Frustrated in 20s and slowing down Wanikani to focus on reading

Ahh ok, my misunderstanding there, sorry! Yeah definitely, it’s really beneficial to mix up what you’re doing, we’re on the same page.

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I’ve been in a similar situation before. I think what you’ve planned out here is a good idea and makes a lot of sense. N4 is a great time to start reading imo, especially with the help of ABBC and Satori Reader! And I noticed that once I started reading, I kept seeing a lot of Wanikani words and kanji I had trouble with and was able to really learn them and the context they’re used in. Same with grammar, if you’re having any trouble with the grammar you’re learning on Bunpro, you’ll likely start to really understand them once you come across them when reading. So I think reading at this point is a great next step!

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I’m not as far through Wanikani but in a similar situation life-wise - 40, job, married, two small children, passed N5 a couple of years ago, working on N4 grammar. My plan is to just keep going steadily at Wanikani and Japanese in general. The Team Snails on Vacation thread is a nice place to hang out if you want some encouragement taking it steady.

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Umm, humble brag much? :roll_eyes:

I stopped at around 30 because I was like, this is too hard for the use I’m getting out of it, considering kanji stops being the most common ones. Changed to focusing on everything else and it worked out pretty well.

Reading is imo the best way to actually cement the kanji to memory.

I wouldn’t say 30 is the place to switch, necessarily. There should be some reading since before depending on your grammar level, but yeah. Some people hit diminishing returns on kanji at different points. Do what works for you. :slightly_smiling_face:

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Hi, sorry, what is Yotsuba and how it helps you to improve reading? thank you.
I’m new so i don’t have a meaningful advice… i’m just in level 7, buuuut this sounds hard. Buena suerte.

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It’s just the best manga ever.

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As many have mentioned, 1.5 hours/day is a LOT of time to spend on WK. Everyone learns differently, but I agree that that’s at the far end of the spectrum.

You don’t mention how many sessions you have per day nor how many items you typically review in each session. Is this one marathon session, or two, three, or even more sessions spread throughout the day? I’ve always done just one ~45 minute session per day for what it’s worth, but I’d recommend two or even three sessions shorter sessions per day if you can swing it.

Most people seem to prefer a pace of about 6 to 10 questions (or 3-5 items) per minute (depending mostly on typing speed!). While it’s good to struggle to recall some items (that struggle actually programs the neural pathways in your brain) it’s bad to spend too much time on any individual item or, worse, most items. It’s often better to just give up if you can’t answer in 20-30 seconds or so.

Remember that repetition is a huge part of the process, and answering incorrectly just gives you more repetitions for an item. That’s what you want! The ideal case is when you’ve seen most items enough times that you recognize them and can answer instantly and effortlessly.

This explains the frustration for sure. You mention only 50 apprentice items, but how many guru items do you have? If you’re spending 1.5 hours/day with only 50 apprentice items, I’m wondering if you have a huge number of guru items that you haven’t really learned well yet.

I’m a fan of the rule-of-thumb to keep apprentice-items + guru-items/10 around 100 to 150 items, since those will always be the huge majority of items in your daily workload.

Some userscript suggestions

It can be edifying to configure the ultimate timeline user script to show the SRS breakdown of scheduled reviews for the next 120 days.

Mine looks like this:

Notice how pink and purple (apprentice and guru) dominate the next several days of reviews).

I’m biased, but I’m also a fan of the GanbarOmeter to manage one’s workload.

Here’s mine:

Since you’re on level 24 and started more than 6 months ago, you should also have a few master and enlightened items each day. It’s totally normal to miss a higher percentage of those since you haven’t reviewed them in months, but they should only be a relatively small fraction of your daily workload.

Lastly, I’d STRONGLY RECOMMEND stopping lessons altogether and using the extra study feature to get in more repetitions until your overall review accuracy gets to a point where it starts feeling easy rather than frustrating. You need to figure out if it’s “recent lessons” or “recent mistakes” that are causing you the most grief, but either way the solution is more out-of-band reviews.

The old saw about marathon vs. sprint is true. Motivation is key. Who cares how long it takes? As long as you’re making progress and enjoying the learning process, you’ll get there eventually. Quitting is the only sure path to failure.

Yes. Extremely. Especially after the first six months when enlightened items begin to appear in your queue.

Maybe, but unless you really enjoy manga, children’s stories or even the truly excellent Satori Reader content, it’s hard to read much until around you’ve reached around level 35 (95% of JLPT N3 content).

I’ve only recently started to feel even moderately comfortable reading (though I’ve spoken the language poorly for many years). It’s never too early to start reading, but one needs to build up an awfully large corpus of recognizable vocabulary before reading is anything but a difficult slog.

Finally, remember that even level 60 is just the beginning of a journey. Relax. You’ll never stop learning about the language.

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Thanks everyone for the clarifications, support, and encouragement!

Just to clarify, when I say 1.5 hours that’s a very rough estimate over Wanikani, 1 cure dolly video a day, bunpro, and two WK ABBC bookclubs.

