How This Guy Learned Fluent Japanese by Age 21 | Method Breakdown

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024

Комментарии • 404

  • @storylearning
    @storylearning  3 года назад +86

    Enjoy this? Here's a similar story about fluent Mandarin Chinese: ruclips.net/video/dMSxPvECMck/видео.html

    • @Laerciokatsuyatatsuya
      @Laerciokatsuyatatsuya 3 года назад

      traduza

    • @gordonbgraham
      @gordonbgraham 2 года назад +2

      I'm not sold on Matt's method. I mean I've lived in Japan for 30 years. I can honestly say it took me 5 years to be conversational, 10 years to be fluent and 15 years to be literate! Let's concede that everyday I experienced "comprehensible input"...Matt is clearly an exceptional student.

  • @mattvsjapan
    @mattvsjapan 3 года назад +1263

    Awesome job Olly! This was really fun to watch. I think you portrayed my journey accurately and it was interesting to hear your analysis of the factors that went into my success with Japanese

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +143

      Thanks Matt, you're an inspiration!

    • @Aditya-te7oo
      @Aditya-te7oo 3 года назад +24

      @@storylearning Absolutely, he IS an inspiration.

    • @LittleThingsinJapan
      @LittleThingsinJapan 3 года назад +23

      I seriously think Matt is an inspiration for all the Japanese learners around the world 👍

    • @zerothehero123
      @zerothehero123 3 года назад +4

      Thank you Matt for your insights and story! The biggest thing for succeeding in a language is having that aha moment of knowing you're going to push through till the end. It became a self evident desire for me, and now the discipline doesn't feel hard at all. Still have a long way to go in Japanese, but the journey is the destination. At first my motivation was like yours, infatuation with a culture, but now it's people!

    • @harrypotty5643
      @harrypotty5643 3 года назад

      on the same path Matt grinding on music watch a bit of anime while I work small study lot each afternoon. slowly build

  • @porkysugrim
    @porkysugrim 3 года назад +369

    I'm almost 2 years into studying Japanese, I'm primarily following Matt's methods but I tweaked them to work with my schedule. Learning Japanese is like trying to fill up a lake using only a bucket of water at a time. It seems almost impossible at times but as time goes on the water (progress) really starts to build up and it's the moment when you see your little progress that gives you a little more kick of motivation to keep going

    • @Real_Genji
      @Real_Genji 3 года назад +23

      Great analogy. My analogy was digging a massive hole. In the beginning it seems like you're making absolutely no progress and ur working super hard for no progress. But if you keep up the pace, eventually you'll find yourself head deep in the hole and be like "wow, that's a big hole"

    • @porkysugrim
      @porkysugrim 3 года назад +5

      @@Real_Genji 2 months later and still at it. Almost wanted to quit a few more times but luckily the feeling of quitting is worse than the feeling of not improving fast enough lol We can do this!

    • @Real_Genji
      @Real_Genji 3 года назад +11

      @@porkysugrim I started learning japanese about 4 years ago and I would quit after only going in for a few weeks because I was using other methods. Had I kept going from then I would have been fluent, and that's what motivates me NOW to keep on going and going. I've been learning for a month straight now and I'm making tons of progress

    • @cevcena6692
      @cevcena6692 3 года назад

      Care to share your sched?

    • @OutcastYBJ
      @OutcastYBJ 2 года назад +5

      Apparently it take about 3 years to learn Japanese and even then u still have so much more to learn and also that’s only if u dedicate a lot of your free time to learning it I’m 16 I’m having by age 19 I’m able to speak it good enough to to understand and fully communicate with a native Japanese speaker

  • @willbethereforyou8044
    @willbethereforyou8044 3 года назад +339

    I'm almost 34 year old,I'm learning japanese and let me tell you guys,age doesn't matter,determination does matter!

    • @Matthew-fj6eu
      @Matthew-fj6eu 3 года назад +38

      YOU CAN DO IT RANDOM PERSON ON THE INTERNET!!!

    • @notcyfhr
      @notcyfhr 3 года назад +8

      @@Matthew-fj6eu lmfaoooo yes you got this random dude

    • @jayuppercase3398
      @jayuppercase3398 3 года назад

      Why are you learning it?

    • @dogma8538
      @dogma8538 3 года назад

      hell yea!!

    • @coremitsi922
      @coremitsi922 3 года назад +3

      @@Matthew-fj6eu And I love you, random citizen.

  • @MikhaelWebb
    @MikhaelWebb 3 года назад +546

    Apparently learning Japanese also made Matt's hairline better. Night and day difference over 5 years

    • @bigbobabc123
      @bigbobabc123 3 года назад +10

      Propecia

    • @luna1515
      @luna1515 3 года назад +52

      He's speaking the language of the gods after all

    • @karifurai8479
      @karifurai8479 3 года назад +56

      he said it's just as bad but he just grew out his bangs

    • @futurez12
      @futurez12 3 года назад +24

      What does his hairline have to do with anything? Is this just a way to have a dig at someone who has been successful?

    • @MikhaelWebb
      @MikhaelWebb 3 года назад +70

      @@futurez12 Just an observation. Not sure why you would construe a compliment as an insult, but okay...

  • @IkennaLanguages
    @IkennaLanguages 3 года назад +474

    Great vid Olly! Matt's story is super interesting! Can definitely relate to finally watching anime at 15 years old in Japanese dub for the first time and feeling captivated by the language!

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +31

      That's awesome! Thanks man.

