Making Japanese Obvious [Obvious]

Okay, fine, so that’s a picture of Captain Hindsight and not a picture of Captain Obvious, but it’s still sort of the same meessage: In order to know Japanese, Japanese has to be Obvious to you. D’uh. That’s pretty obvious itself, right? I think the really interesting question, though, is how to get to this point. Sure, you could say you want to “learn Japanese” but what does that mean? I think it means you want to get to a point where the Japanese language is “obvious” to you… where even when you look at something you don’t quite know yet, it’s “obvious” what the meaning is. The real question that’s on most Japanese learners’ minds, though, is this: How the #$@! do I get to this point? How do I make Japanese obvious?

That Is So Obvious!

I should have known that big square thing was up to no good…

A few months ago I read an article titled “You Don’t Understand Something Until You Think It’s Obvious.” I’ve had a little time to mull on it, and I’ve been finding more and more examples of why this is important with Japanese learning (and not to mention any other language as well).

In the above article, Bassett talks about math and programming, but a lot of it is applicable to Japanese as well. I’d say the main point of his article is that when you’re learning or doing something (in his case math or programming) you struggle with a bunch of little things and have a bunch of little epiphanies until you reach the point where things are “obvious.” When things are “obvious” you can look back and be like “oh, jeepers, that was easy. I should have been able to do that much more quickly” (yes, I am assuming you talk like Shaggy from Scooby Doo).

The idea is that there’s a lot more to learning something and getting to the point where it’s “obvious” than meets the eye. To most people, it seems like a bunch of random actions leading up to the “obvious” result (if you even manage to get here at all, to be honest). The more I think about it, though, the more it seems to me that there are a lot of things all Japanese learners share with each other in terms of their journeys to “learning Japanese.”

On the other side of the spectrum, there are also a lot of things that a lot of people do that actually hurt their quest to make Japanese obvious. Like, a lot of things… not to mention really big picture things that can make or break the end result for you. I want to cover these things too, so that you run into fewer walls that could potentially end your Japanese learning career.

After realizing all this, I started writing one big “Making Japanese Obvious” post where I talked about all these different things. Then, I got to the 1000th word and was only about a tenth done. That’s when I decided I ought to break this post up (this here is part one).

So, over the next couple months I’ll be posting about “Making Japanese Obvious” in an attempt to help you to reach that beautiful peak yourself. A lot of the info actually parallels what I do in TextFugu, but now I’ll be writing these crazy learning theories out so that you can all benefit from them in at least a sort of abstract sense while you’re studying Japanese on your own. Either way, I hope it’s going to be incredibly helpful.

How We’ll Make It Obvious

I have probably 7-10 posts worth of content in my head around this subject, and I’m hoping to get it all up in the next one to two months. I’ll be posting at least one of these “Obvious” tagged posts every week (possibly more, though we’ll see) and they’ll all come back to the central theme of how to “Make Japanese Obvious.” Why? Because when it’s obvious, you know it. The hard part (and the part we’ll be covering) is the whole “how to get there” portion of things.

So, mull on that a bit. Over the next few days, think about things you think of as “obvious.” How did you reach that state? It might seem like magic… but there were certain things you did to get there. What are you good at? What did you have to do to make it obvious? How can you apply that to other things in life? Noticing little things like this that are normally hidden can really give you a boost – that’s exactly what I hope to do with Japanese learning for you with these “Obvious” posts. Because the more you know, knowing is half the battle…

[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bsoKMKq0qHU']

See you soon, obviously.

  • Will Markey

    I think Koichi is the best thing thats happened to 日本語 in the west ever. The only thing cooler than him is the language itself. 

  • Hailey

    I love this concept of “obviousness”. Can’t wait to see what all you’re going to post about it!!!

  • アントン

    NICE POST!!! I always find your posts the most 「勉強になります」and useful!
    Thanks a lot!

  • アントン

    Really looking forward to this “series”!

  • mushi27

    … that… that video… smh

  • Michael

    No, the only thing cooler than Koichi is… Hashi (and the language of course).

    TROLOLOL

  • http://www.tofugu.com/ Hashi

    You take that back! ;____;

  • Anonymous

    “You Don’t Understand Something Until You Think It’s Obvious” – That article was a rather good read. Nice little motivation igniter for those times when we are learning Japanese [or any other subject] and we can’t quite make it click.

    As the TextFugu せんせい have said before, though, “Consistency is the key.” And yup, I can definitely concur that consistency really pays off. Whether it is in the short run or the long run, you’ll definitely get there if you keep going.

    (Just had a though…)
    You know the rockets that we launch into space? Those have to crawl at a horrible pace (about 3-5mi/hr.) just to get to launch pad. Once there, after a T-10 countdown, they go shooting off into space at an incredible speed. This is kind of like the “dip” which is mentioned in TextFugu. Once you pass that point where you feel like you’re crawling, you grasp things quicker, and like the rocket you go blasting off… (metaphorically of course!)

    ~ fv

  • Jahgoreds

    Obvious Japanese is obvious….

  • John

    ಥ_ಥ

  • John

    ಥ_ಥ

  • John

    ಥ_ಥ

  • Justinpskeen

    It’s like hacking though a jungle with a machete . The only time you’re going to see a trail is when you look back on the ground you’ve already cleared out.

  • Anonymous

    I wanted to chime in with more thing…

    Let us not forget that in Bassett’s article, he talks about Math and Programming, in language, however, things might have a mixture of meanings (as we, Japanese learners, are all beginning to see). Math and to some degree programming are pretty set in stone, meaning there is a right or wrong, hardly any maybes… those are reserved for theoretical propositions generally.

    I am a programmer myself, 10 years now, so this post really hit the spot for me, it made sense because I get what Bassett was talking about. But also, I am a native Spanish speaker and proficient in Portuguese. Everyone is different but I believe that me knowing another language(s) is what helped me more than anything. Why? Well because from the first minute I logged on to TextFugu I realized that In order to learn Japanese I have to NOT think in English nor in Spanish etc. I have to not only learn Japanese but I have to learn the train of though that goes with it.

    I have found more similarities in Japanese to Spanish than to English… why that is, I don’t know. But they exist and they are helpful at times, but not all the time.

    This is a great post, Koichi. Thanks to you and your team for providing these tidbits of information. 

    ~ fv

  • Kiriain

    When I first scrolled down to the video and saw the title. I was thinking “… How appropriate is this?”

  • http://www.facebook.com/Zerokeemu Kim McInally

    Looking forward to this maybe it will help get me back on track my perfect routine has been blasted out the window by college and Im freaking out.

  • Jeffery Krasko

    I couldn’t agree more! freaking college. why must you interfere so often!?!?

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