French, Urdu, Arabic, Kiswahili, Portuguese. Have you learned one of these languages? As global workers, language learning is often a given for us. For some, it’s a welcome challenge; for others, it’s a frustrating endeavor.
I happen to be one of those people who love language learning! In middle school and high school, I took French. In college, I studied French, English, and linguistics. I found learning a new vocabulary word, verb tense, or sentence structure fascinating. I merrily skipped to the top of the I-can-speak-French mountain. All was well—until I tried talking with a native French speaker.
During a study-abroad in Paris, my mountain crumbled. As I chatted comfortably with a new friend, I yammered on and on in my best French. She listened respectfully, then, when she could no longer stand it, she laughed and said, “Why do you say it like that?”
I was embarrassed, completely confused, and decided to stop yammering.
“It’s tu not tout,” she said.
After nearly 10 years of studying French, how had I missed this distinction? My friend kindly showed me how to change the shape of my mouth so I could make the sounds correctly. She began saying words that contrasted the sounds and invited me to repeat them after her. I felt humiliated but tried to say the words with the different u vowel sounds.
After a few more failed attempts, my friend simply carried on with the conversation we were in the middle of. She didn’t seem to care that I still couldn’t correctly pronounce the sounds. But she did care that I had tried, that I had a teachable spirit, that I was willing to humbly learn from her.
It mattered to my friend. It mattered that I tried.
I began to look at language learning in a new way. Rather than a mountain to climb and conquer, I began to see it as a doorway. When we step through the doorway, we find people! We’re not simply learning a language; we’re learning someone’s language. Thankfully, perfect French isn’t the goal. Instead, we’re given an opportunity to show Christ-like love for the people whose language we’re learning.
If you’ve learned another language, have you had an especially helpful language teacher or coach? What did they do that was helpful?
One of my language teachers used songs to teach us vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation. It was not only an effective method but was fun, too!