    • @charliebaker1427
      @charliebaker1427 3 года назад +2

      Its funny im a big fan of anime but cant stand watchimg it in Japanese meanwhile i adore watching hololive

    • @johncowen8798
      @johncowen8798 3 года назад +15

      That video he did exposing youtube's fake polyglots was specifically targeted at only you and no-one else at all

    • @marxiewasalittlegirl
      @marxiewasalittlegirl 2 года назад

      Same

  • @foreverlearningfrench
    @foreverlearningfrench 3 года назад +242

    I appreciate that it took him 5 years to become fluent. It makes me feel better about my journey to fluency in French. It helps me to have a more realistic goal.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +68

      Yes! There’s no “fluent in 7 days” around here!

    • @FingtamLanguages
      @FingtamLanguages 3 года назад +12

      And it also terrifies me about how long it will take me to learn Thai! 😅

    • @foreverlearningfrench
      @foreverlearningfrench 3 года назад +2

      @@FingtamLanguages MDR ! Hang in there!

    • @user-if7fr6or6h
      @user-if7fr6or6h 3 года назад +11

      Pretty sure he was fluent in 3 years but not super good. People from ajatt/mia/refold/djt community get fluent around 2~~3 for asian languages it seems (the community is still young) and there are people better than matt that are not making videos. For european languages people are outputting pretty well in about 18--24 months but it's to be expected. Because they sentence mine, their passive vocabulary is super high too.

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 3 года назад +3

      @@user-if7fr6or6h Yea he's saud there are better because they've been doing it longer. But he said that it took him five years to get so fluent. He mentions that he's never met anyone that reached his level in only five years. That's fast for a native english speaker.

  • @tensaimontv
    @tensaimontv 3 года назад +284

    I basically followed Matt's advice starting 3 years ago: I was listening to five hours of podcasts per day, and only reading in Japanese, and I got to the point where I'd occasionally find words or phrases I'd never sai before falling out my mouth - sometimes I'd wonder if it was right or not, and go check the dictionary - it invariably was. Admittedly I already had a solid foundation (I'd been in Japan twenty years already) but doing immersion made a massive difference and helped me break through the plateau I'd reached. Still a long way to go to native-like (honestly: I realize I'll probably never quite get there) but I read novels and newspapers and watch Netflix, all with only minimal dictionary use. Incidentally in my forties with a job and family, so you don't need to be a teenager to make it work.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +32

      That’s awesome Simon!

    • @tensaimontv
      @tensaimontv 3 года назад +2

      @Rei Ren haha sorry! But my point is that Matt's advice still made a huge difference, I wish I'd done it at the beginning!!😂

    • @mlc4495
      @mlc4495 3 года назад +1

      @Rei Ren Right?! 🤨

    • @Laerciokatsuyatatsuya
      @Laerciokatsuyatatsuya 3 года назад

      isso ai

    • @Laerciokatsuyatatsuya
      @Laerciokatsuyatatsuya 3 года назад

      @@tensaimontv pior eu que não entendo ingles

  • @nendoakuma7451
    @nendoakuma7451 3 года назад +159

    He seems pretty realistic. He's not making exaggerated claims and he admits that his approach might have been a little too extreme. Seems pretty self-aware. I like it. Seriously, spending your whole day studying languages every day might be fun, but it's not necessarily a good thing in the long run.

    • @birjisafroz8886
      @birjisafroz8886 3 года назад +12

      It isn't doable for many as well. Still impressive

    • @based9930
      @based9930 2 года назад +1

      "He seems pretty realistic. He's not making exaggerated claims"
      Unlike Olly, who is a fraud.

    • @baronmeduse
      @baronmeduse Год назад +1

      @@based9930 So is MvJ. Plays down the fact of ever being in Japan. Lots of liars in the online language world.

    • @based9930
      @based9930 Год назад +2

      @@baronmeduse Matt lies a lot, but I don't think his being in Japan for 6 months matters. Tons of people have lived in Japan for decades and can't speak any Japanese at all. Another liar is Ken Cannon, there is no way he got that good watching anime in his room. Same with Khatz. Both of them clearly grew up around Japanese being spoken around them regularly.

  • @TheFiestyhick
    @TheFiestyhick 3 года назад +88

    One of the better approaches out there. I also respect that he doesn't make false claims or exaggerate stuff.
    The people in his community have pretty realistic expectations of what is required to attain fluency, unlike a lot of these gurus promoting gimmicks

  • @adamlasry1691
    @adamlasry1691 3 года назад +86

    To learn a language you need to be 1. Motivated, 2. Put in few hours a week to consistently practice, 3. Speak , listen, watch tv and don’t give a hoot about making mistakes...with perseverance and dedication anyone can learn anything. As a Moroccan, I learnt English in 2 years (from zero to fluent). I’m now learning Hindi at 50 years old. My trick is simple: I read a lot of kids’ books in the language I want to learn. I listen to radio and TV, etc. Nowadays, with RUclips and audio books, it is much easier to learn anything - if you find the time!
    If I this can motivate someone to pick up that foreign anguage book, then I will be happy. I do speak French, Spanish, Italian (learnt in my teenage years) and can read and understand German...BUT to me the most beautiful language is my own language: Arabic. Poetry in Arabic is divine...in Persian too, to be fair -=)

    • @sk8_bort
      @sk8_bort 3 года назад +2

      Arabic seems absolutely impossible to learn.

