, studying for hospital applications sounds terrifying. Good luck with
    that!

  • Imrb

    Sorry to ask, but I signed up for the Tofugu newsletter a couple of weeks ago and haven't received an issue yet. I'm guessing that either my submission didn't go through properly or the newsletter is discontinued (the normal subscribe to the newsletter in the PPS is now replaced with an prompt for like this article). Or I'm just reeeeeeeaaaaaaaaallllllllly impatient :) . So anyway, in short my question is: “Why aren't I receiving my newsletter”

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    It's because I only write them when I have something good to write! Be
    patient! :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/ltsiros Luciano Tsiros

    My trick is that I love the Japanese language so much, that I don't need extra motivation :D

    I could use some more planning and organization though. I will work on that.

  • Mikeybruv

    I noticed you make one little typo. No big deal but I figure it's better to correct it than not to!
    Press ctrl + F and search for “make sit” It needs to be changed to “makes it”

    Very interesting to read though! I learnt a lot here.

  • http://www.google.com/profiles/derived.su スチイブン

    Thanks Koichi!

    This has definitely assisted me in creating a study schedule and having good learning habits.

  • http://cnandbolts.wordpress.com/ Crowbeak

    I'm going to argue that writing down things you won't do is less helpful than you think, unless you phrase it right. For some reason, the human brain is inclined to gloss over words like “don't” and “won't”. Maybe it's because we hear them so often that they become just points of grammar, like punctuation marks.

    Anyway, for example: let's say a kid, Timmy, is playing with his Nerf guns in the living room, near the family's sleeping pet dog, Floofy. Mom sees this, and is concerned about Timmy waking the dog. She tells Timmy, “Timmy, don't shoot Floofy.” Now, Timmy had no intention of disturbing poor Floofy, who's getting old and has trouble seeing and needs 20 hours of sleep a day. But his brain failed to process the word “don't” very well, so the idea of shooting Floofy grew from idea to a full-on assault within a couple of minutes.

    In short, Mom unintentionally planted the idea of shooting Floofy in Timmy's head. A better way to phrase her instructions would have been something like, “Leave Floofy alone, she's sleeping.”

    There are a number of ways to rephrase things you won't do in wording that actually outlines what you will do to prevent doing the thing you want to avoid. Here are some examples:

    “I will not sleep in late.” –> “I will wake up at 6 AM.”
    “I will not go to bed until I finish studying for my test.” –> “I will study the material from chapters 9 & 10 from 11 to 12 PM, THEN go to bed.”
    “I will not overeat.” –> “I will have only one hamburger and a handful of chips.”
    “I will not cry during the show.” –> “I will refrain from crying until curtain call.”

    As you can see, all of the alternate wordings are more specific and help formulate a plan for how you will achieve the positive goal behind the negative will nots.

    The last of those examples is one I've used. I was in The Sound of Music this past spring, and it was one of the best experiences of my life. I was extremely sad when it ended, and I had to keep reminding myself during the last performance that crying during the show would be decidedly unhelpful. What nun can sing with her throat closed up? Not this one, for sure. Everytime I wanted to tear up, I reminded myself that I would refrain from crying until curtain call. (And as soon as the lights came up after the final “Climb Every Mountain”, I cried like a baby.)

  • Pingback: Article: How To Trick Yourself Into Good (Japanese) Studying Habits « Sydney Uni AV Language Library

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  • http://www.facebook.com/Mesqueeb Lucas Van Ammel

    Yarrrr!
    Mister Koichi,

    This post inspired me to finally start organizing my days again. With the vacation I was going downhill, wasting my days on games (in English). xD

    I want to make a really organized schedule. Where I can write down my goals for each day / each week / and month. It should also be an agenda to organize what I do each day from what until what hour.
    Handwritten seems difficult to use if plans move from day to day, and you can't access it everywhere.
    I used Google Agenda a lot, but I think it misses a lot of things. Do you, or anyone here knows anything good?
    Thanks!

    Fair winds,
    -Mesqueeb

  • http://www.facebook.com/Mesqueeb Lucas Van Ammel

    Yarrrr!
    Mister Koichi,

    This post inspired me to finally start organizing my days again. With the vacation I was going downhill, wasting my days on games (in English). xD

    I want to make a really organized schedule. Where I can write down my goals for each day / each week / and month. It should also be an agenda to organize what I do each day from what until what hour.
    Handwritten seems difficult to use if plans move from day to day, and you can't access it everywhere.
    I used Google Agenda a lot, but I think it misses a lot of things. Do you, or anyone here knows anything good?
    Thanks!

