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Ultimate school
As you get older, you tend to get lonely, so I picked up Japanese.
Not because I had any connection to Japan. No family there. No particular interest in anime or sushi.
I was just bored. 71 years old, retired, and tired of crossword puzzles.
My daughter suggested I "try something completely different" to keep my mind sharp.
So I downloaded those language apps everyone talks about.
The ones with the cute cartoons and gamelike interfaces.
Three months in, I could count to 10 and name various animals. Thrilling.
Then I met Mitsuaki at my local coffee shop.
He was 73, Japanese-American, moved here 40 years ago.
When I proudly showed him my app progress, he just shook his head.
"Those apps are designed for young brains. They teach you like you're still in school. But our older brains don't work that way anymore."
He explained something fascinating: after 60, our brains actually process language completely differently than younger people.
"The traditional methods fight against how your brain works now. That's why it feels so frustrating."
Mitsuaki had been a language instructor before retiring. Had developed a method specifically for older learners.
A completely different approach that worked WITH our mature brains instead of against them.
He called it "Wisdom Learning" - because it leveraged the wisdom and experience our brains had accumulated over decades.
One week after trying his method, I was having simple conversations.
One month in, I was watching Japanese shows with subtitles and actually catching words.
Three months later, I joined a virtual language exchange with seniors in Tokyo.
Making real connections. Sharing stories. Laughing.
That was two years ago.
Today, I have six close friends in Japan. We video chat weekly. I've visited twice. They've shown me a Japan tourists never see.
At 73, I have a richer social life than I did at 53.
Language learning companies are trying to take this down.
Their business model depends on selling the same ineffective methods to everyone, regardless of age.
They don't want people to know there's a better way for mature learners.
If you're just looking for a casual hobby, stick with the free apps.
But if you're over 55 and want to actually experience the joy of speaking another language – to connect, to grow, to enrich your life?
Click below before this gets removed:
https://bloomkirei.com/autopilot/
facebook 美国
24721
热度
293926
展示估值
146
投放天数
2025-04-18
最新发现
Ultimate model
As you get older, you tend to get lonely, so I picked up Japanese.
Not because I had any connection to Japan. No family there. No particular interest in anime or sushi.
I was just bored. 71 years old, retired, and tired of crossword puzzles.
My daughter suggested I "try something completely different" to keep my mind sharp.
So I downloaded those language apps everyone talks about.
The ones with the cute cartoons and gamelike interfaces.
Three months in, I could count to 10 and name various animals. Thrilling.
Then I met Mitsuaki at my local coffee shop.
He was 73, Japanese-American, moved here 40 years ago.
When I proudly showed him my app progress, he just shook his head.
"Those apps are designed for young brains. They teach you like you're still in school. But our older brains don't work that way anymore."
He explained something fascinating: after 60, our brains actually process language completely differently than younger people.
"The traditional methods fight against how your brain works now. That's why it feels so frustrating."
Mitsuaki had been a language instructor before retiring. Had developed a method specifically for older learners.
A completely different approach that worked WITH our mature brains instead of against them.
He called it "Wisdom Learning" - because it leveraged the wisdom and experience our brains had accumulated over decades.
One week after trying his method, I was having simple conversations.
One month in, I was watching Japanese shows with subtitles and actually catching words.
Three months later, I joined a virtual language exchange with seniors in Tokyo.
Making real connections. Sharing stories. Laughing.
That was two years ago.
Today, I have six close friends in Japan. We video chat weekly. I've visited twice. They've shown me a Japan tourists never see.
At 73, I have a richer social life than I did at 53.
Language learning companies are trying to take this down.
Their business model depends on selling the same ineffective methods to everyone, regardless of age.
They don't want people to know there's a better way for mature learners.
If you're just looking for a casual hobby, stick with the free apps.
But if you're over 55 and want to actually experience the joy of speaking another language – to connect, to grow, to enrich your life?
Click below before this gets removed:
https://bloomkirei.com/autopilot/
facebook 美国
24294
热度
294057
展示估值
147
投放天数
2025-04-18
最新发现