    • @adamlasry1691
      @adamlasry1691 3 года назад +6

      @@sk8_bort Hombre! No digas esto! Sabes que el español tiene miles de palabras de origin árabe... conozco a engleses que hablan árabe. Cuestión de dedicación y tiempo. Imposible no existe...Ánimo, tío! De un maroqui que habla más de 5 idiomas! Ojo! Tengo 55 anos y estoy aprendiendo el hindu! Imposdible no existe in mi diccionario...

    • @sk8_bort
      @sk8_bort 3 года назад +2

      @@adamlasry1691 Es cierto que el español tiene miles de palabras de origen árabe, pero el sistema de escritura del árabe parece muy difícil. La verdad es que todos los marroquíes que he conocido hablaban muy bien español incluso llevando muy poco tiempo en España. Gracias por la motivación!

    • @adamlasry1691
      @adamlasry1691 3 года назад

      @@sk8_bort De nada. Ánimo. Hay gente de Corea que aprenden el árabe...un desafío intelectual. Con el tiempo...Saludos.

    • @tokkieram
      @tokkieram 3 года назад

      I really needed this comment bc ive been feeling bad bc my way of studying japanese is different from these who are fluent, bc my english came most of watching series with my native language sub (brazilian portuguese) and studying at school i become almost fluent. From this day, i will study japanese on my way, i will study grammar, watch tv shows, radio, podcast, books or whatever, but the most important is if i am feeling good with that.

  • @giornogiovanna3139
    @giornogiovanna3139 3 года назад +37

    I started when I was 14, now I am 16. I hope to be very fluent by 5 years as well.

    • @bungeegum1369
      @bungeegum1369 3 года назад +2

      I'm 17, and I picked up on alot of loose vocab but it's worth it honestly, keep practing input and any song lyric try pronouncing even if you screw it up it doesn't matter you're learning! Keep it up ❤️

    • @pazu2222
      @pazu2222 2 года назад +6

      @@bungeegum1369 I'm 19, and I've quit gaming and stopped hanging out with my University friend (on discord) to do this hardcore Japanese just like what Matt did.

    • @bungeegum1369
      @bungeegum1369 2 года назад +2

      @@pazu2222 I'M SO PROUD OF YOU KEEP IT UP :))))))) and if you want to we can be study buddies!!! :))))

    • @keidanekeith668
      @keidanekeith668 2 года назад +1

      @@bungeegum1369 I'm 15, I'm so passionate on French. I'm self learning, I can read quite an amount but I'm not on the level I want to be. Hopefully I'll be back here in a year or 2 with good news

    • @chevvvv
      @chevvvv Год назад

      how's it going?

  • @kdakaisa6668
    @kdakaisa6668 3 года назад +27

    Does anyone else have the problem of learning about learning but not actually doing anything?

  • @AskTetsu
    @AskTetsu 3 года назад +60

    Just darn stubborn. I know a guy like that. I see him in the mirror everyday. Bravo Matt!

  • @perryfrancis7640
    @perryfrancis7640 3 года назад +21

    Brilliant, this young man gets it. I loved the comment about having conversations multiple times. I keep several tutors just for that reason alone, it's very effective to be able to repeat yourself or a story multiple times without driving a single listener crazy. :)

  • @konkyolife
    @konkyolife 3 года назад +5

    Great to see a young guy focusing his energy like this.

  • @asupoyopoyo6081
    @asupoyopoyo6081 3 года назад +40

    His Japanese is definitely at the native level. His commitment for perfecting the language is amazing. This is such a inspiring session

  • @Mitch_Crane
    @Mitch_Crane 3 года назад +39

    日本語上手

  • @ClowdyHowdy
    @ClowdyHowdy 3 года назад +42

    I've spent the past 9 months following a similar path as Matt but for Korean, and I wouldn't have it any other way.
    Also, I've recently started reading your korean stories book and it's led to a lot of progress in solidifying all the basic grammar and common vocab. I'm familiar with most things in the book, but having a concentrated focus at an easier level without more complex grammar is really helping the transition to more native reading material.
    So thank you for releasing a great book.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +5

      Thanks so much, and keep it up!

    • @laciruela7772
      @laciruela7772 3 года назад

      Hey Clowdy, I see you a lot on the refold discord lol

    • @jonbacon6664
      @jonbacon6664 3 года назад

      Any suggestions with books? I want to read Spanish books but don’t know where to start. Cheers

    • @atta4786
      @atta4786 3 года назад

      Hi cloudy!!!

    • @pranavraja9045
      @pranavraja9045 2 года назад

      ITS MY FAVORITE KOREAN IMMERSION LEARNER ON RUclips

  • @ShavosBlackJacket
    @ShavosBlackJacket 3 года назад +10

    I'll let myself take a break from immersion to listen about the homie Matt :). He's taught many of us so much.

  • @dianeh2481
    @dianeh2481 3 года назад +20

    That is exactly what I did to learn English. I am originally from Romania and I hated English taught in school, but when I moved I was forced to learn it. I spent 3 months without talking to anyone but just listening and learning words and phrases. Therefore after 3 months when I started highschool I was able to converse and write essays. Yes my grammar needed some work but I was able to have a full conversation and be understood by others around me. That was only when I was 15 years old... now I am learning Korean and still doing it the same way :) and wish to study it in college next year !

  • @futurez12
    @futurez12 3 года назад +19

    The thing I've learned about doing it this way is that it's one thing to think/plan/aim to do it... It's a completely different thing altogether to actually _do_ it. It requires an unbelievable amount of passion and dedication.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +6

      Indeed. Just think about how much your priorities change over the span of 5 years... and to keep it up amid all of that.

