Why I study 6 foreign languages recreationally

I must begin by admitting that I’m not really a polyglot. I’ve only mastered English. I’m not even brave about using my foreign language skills with friends or strangers. My brain is piping up with answers, but my cowardly lips remain zipped.

I have been a passionate fan of the very idea of language study since childhood, however, and I dabble in a few world languages. I wish, in a theoretical way, that I could speak with every person in the world. I know. I can be a little sentimental.

In high school, I studied Spanish (four years.)

In college, I took classes in Spanish (one more year), German (one year), and Japanese (one semester.)

Outside of academia, I’ve studied Russian (6 weeks at the Boston Language Institute) and Biblical Hebrew (synagogue based adult class), plus I’ve self-studied most of the above and also French. I’ve worked to learn at least a few common and helpful phrases in both Icelandic and Catalan before specific trips. I like to be a polite visitor.

I also avoid traveling without the ability to speak sentences I’d be too embarrassed to mime. I usually begin by memorizing, “Where is the toilet?” I’ve never visited any country without at least learning please, thank you, and hello. I also try to keep at least one exclamation of delight on the tip of my tongue: ¡Qué maravilloso!

Buy why else have I spent so many hours over so many years on this exercise when I have nothing concrete to show for it since good grades on a transcript decades ago?

I can feel my brain stretching

I’m a full-time, stay at home parent, so there’s no monetary gain. Then again, I’m a full-time, stay at home parent, so the intellectual workout ranks right up there as its own reward. Especially when my children were very young, and their care was so mind-numbingly boring, even listening to nursery rhymes in another language offered mental relief from feed, burp, change, repeat (and, occasionally, sleep…)

When I’m really working at integrating  new language into my working vocabulary, I can feel my brain stretching. I’m probably not the only nerd who thrills from the act of intense learning. Like the high that comes after aerobic exercise, there’s an emotional payoff to brain fitness. It’s also nice to imagine your brain looking better in a swimsuit getting healthier after each session.

Languages are inherently interesting, complex structures

Studying a romance language, for me, at least, was fun and interesting, but nothing like the kind of mind-blowing revelation that Japanese presented. I’m no linguist, either, so I can’t explain this deeply, but everything from sentence structure to word classes was, frankly, foreign. Learning even a little Japanese was like re-learning how to think.

Never in my life have I taken a more difficult, more stimulating, more thrilling class than my one semester of Japanese immersion at Cornell University. At the end of every session, I felt like the hero(ine) walking into the sunset behind the credits of an action movie. Victorious, and exhausted.

I’m forced to reconsider things I thought were obvious

Even when studying languages much more familiar—the short words in German, and the long words in the Latin-based romance languages—I find it delightful to make connections across cultures. Some modern words are obvious candidates for cognates. The world is so small and interconnected now, it’s hard to imagine new words like “computer” not carrying over into languages other than English.

But I loved discovering the word for “furniture” was so similar between Spanish (mueble), German (Möbel), and Russian (мебель)—they all use consonant sounds M-B-L with vowels appropriate to the target language. Most Russian vocabulary up to that point had been so strange. It made me reflect that the very notion of owning enough household stuff to require a collective name for it could be modern. Or perhaps the idea to name that stuff came from western Europe, or the people with better stuff adopted a name from the west so the word caught on with social climbers… I’m not sure. I don’t even know if the word is older in Russian as opposed to western Europe. I sure enjoy pondering the possibilities.

And, in Japanese, the color ao means all color shades of blue to green.* That stopped me in my tracks. Color is a spectrum, isn’t it, and at some point, we decide where the stopping point is between one shade and another. But I hadn’t thought of that before. Japanese taught me that.

I could go on and on about compound nouns and meanings within my own language that only became obvious to me after I recognized some interesting facet of a word in a foreign tongue, but the point is made and my zeal for this topic probably exceeds the bounds of decency.

Making an effort is the only way to combat entropy

There’s a running joke in our family that my husband’s most hated nemesis is entropy.

I think it is accepted knowledge that mental acuity is a use it or lose it thing. That’s the exercise analogy I used earlier. I believe the battle against entropy goes even deeper than that.

Making an effort, struggling to do better, learning something new, improving communication in the smallest way… every one of these things is a creative act. Creation is the opposite of entropy. Creation is an inherently positive act.

I learn in order to make the world a better place

I learn to make the world a better place, though my small efforts may have only infinitesimal effects.

I can live with that.

*There is a modern Japanese color word for green, which I believe was introduced only after World War II when Western influence became significant during the Occupation. There are also extra color words for various shades, including some of blue and green, like we have navy and royal (blues) or spring vs. hunter (greens.) You’ll want to follow up with someone much more knowledgeable than I to get the full story on Japanese color words.

10 thoughts on “Why I study 6 foreign languages recreationally

    • Thanks for the kind words. You deserve them more if you are fluent in both Chinese and English. 🙂 One of the gifts of I’ve found of getting a little older is dwelling less on external validation and focusing more on my true goals. I don’t learn languages to show off or get approval. I’m studying for myself, and for joy!

      • I’m biased towards Japanese, so I am a little sad that you only had one semester of classes, but I’m very happy to hear that the Japanese class was really something! Will you dabble in Japanese again in the near future? (Or are you currently still working on it?)

      • I literally said to my husband two days ago, “Why don’t you get invited to Japan? I really want to go there.”

        He’s a scientist who is invited around the world to speak. (He’s invited far more often than he has time to travel.)

        Usually, my studies coincide with some reality in my life and plans. I started German because we were going to visit our former exchange student after I graduated college (and now my son studies German, so it remains important.)

        I learned a little French when I joined my husband in the French speaking part of Switzerland. We also traveled several times to Montreal in Canada.

        My mother is fluent in Spanish, so I grew up with that one. It is also often heard in many parts of the US.

        Hebrew, I started for religious reasons; Russian, I began to study when I met my husband and wanted to know if his friends were talking about me!

        Japanese is perhaps the only language I began strictly from interest. I do intend to do more someday, but some event will probably need to bump it up to top priority!

        I’d like to learn to read Egyptian hieroglyphics, too, and do some Latin, and ancient Greek…

        You see, I’m a dilettante!

      • What an insight to your language studies! It’s amazing how many languages are somewhat necessary to you and coincide with your plans. My studies of Japanese and Korean are out of pure interest. I also tried to pick up Spanish previously since it’s very widely used in the world, but I couldn’t feel the bond with it… Maybe I’ll try again after I’m done-ish with Korean. Egyptian hieroglyphics sounds REALLY cool, and I love Latin as well. I am suddenly reminded of the time when I tried to learn Na’vi after watching Avatar xD Oel ngati kameie.

        Well, if you ever need help with any Japanese learning, you know who to look for! 😀

        PS: I hope your husband gets invited to Japan soon!

      • Sigh. I want to go everywhere and understand everyone. I never will, but it does motivate me.

        It’s amazing how people respond when you use even a little of their language, though. Like you’re offering a gift. And, I suppose, we are: that of our time and attention. 🙂

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