    Fair winds,
    -Mesqueeb

  • Trinatownsend25

    Koichi-san! Thank you for the inspiration! I always start forming good habits and then I stop doing them. Hopefully I start these habits before school starts so Japanese class will not be as difficult.

  • http://www.facebook.com/vesa.piittinen Vesa Piittinen

    I've been depressed and spent a lot of time working my way out of it – on my own. It's been about four years when I figured out what I had. Anyway now that I'm out of it (even if it is always a continuing project) one thing that I have noticed is that I haven't been able to get back into some things. This article may be the clue that I just haven't noticed: habits. Compared to what kind of a “superhamster” I used do be in coding productivity I haven't been able to keep it up for various reasons.

    So now I guess I'm going to put this little thing in my head and figure out a pattern that will make me do more of those things that I actually want to get done instead of doing the things that are the easiest to get into. As you may understand from the start of this message I've already been doing a lot of brain hacking to get at this point… and I will keep doing so.

    Thank you very much.

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  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_RIVQEUHYNDL7KPNZWDUIIQASH4 John D

    Thanks for all the information and advice.

  • http://twitter.com/lloydantony Antony Crisp

    straight after class every day, i go to the tatami room in my college's asia studies building, bust out the laptop, and use smart.fm for an hour or two. Doesn't feel like study at all, and it really supplements what i've just learned. I can't study at all at home. Far too many distractions.

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  • Beryl

    I like to listen to my favorite Japanese music to motivate me.
    But the thing is after I study for more than 30 minutes, I tend to burn out and my words and memory get fuddled.
    Anyone else notice this? Any strategies?

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  • http://twitter.com/Kyotocutie Richelle T.

    After reading this article, you may want to reconsider setting aside a place or environment for studying Japanese: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/09/08/earlyshow/living/parenting/main6845277.shtml

    I can kinda see how this would be true. If you only study in one place, your brain might learn you only need to be able to retrieve it in one place. Not good!

    I noticed someone in the comments also said that after studying for a while they get burned out. Good news! This article says spacing out your study is better (if 30 minutes is too much, how about 15 minutes now, and 15 minutes in an hour? )

    Please read the whole thing for other ideas you may want to apply to your learning! がんばって!

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_32VXKX2RLJRO25BNTRG4KIHNJU T Fe

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    === http://www.2kuu.com ======

  • Areckx

    I have a bad habit of sitting at the computer/tv/videogame-thingy for too many hours a day, so in order to combat this, I gave myself this rule:

    If you are going to play a videogame or watch a movie BY YOURSELF, it HAS to be in Japanese…

    Although sometimes it’s good to keep your English in check… and that’s why I save English for works from my favorite authors (Orson Scott Card, J.K. Rowling) and the bible of course…

    Then I got into the Japanese bible… HARD STUFF, NOT FOR THE FEINT OF KANJI, errr HEART!!!

    [http://www.biblica.com/bibles/japanese/index.php]

    And of course I have stuff in spanish strewn about the house in case I get bored… Spanish bible is beautiful.

    Please note that while I have my own faith, I recognize the bible as the greatest book ever written in literary (as well as spiritual) terms, but I am not pushing my faith onto anyone here.

    GREAT BLOG!!!!

  • Areckx

    Oh, and this actually made me watch MORE stuff, because now I’m so eager to get as MUCH JAPANESE AS I POSSIBLY CAN EACH DAY!!!!

    o_O;

    It’s not too bad, I just need to keep things in balance. I need to exercise and eat right because I’m diabetic.

    Sometimes it’s okay to sit back and relax with Japanese dubs of The Simpsons and watching movies with Japanese subtitles…

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=3610633 Michael Vladimir Nicolayeff

    I keep lots of Japanese study material on my iPod Touch, and pull it out whenever I’m idling or waiting for something.

    My main set is Anki, Tae Kim’s Grammar Guide, and “Japanese” (dictionary with some nice features. kotoba is a good free one).

    Just by studying whenever waiting for things and a little at night, I’ve easily been able to do an average of 300 flash card reviews per day for the last 4 months.

  • sweavo

    Google is your friend, or in this case, Mikeybruv’s friend.