    • @futurez12
      @futurez12 3 года назад +5

      @@storylearning Yeah, that's quite something. The odds of staying the course, whilst maintaining that kind of intensity... It's mindblowing, honestly. Just the intial couple of years alone; staying immersed in something you understand so little of for those first couple of years must've been something close to torture. It's all very well finding things of interest, but even things of interest lose their interest when you can't understand them, lol. Just nothing but the highest respect to anyone who manages to see this approach through to fluency, particularly in a language so far removed from any other language/s you already know.

  • @danielcook1271
    @danielcook1271 3 года назад +7

    I LOVE the language learning community on RUclips. So inspiring. I've been learning German now for two months and have learnt more in two months than I did in the 3 years I studied it at school.

  • @mauroboros8566
    @mauroboros8566 3 года назад +8

    I don't regret taking Italian in high school, but I wish I could've started learning Japanese back then too. But I'm starting now! Better late than never

    • @CBR_squid06
      @CBR_squid06 3 года назад +1

      I hope it’s going good 2 months later 👍

  • @jsbart96
    @jsbart96 3 года назад +9

    This gave me renewed motivation for pushing on with Spanish. Thanks :)

  • @luketruman3033
    @luketruman3033 3 года назад +27

    This is a really interesting video, you and Matt both have a lot of great work! Keep it up. Be interesting if you do a breakdown for AJATT seeing as both xiaoma and Matt used that as the basis for their methodology when starting out

    • @k.5425
      @k.5425 3 года назад

      Hope he sees this comment. Would love to see a video like that. Following this series breakdown

  • @dr.corneliusq.cadbury6984
    @dr.corneliusq.cadbury6984 3 года назад +7

    I watched a few of his videos and (though he doesn’t seem to emphasize it) I got the sense that he did do a fair bit of book type studying since he said he was studying/memorizing word etymologies and stuff like that. And he seemed to be intimately familiar with several different dictionaries and reference works.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +6

      Yes, but I get the impression this was Self-directed and based on satisfying curiosity. Dictionaries are a great way to get more input in and of themselves.

  • @tomatrix7525
    @tomatrix7525 3 года назад +2

    That’s actually a HUGE point. Bottom line is not giving up. Those who succeed aren’t necessarily effective learners, and while the combination of determination and effective learning lends likely to a faster pace of achieving your fluency, if you don’t ever give up, basically regardless of how slow your progress is, once you’ve progress being made at all , and continue for long enough, you will inevitably achieve any given level.

  • @vasilisa2241
    @vasilisa2241 2 года назад +3

    I followed the same input-based method (however I didn't know it was a thing) when I was learning English. Now I'm advanced in it. Moreover, I work with the US market, managing business communication in English every single day. I'm Ukrainian, 22 y.o.

  • @dmaxwell2123
    @dmaxwell2123 3 года назад +7

    If there is gonna' be an anime about language learning, Matt's story is the perfect basis.

  • @Acolytemedia
    @Acolytemedia 3 года назад +3

    Really liked your video man. Also i love the fact that you actually do understand Matts method very well. I think its quits easy to brush off inmersion learning and dismiss it without understanding it fully. Ive seen a number of videos where people are just like "this is too extreme and completely unhelpful" and not really dissected the process. Ive been learning Russian with this method (not as crazy extreme but definitely very high levels of input) and its insane how quickly your conprehension grows. I think the thing that peopld dont give this method credit for is just how great people's comprehension gets doing this method. Ive seen lots of language learners who say they are fluent but im pretfy sure would get immediately lost in a real conversation or watching a movie without subtitles. Anyhow really good video and you've earned a sub :)

  • @bangkokadventures298
    @bangkokadventures298 3 года назад +8

    I've' been watching him for a long time now. You and Matt are my go-to sources as far as language learning goes.

  • @richardconejo5460
    @richardconejo5460 3 года назад +10

    Great channel. I've just started my Japanese learning journey (2 weeks) and I've been watching various videos such as yours and others about acquiring a language. I've joined Tandem and HelloTalk and made a few japanese friends, with one in particular meeting on scheduled basis. Watching netflix with no subtitles, I just need to get going on the reading.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +2

      It’s the start of a wonderful journey, good luck!

    • @Adrian-TJ
      @Adrian-TJ 3 года назад +1

      You should watch with subtitles as a beginner! Gl!

    • @richardconejo5460
      @richardconejo5460 3 года назад +2

      I thought the general view was to have them off. At this stage I can pick out certain words and hear the patterns. I'm relying on the images to make sense of what's going on, which is about 1/3 of the time.

    • @tommyfletcher1357
      @tommyfletcher1357 3 года назад

      Put japanese subtitles on. I think it helps a lot

  • @videogamerka0009
    @videogamerka0009 3 года назад +5

    Honestly Matt is like my numer 1 language mentor on YT. I also want to get super fluent in one language like him. It's rare to find, usually language RUclipsrs focus on quantity.

  • @imwortyoflove369
    @imwortyoflove369 3 года назад +6

    Matt is famous! His English sounds very natural!!! 😮 Awesome!! ✨✨

    • @k.5425
      @k.5425 3 года назад +1

      😂😂You know english is his native language right? Matt is an American.
      It's talking about how he learnt Japanese...