This is my current progress. I’ve been seeing the number of leeches steadily climb over the last two months, part of what prompted me to slow from 100 apprentice items to 50, especially as I’m forgetting some enlightened items and my brain is struggling to remember everything (even stuff I thought I had remember, such as the difference between 生む and 生まれる I’ve been getting wrong lately).

Overall, it’s very comforting to know I’m not alone in not wanting to race for level 60 and feeling that it’s better to slow down and focus on reading and keep WK on maintenance. I’m struggling to completely stop WK progress but instead focus on having a certain number of apprentice and doing new lessons only when I have fewer apprentice, even if it that means it takes two months for one level.

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Completely stopping seems unreasonable, because the farther you get with WK, the easier real reading becomes.

IMO, there are only two differences between real reading for practice and WK:

  • WK won’t teach you any grammar (except for the example sentences)

  • WK only teaches you the absolute most common vocabulary and some (often unusual) words to help learn the readings for individual characters. Real reading will help you to learn the vocabulary that interests you. Note that even level 60 only teaches about 1/4 to 1/6 of the vocabulary a moderately literate person will be exposed to.

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While this is of course true, WK is not the only way to learn vocab/kanji.

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Certainly not! :wink:

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i heartily recommend reading.

while reading, i noticed that my grammar was quite lacking, so i’ve been doing some catch-up on grammar. but i rely on the reading to reinforce the grammar.

manga might be easier to start with, but i’m not convinced about that. the text being in image format makes it difficult to look things up, and you’ll definitely need to look up kanji and words. having to look up kanji by radicals can be tedious, and slow your reading to a crawl. that said, i did start with manga myself.

but i’ve just finished my first LN, and it’s transformed my experience of japanese. ploughing through pages and pages of text like that has contextualised everything i’ve learned so far. 100% would recommend.

(p.s. i also rushed the first 24 levels of WK, then crashed. 10 lessons a day seems good to me currently)

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In the 3 or 5 years (depending on who you ask) that I have been studying Japanese, I found these times are best to just slow down but don’t stop.

When burnout sets in, I usually just make sure my reviews are done and only do the number of lessons I want to or can. I think people put too much pressure on finishing WaniKani than actually doing things in Japanese. Now (Level 24) is a great time to start reading the stuff you want to! So just enjoy the process but stick with the process at the speed you need.

My own little insert:
Right now I’m having learners block with Quartet 1 at the moment and struggling to get through the workbook for Ch 6. I can do other things for studying that I don’t mind though, so I just do those instead.

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I also hit a wall around the same level. I put WK on vacation mode for 3-4 months and just read Japanese fiction and manga the entire time. Didn’t do any other SRS, just extensively read. Not sure how to quantify how much I’d progressed in my overall learning, but it did give me a fresher perspective and felt less burnt out when I did return to WK. Exclusively and extensively reading for that much of a time also made me comfortable about reading in general, on being content with not looking up every single word and rather just focus on getting the gist or the story.

Feel free to take a break and switch to other aspects of the language (I also did some stint of listening only, and though I didn’t find it as enjoyable as reading, it was still “something different”), especially if you’re starting to dread doing your reviews.

I did lessen my WK workload after I hit 28 to 30-ish levels because I wanted to spend more time with reading. I focus now on just speed-learning the kanjis so I could unlock and learn them asap, and just pick out available vocabulary to learn, keeping my overall Apprentice limit of 60.

Good luck!

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General agreement with the above, plus a few more cents…

I started reading manga more seriously in the 20s, and I found that when I looked up vocab on jisho, it very often was just a few levels ahead of where I was. It provided good motivation to keep going!

I can’t count the number of things I got could not keep straight until I had a memorable concrete real life example. Maybe it was from a song, or a line in a show, or from some manga, but I bet you’ll find in some ways diversifying your attention may make WK go faster (if you held time spent at a constant)

This is probably rehashing what was said before, but progress on WK is (usually) not a goal in itself. It’s only useful to the extent that is helps you get to your real goals faster. So use it however works best for you!

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Thank you for this thread! I’ve been feeling a strong sense of dread lately, mostly because I’ve been rushing like a speed demon and haven’t burned anything yet…
download

Now that I’ve committed to study for a career change, I’ll be very happy to slow down. Initially I was aiming to get the most of my yearly subscription so I could be done with it ASAP, but now I feel I’ll be more at peace buying a lifetime subscription at the end of the year.

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it takes almost 6 months between when you learn an item and when it gets burned (if you never make any mistakes). depending on just how fast you’re going, you could reach level 27 before you get your first burns (it was 24 for me).

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I hit the wall ages ago. The mnemonics don’t work with me and I find the unlearning of Japanese I already know difficult.
And, I’ll be honest, I just lost interest in Japanese and to a great extent Japan.

Don’t worry about the wall. If you have the motivation, you’ll get over it. If not, then stick around for the conversations.

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Curious what you mean by the unlearning of Japanese you already know. Radicals?

Cause otherwise, I can’t think of something you need to unlearn.

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Yeah, the radicals and the meanings they’re given in Wanikani when it’s different from the Japanese.

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