I think we need to remind ourselves that output is much more difficult than input. This can apply to many aspects of life, but particularly to learning a language. So, speaking and writing will be more difficult than reading and listening, and that’s okay, it’s something to be expected in the language learning process.
Now, here’s the point where almost everyone tells you to find a tutor or conversation practice buddy and just try to brute force learn to speak. And to some degree, I think this can help. But there’s a missing piece that this guide on learning to speak Japanese covers well, here’s an excerpt:
Speaking Japanese is similar to playing a sport, especially for the process of being a good player and speaker. There are only three factors; Knowledge , Practice , and Experience . Suppose that people have read several how-to books on basketball and know the rules and the theories behind them, do you think they could sink a shot on the first try? Suppose that a basketball team has practiced shooting a lot, but has never experienced actually playing real games, do you think they could win their first one? This is applicable for languages as well.
|
Knowledge |
Practice |
Experience |
| Basketball |
Rule, Theory |
Shooting, Passing, etc. |
Participation in games |
| Japanese |
Writing System, Vocabulary, Grammar |
Pronunciation Practice, Read-Aloud Method, Instantaneous Composition Method |
Interactions with native speakers, Intensive and Extensive reading |
However, the importance of the practice is often ignored in languages. As far as we know, a lot of people go straight into interactions with native speakers after acquiring some of the grammar and the vocabulary.
Some people can jump straight from Knowledge to Experience and do quite well. Sure, they’ll make plenty of mistakes along the way, but they get over them mostly unharmed, and therefore are able to progress in their language learning process. For them, this brute force approach might be intense, but it’s not overwhelming.
But I imagine that this straight jump can be truly overwhelming for other people, especially those with certain personality traits or mental health conditions (myself included: very introverted, shy, highly sensitive, and for a while now dealing with more anxious and depressive feelings than usual). For these kinds of people, this brute force approach can lead to a complete loss of words or to very stiff and unpleasant conversations, which we later use to blame and berate ourselves for our “failure” to speak properly, which can then lead to increased anxiety in the following conversations, which can then lead to avoidance, and then we’re stuck on a loop…
So, to avoid or at least reduce the chances of getting stuck in this loop, we would do better by focusing on Practice before or along with Experience. Some of the suggestions proposed here in this thread (making up sentences and having conversations in your head, shadowing, reading aloud, role playing) are good examples of Practice!