    • @imwortyoflove369
      @imwortyoflove369 3 года назад

      @@k.5425 Oops!! What I wanted to say is “His JAPANESE sounds very natural!!!” 😅🤣🤣 My bad. Lol 💦

    • @nfrankiksa4596
      @nfrankiksa4596 3 года назад +1

      @@imwortyoflove369 😆

    • @user-qh7rw5gy5i
      @user-qh7rw5gy5i 3 года назад

      Lol he's just that good that you mistaked him for a Japanese person learning English

  • @SkaterStimm
    @SkaterStimm 2 года назад +4

    I have a similar experience to Matt, I studied Japanese in High school and college, actually got a minor in it. However I focused too much on textbook Japanese, and reading/writing and not enough on listening and speaking. I can understand most written Japanese, I have a high level of Kanji and vocabulary, but my listening is so poor that I have trouble conversing with people. Now I can do the same thing Matt can did where he has a scripted response to blow Japanese people's minds. "hi are you Japanese?", then go and start speaking Japanese to them and answering their questions as to why I was interested, but my Japanese listening ability was so limited that I couldn't do much more after that. I spent 2 weeks in Japan and I immersed myself and believe it or not my Japanese listening improved tremendously during that time, I almost would have a headache at the end of the day because all I did was listen listen listen. I completely regret not doing more Japanese listening practice (kikitori/ 聞き取り) because like Matt said this is 100% the most important part of learning, and it gives you the same experience a baby/child would have learning their native language. Recently I have been forcing myself to do listening practice but I really struggle trying to find material that interests me at my level. For example most N4/N3 listening excerizes are the most boring content imaginable and the interesting stuff I want to listen to is way to hard, and N5 is way too easy. Satori Reader seems decent, but still kinda boring. I am 40 now, and I have been studying Japanese for over half my life, but in total I am probably only a few years in since I haven't completely immersed myself. I think in the next decade I want to get to N3 listening level, and if I do that I think I can start reading books and watching tv shows pretty comfortably. Wish me luck!

  • @EnglishWithIzabela
    @EnglishWithIzabela 3 года назад +5

    When I moved to the US (decades ago) I was a teen, i spoke 0 english. What Matt said about spending all his time in the library studying hit hard because I spent all my time with the dictionary. ESL (in my humble opinion) is a laughable waste of time and I refused to go, I insisted on full immersion into a regular classroom and I struggled but became fluent in 3 to 6 months. AJATT (or in my case AEATT) works and if someone has the discipline to set aside socializing for the sake of self improvement for a few months, it pays off.

    • @Komatik_
      @Komatik_ 2 года назад +2

      Japanese does have the added kink of having a complete clusterfuck of a writing system. Raw immersion's a good bit easier if the language is written with a phonetic script.

  • @LittleThingsinJapan
    @LittleThingsinJapan 3 года назад +27

    This is a serious analysis of Matt's method. Great content full of inputs for Japanese self study .👍

  • @paulwalther5237
    @paulwalther5237 3 года назад +5

    I'm a Japanese learner and not surprisingly a fan of Matt's RUclips videos. When he talked about the lightning striking and this sudden crazy obsession with the language as the big drive propelling him to learn the language I felt like he hit the nail on the head. That happened with me for German around age 21 and later with Japanese at age 34. I've studied other languages and enjoy it and I try to get that same lightning strike phenomenon to happen again but I can't seem to make it happen. I still enjoy other languages but I think I'm doomed to A2 maybe B1 or just semi competence in the languages as opposed to achieving something really special. (I've gotten a strong B2 in German and Japanese)

  • @The235Anil
    @The235Anil 3 года назад +17

    Matt is the king of language learning RUclips!

  • @diariosdelextranjero
    @diariosdelextranjero 3 года назад +7

    His content on languge learning is one of the best that is out there.
    He's authentic and real 👌🏼

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +2

      It is, that's why I chose him as a subject!

  • @Aaron-kr7rj
    @Aaron-kr7rj 3 года назад +7

    I'll know I have finally mastered Japanese when my hairline comes back like matt's

  • @christobotha7191
    @christobotha7191 3 года назад +3

    Olly, thank you very much for this video. I needed some inspiration. I am from South Africa and I started to learn a local language called Sotho. i find your videos very inspiring and helpful
    Baie dankie !
    Groete Christo

  • @phoenixhou4486
    @phoenixhou4486 3 года назад +9

    It’s a really interesting niche you found in the language-learning community! Abusolutely love it! Maybe you can analyst my case sometime lol😂😂😂

  • @DengueBurger
    @DengueBurger 3 года назад +1

    I love this video, it’s like a trimmed down version of my favorite videos of Matt’s language learning journey.

  • @thenaturalyogi5934
    @thenaturalyogi5934 2 года назад +1

    This just proves how personal a language is to the person outside of it being a language everyone in your life speaks. There are those languages and then there are languages that you just want to learn because are curious about it and excited to listen to and use it. I learned Mandarin in school for close to 15 years but as soon as high-school was over I stopped using it and all Palace dramas and martial arts shows became boring to me that I don't enjoy watching them so that language has been at a B2 until now I can understand and speak at the same level comfortable enough to not get lost in a bigger Mandarin speaking city, I will get lost in provinces that speak other Chinese languages but the point is the journey is different for everyone.

  • @damianloder6080
    @damianloder6080 3 года назад +5

    Yeah! Amazing. Go get it, make them dreams come true! No excuses, persistence and consistency. Thanks Olly, very inspiring story. Maybe one day you can interview me, how I became fluent in Tagalog 🙂

  • @allayth3247
    @allayth3247 3 года назад +2

    One of you best videos Olly. Thank you so much.

  • @weil46
    @weil46 3 года назад +2

    i think it's never about how long it's take. never about 1 to 10 years od learning. i respect the way he did it. and i believe their will others can achieve that level in less time. for me i started learning since high school, but wasn't huge progress. and one day i had an opportunity to study in the us. and luckily since i want to learn the language. 20% came from institute and college 80% came from me. i spent a year in English institute and than took a break before college. and bcuz i wanted it. i transform my entire life to English and that how learned faster and be fluent. so the point is. if u want to learn, just transform ur daily life to the language u want to learn and u will make a huge progress in short time..

  • @completebilingual
    @completebilingual 3 года назад +14

    Yeah. The main reason that I feel that people move to Japan is because of something they're running from. Definitely. Everyone I've observed. Like not getting along with their family or not popular with the opposite gender or just plain hating their life. Me on the other hand, I didn't have a choice because I was 9 years old.

    • @niels2958
      @niels2958 3 года назад

      Isn't that the obvious reason for all people living outsite their country of origin? Migrating has always something to do with choosing a place where you think life is better or more valuable for various reasons. If you don't run from something or want to improve something for yourself, there wouldn't be any reason to move to another country (of course, moving together with your parents is the exception). Even when westerners doing welfare in poorer countries it is some kind of escaping (mostly from the fact that they might have lived a meaningless life before).
      In the case of Japan I think every reason is okay as long as you are really interested in the people and culture rather then phantasizing about living in some dream world that all your comic books and anime made you believe Japan is. Because, living in Japan (like really living, being responsible for earning money and stuff like that) has a lot of downsites. I often think that most people are making more of Japan than the country really has to offer, because they are too lost in their anime and fantasy. This goes especially for nerdish people coming from the US or Europe.

    • @completebilingual
      @completebilingual 3 года назад

      @@niels2958
      No, that's not true.
      Running away and finding someplace you'd like to be instead are two completely different things.
      I've heard a few stories of people moving to Japan simply because of their fascination with Japan.
      That's not ESCAPING something, that's a HOBBY.
      Of course, the average listener is not interested in drama, so you will never hear about the people who didn't get along with their family or didn't fit in in American society and decided to come to Japan.

    • @niels2958
      @niels2958 3 года назад

      @@completebilingual well, moving to another country because you feel not fitting in the country/society of your origin is in my opinion a fair reason. I know a lot of chinese living in Japan, guess what their reason is (besides their interest in Japanese culture).
      But I agree, running from personal problems that are not connected with something like political might be a huge mistake because personal problems will not disdappear just because people move to another country. In the case of Japan it might get even worse because besides all the superficial kawaii bullshit Japan has a quite cold society (depending on the people you can make friends with of course) and a weak mental health system in general which is even worse for foreigners.

    • @completebilingual
      @completebilingual 3 года назад

      @@niels2958
      Everyone else sticks it out when the problem is political. Why should the people that RUN AWAY to Japan be any different? They're wimps, that's how they're different.
      You don't have an entire country migrate to a different one.
      That's just absurd.

  • @FlowUrbanFlow
    @FlowUrbanFlow 3 года назад +6

    I find it interesting that people call it native level when you're fluent with a good accent. I've seen a lot of people that are very fluent that seem to just completely ignore pronunciation being accurate, and it baffles me. I don't consider myself very good at Japanese but people who are much better than me have complimented me on how good I sound when I speak. I used to do a lot of impressions as a kid so maybe It's easier for me to change my voice than most people

    • @rsmith02
      @rsmith02 3 года назад

      Maybe it's better to not sound so good but understand everything.

  • @adamgilleece4936
    @adamgilleece4936 3 года назад +3

    Great video! I'd also really like to hear more about your "runaway" to France. I can definitely relate to that feeling of wanting to move as far away from home as possible, and that's what I did last summer. So far it's been great, but I'd like to hear about your experience and if you think it was the right move looking back.

  • @learneratheart2564
    @learneratheart2564 3 года назад +3

    This is a really cool video format!

  • @UltraNyan
    @UltraNyan 2 года назад +1

    That wall back in his bedroom, I wonder what stories it could tell.

  • @sideshowbob6241
    @sideshowbob6241 Год назад +2

    Learning Japanese seemed to also regenerate his hairline

  • @itsumoookini
    @itsumoookini 3 года назад +1

    👍すごく役に立ちました。

  • @Donavelo
    @Donavelo 3 года назад +7

    Thank you for your content Olly and yes Matt is definitely one of the examples to follow when approaching languages.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +1

      You're welcome, glad you enjoy it!

  • @hijay8501
    @hijay8501 2 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for this. This was so helpful I'm very motivated now, thank you!

  • @Alaedious
    @Alaedious 3 года назад +3

    My favorite video you've made so far. I found your commentaries very interesting and on point. 😎👍
    Great work!

  • @SlyGuyMorad
    @SlyGuyMorad Год назад +1

    So what I got from this: he just learned by flash cards, memorizing as many words, studying the language in-depth in school, complete immersion in the language, and practicing speaking with Japanese friends.

  • @chesterfarrington9853
    @chesterfarrington9853 Год назад +1

    Yeah this happened to me with Puerto Rico. I lived and worked there for a while, but only half learned the language, so conversations with my coworkers were brief, and simplistic. Couldn't really make close friends because we had to talk to each other like we were 6 year olds

  • @stephenbui490
    @stephenbui490 Год назад

    Interesting !. I capture that the idea keys of success are "not giving up " and "doing it with your passion"

  • @jadeevergreen
    @jadeevergreen 3 года назад +4

    I've been studying Japanese for about 4 years and recently I've been stuck between not being completely bad at Japanese, but also not actually being good in it either. That's why I've been trying to study by immersing myself more in the language by watching News and listening to Podcasts. As I'm not interested in most of the mainstream anime and light novels, I sometimes find it hard to find content I can immerse myself in that is also accesible in my home country. Does anyone have any recommendations?

  • @anamilliebaez8920
    @anamilliebaez8920 3 года назад +1

    Perfect vid for me. Thank you Olly and Matt for sharing your knowledge and experience. This vid is gold!

  • @alexiscool8474
    @alexiscool8474 4 месяца назад +1

    As a beginner, All Japanese All the Time sounds more like All Sentence-Mining All the Time.

  • @anitawaters4745
    @anitawaters4745 3 года назад +2

    Inspiring video! Thank you 🙏

  • @nullifiedou
    @nullifiedou 3 года назад +4

    While i don't have time to watch this because I'm too busy applying Matts strategies everyday, I'm making time because I can allow a little bit of english content in my system right 😂

  • @del2744
    @del2744 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video Olly, merci beaucoup c'est très intéressant ! En tant que française qui apprend le japonais depuis plusieurs mois (années...) je suis très touchée de voir l'implication de Matt et surtout le rêve accompli ! Je suis curieuse d'avoir votre ressenti sur l'apprentissage du japonais en comparaison à l'apprentissage du français... C'est l'objet de blagues entre mes amis japonaises et moi : combien le japonais est plus difficile à apprendre (elles ne sont pas d'accord haha !). Au final, les langues nous rapprochent, on se comprend sur beaucoup de choses :)

  • @TheBillaro
    @TheBillaro 3 года назад

    As a marketer, you are on point with all of your little comments, well researched and presented ;)

  • @onoff101
    @onoff101 3 месяца назад

    ty for enlightening us; he started as a child so yeah I understand better why

  • @jukeClassic
    @jukeClassic 3 года назад +3

    THANK YOU FOR THIS VIDEO!! I feel like I've learned so much I can apply to my own attempts at immersion learning through this video. I have so many gray areas in my understanding of immersion learning but feel like this cleared up more things than any other video I can think of!

  • @naxcapfolsap1683
    @naxcapfolsap1683 3 года назад +12

    Make one about a person who learned Cantonese and korean through the same method!!

  • @jackattack5209
    @jackattack5209 3 года назад +9

    Forget how he learned Japanese. How tf did he grow his hair back?

  • @ndlugani2008
    @ndlugani2008 3 года назад +14

    I like Matts tenacity in his endeavour to learn Japanese. I think the principals of immersion can apply well to learn any language. However in a world where we need to work, be with our family etc i do not agree that having the language around us at 'all' times is practical. I think te Mass Immersion Approach is for anyone who has a BURNING desire to learn one language to its fullest.. Not for those who simply learn languages to enjoy their time in a foreign country, at university etc. This point was mentioned by Steve Kauffman in his interview with MattvJapan, which i think is worthy of mention.
    There are over 2000 languages in the world, Japanese is just one drop in that ocean. To learn it to the extent that Matt had i think you need strong motivation otherwise in my opinion you could do something more conducive with the time you have.

    • @storylearning
      @storylearning  3 года назад +2

      I agree completely

    • @Aditya-te7oo
      @Aditya-te7oo 3 года назад

      Ndlugani Yaw Absolutely. I'm learning French and I really really want to be as good as Matt is in Japanese. I LOVE this language and WANT TO get to a near-native level of this language. I just want it.

    • @brendon2462
      @brendon2462 3 года назад +1

      @@Aditya-te7oo i hope you do good luck

    • @Aditya-te7oo
      @Aditya-te7oo 3 года назад

      @@brendon2462 Thanks. 😅😅😊

  • @hijeffhere
    @hijeffhere Год назад +1

    I'm laughing while watching this video because I can relate to Matt at this point of my learning.
    I was so obsessed with perfection that I forgot to enjoy my life. Then I realized that and said to my self "FCK IT! I'll throw away these books and immerse myself instead."
    Right now, I'm seeing more progress than before and overall, I'm happier because I can spend my life living. I'm nowhere near Matt's level but someday, I will definitely! I'll never give up until then

  • @amadeusmalonje8263
    @amadeusmalonje8263 3 года назад +2

    Great video, would love to see more videos like this. Definitely picked up somethings from this

  • @aidenbradfield1129
    @aidenbradfield1129 Год назад +2

    5:15 same thing for me I want to move to Japan to get away from problems (mainly social) and start over

  • @maniravandi5983
    @maniravandi5983 3 года назад +3

    he is our language prophet

  • @damon2847
    @damon2847 3 года назад +4

    Interesting video, Olly.
    He's definitely taken control of his own learning, but what I found especially interesting is that once he started really speaking Japanese, he was dictating the topic, and direction of the conversations. I've noticed this about other language learners who impress their interlocutors. I think this is especially ego-boosting when used among speakers who are not used to non-L1 speakers speaking their language proficiently.

  • @TheDynamite333
    @TheDynamite333 2 года назад +2

    had opportunity to study Japanese in high school
    had opportunity to study Japanese in community college
    had opportunity to work abroad in Japan (means full immersion)
    I don't say that his accomplishment can be dismissed easily but come on now! I don't see anything particularly distinguishable here.

  • @alysimone
    @alysimone 3 года назад +9

    This series is super interesting and insightful. Thanks for taking the time to make this video series!

  • @OKOKOKOKOKOKOK-zn2fy
    @OKOKOKOKOKOKOK-zn2fy 4 месяца назад

    Hiragana and Katakana first. Then, Genki 1 and 2 for grammar and vocab and Remember the Kanji... the first 400 Kanji.
    Get some easy to read picture books to practice your hiragana and katakana. You will start to recognize some of the kanji too.
    Then, blitz the 2000 most frequently used words in vocabulary sentences from native Japanese speakers.
    That will give you a base so that you can comprehend most words when you hear them.
    You will understand about 90% of what you hear when you start the next phase.
    Then, you put the text books away and immerse yourself in Anime, TV, Manga, grade readers, and movies.
    You will have enough of a base in Japanese to get the 10% of the words that you don't know in each sentence. (Comprehensible immersion.)
    Reading books that are just above your ability really seems to help at this point. It should be a struggle.
    It's not a race, but if your pace is faster, you will forget less and retain more of what you learn. When you keep seeing the same kanji over and over, they start to really stick.
    I think the problem for older learners is not that they can't learn, it's that they forget faster. More repetition and re-encountering information is needed.
    A kid will sit in front of the TV, learn the alphabet song, and then sing the alphabet song for the next two weeks. ( They are over-training the information. )
    Adults won't do that. (...and that might be what it takes and why the kids are more successful. )

  • @Eudaimonia239
    @Eudaimonia239 Год назад

    I am currently learning korean with a similar method , so far is going good.

  • @mohammadk6548
    @mohammadk6548 3 года назад

    Breakdown method videos are great 👍🏻

  • @paulwalther5237
    @paulwalther5237 3 года назад

    I like this video I'll have to look for other videos where you analyze someone's successful language journey.

  • @mapplehitoritheartist9114
    @mapplehitoritheartist9114 2 года назад +1

    huh.. this explains how i learned english better than my sis at school. i just started reading and hearing english (primordially from videogames and series).. to a point i jsut understand it.. though have a really thicc mexicant accent... O.0

  • @SalmonJumps
    @SalmonJumps 3 года назад +1

    'Success takes more than passion, it takes obsession.' - Grant Cardone

  • @iam03j32
    @iam03j32 3 года назад +2

    I’m at a crossroads... I want to learn Japanese so bad but I’ve been learning Spanish for a few years and I’m at a decent level but not fluent. Idk if I should just put Spanish to the side and focus on Japanese or if I should just go all out and achieve fluency in Spanish and then learn Japanese... damnnnnnn

    • @Themoment888
      @Themoment888 3 года назад +1

      If you watch lindiebots, she has this method where she learns another language in the language she's learned. So learn Japanese using textbooks written in Spanish ect.

  • @garpthegramps4282
    @garpthegramps4282 2 года назад +1

    How would you use these tips if not as lucky as Matt and getting things such as trips etc?

  • @MartijnMols
    @MartijnMols 3 года назад +5

    what about reading a book out loud? Two birds one stone

    • @experimentingme7669
      @experimentingme7669 3 года назад

      I try to do that. I'm at beginner level. So when I read out loud I don't understand what I'm reading. 🤣It's like I can't read, speak and understand at the same time. But I will get there! ☺️

  • @williamrios6976
    @williamrios6976 3 года назад +1

    The real key? .. NEVER GIVE UP! 👍🏼

  • @PD-ws4td
    @PD-ws4td Год назад +2

    His face looks like it was pasted in incorrectly in photoshop. Like it’s being slightly to big for his head… uncanny.

  • @Mango_416
    @Mango_416 Месяц назад

    the way i looked at it is that if Spanish conquistadors held by the Aztecs as slaves managed to learn the ridiculously complicated language in only a few years with no textbooks no study guides and no real resources then its defiantly possible to learn a language now with all our current resources at our disposal

  • @Themoment888
    @Themoment888 3 года назад +4

    My sophomore year of college, I went to a study abroad in Korea. However, I also got depressed because the university I went to was an extension of my university and all the Korean students spoke English in class. Also, there were only 3 options for languages there Spanish, Chinese or Korean. So, most of the Korean students took Korean because it was an easy credit. For this reason, our professor had a hard time teaching the non natives and Korean students at the same time. It felt like my language learning was stifled there and I got frustrated. Now, I've graduated college and I'm using my own methods to learn Korean on my own and it's paying off. I would say, if you plan to study abroad, choose a university or program that will take your learning seriously but also not overwhelm you to the point of feeling inadequate. Also, take breaks during the day if you're doing full immersion to rest your mind.

  • @75adag
    @75adag 2 года назад

    It's incredible how shis voice changes completely when he speaks Japanese !

  • @solarpunk_hive1306
    @solarpunk_hive1306 Год назад

    Dai sempre ottimi spunti!

  • @edoardodepiccoli3004
    @edoardodepiccoli3004 3 года назад +3

    Language is almost all input

  • @weltschmertzz
    @weltschmertzz 3 года назад +1

    Japanese is very tough to learn. I've been trying to learn it on and off for years but I still can't communicate in it.

  • @ifechukwuejiofor8479
    @ifechukwuejiofor8479 Год назад

    Wow! Inspiring!

  • @chsinskyy
    @chsinskyy 3 года назад

    That's so dope 🙌