10 Secrets to Learning Spanish Like Crazy
If
you want to learn a language quickly and inexpensively, you have picked
the right language. With the exception of English, Spanish is spoken
more than any other language in the U.S. You will have plenty of
opportunities to practice your Spanish with native speakers of Spanish
and even Americans that learned Spanish as their first language.
The ability to speak Spanish also
opens many career or business opportunities. As an attorney, the ability
to speak Spanish has enabled me to represent many clients simply because
I spoke their language.
Of course, if you live in certain
cities or states you will have more opportunities to practice your
Spanish. For example, if you live in New York you can find many Puerto
Ricans, Dominicans, Colombians, Ecuadorians, Peruvians, Mexicans, and
other Latin Americans an Latinos to practice your Spanish. If you live
in Texas or California you may find a lot of Mexicans that can help you
with your Spanish. In Florida, there are many Cubans.
My objective is to give you a
multitude of tips and techniques to help you speed up your learning of
Spanish. I also want to reveal a number of things that you can do to
make your learning experience as inexpensive as possible.
Numero Uno: Immerse Yourself
If you really want to learn Spanish,
you need to immerse yourself in the language and the culture. Do you
know why you learned English so easily? It’s not just because you were a
child when you embarked on your study of the English language. It’s
mainly because you were immersed in it. As a child you heard English 24
hours a day and 7 days a week.
If you could hear and speak Spanish 24
hours a day and 7 days a week you would also learn Spanish incredibly
fast. Although it may be difficult for you to hear and speak Spanish 24
hours a day and 7 days a week, there are things you can do to help
immerse yourself in the language.
Instead of listening to your favorite
music station when you’re driving in your car, play a Spanish
instructional CD. Of course, if your favorite music station happens to
be a Salsa or Merengue radio station, you can listen to the Spanish
lessons CD some other time.
When you’re home watching TV, try
substituting MTV or the Discovery Channel for Univision or Telefutura.
If you are jogging, working out in the gym, taking a walk, or just
waiting in the doctor’s office, play a cassette or CD from your favorite
Spanish course. If you are waiting on line in the supermarket, instead
of reading that gossipy tabloid, press “play” on your your cassette
player and listen to a Spanish vocabulary tape or some other Spanish
lessons tape or CD.
Have you ever met a Hispanic person
that has lived in the U.S. for many decades and is still unable to speak
English? That’s because he or she has little or no exposure to English
and is constantly immersed in Spanish. That’s what you must try to
emulate. Expose yourself and immerse yourself as much as possible in the
Spanish language and Latin American Culture.
Numero Dos: Develop the Right Habits
This is probably the most important
advice that I can give you about learning Spanish or any other foreign
language. More than anything else, your habits will determine how
quickly you learn Spanish. In fact, your habits will determine if you
actually learn the language or not.
Of course it helps if you have a
language learning aptitude. Unfortunately, I didn’t have a language
learning aptitude. In fact, I couldn’t speak English until I was four
years old despite the fact that English was my first language and the
only language spoken in my home as a child. However, my desire to learn
Spanish was strong enough for me to develop the necessary habits for
learning Spanish.
Out of habit, every time I turned on
my television it was tuned to Unvision, Telefutura or HBO Latino. Out of
habit, every time I got in my car the radio dial was set to the Latino
radio station Latino Mix. If not, then a CD or cassette from a Spanish
course was playing.
Out of habit, if I went out to a club
it was a Salsa or Merengue club. If I went out to a restaurant, it was
probably a Latin American restaurant. Not that Latino food “es mi plato
favorito.” But if I go get a steak at Outback, I am probably not going
to get a chance to practice my Spanish with the waiter.
In fact, if I was dating someone, she
was either a native of a Spanish speaking country or she learned Spanish
as her first language here in the U.S.
If you develop and cultivate these
habits, you will learn Spanish extremely fast.
Numero Tres: Learn Spanish the Same Way that You Learned
English
This may come as a shock to you, but
in the high schools and colleges in the U.S., the method that they are
using to teach Spanish is all wrong.
If you want to learn Spanish, you must
learn it the same way that you learned English. Let me you ask you a
question. Which did you learn first: How to speak English or how to read
and write English? Of course you learned how to speak it first.
Then why are they teaching the
students in the high schools and colleges to read and write Spanish
first? That’s because they don’t expect the students to ever be able to
speak Spanish. And that’s exactly what happens. Students take several
years of Spanish, graduate, and cannot even speak Spanish.
There’s another problem with learning
to read and write Spanish before you learn to speak it. By default, you
subconsciously learn how to pronounce the Spanish words the way you
would pronounce them in English.
I made that same catastrophic mistake.
It took me countless hours and countless dollars in private instruction
to correct the error. After much wasted time and money, I discovered
that the mistake could have been avoided. I should not have learned to
read and write Spanish until I had at least reached the intermediate
level of conversational Spanish.
You are going to have to trust me on
this one …. Nothing sounds more excruciating to Latin American ears than
a “Gringo” with a thick American accent speaking Spanish. How do I know?
Because now that I speak Spanish fluently, every time I hear an American
with a strong American accent speaking Spanish it makes me cringe.
Numero Cuatro: Relate to What
You Already Know
Many words in Spanish are related to
English. When you learn words in Spanish and you relate them to words in
English, it is much easier to remember the Spanish words. For example,
the word “beber” means to drink. If you make a mental note or written
note that the word “beber” is related to the English word “beverage” it
is easier to remember. Here’s another example. The word “vegetales” is
related to the English word “vegetables.” If you make a note of this,
the Spanish word “vegetales” will be much easier to remember.
Numero Cinco: Make Use of On-Line Resources
There are a number of on-line
resources that can assist you in learning Spanish. Many of them are
free. One of my favorites is www.MyLanguageExchange.com. My Language
Exchange is an on-line community of language learners. You can meet
people who are learning virtually any language at
www.MyLanguageExchange.com.
Since you are studying Spanish you
would try to meet someone at My Language Exchange that’s a native
speaker of Spanish and is trying to learn English. You could become pen
pals with the person. But I recommend that you become more than just pen
pals. As I mentioned earlier, the only way that you can learn how to
speak Spanish is by actually speaking it.
At My Language Exchange, you can meet
people that are interested in doing “voice chat.” Voice Chat permits you
to have a live audio chat session with one or more persons on-line. This
is one of my favorite techniques for learning Spanish. I have practiced
with people from Mexico, Spain and Colombia at My Language Exchange.
Normally, I would help them with
English for 30-45 minutes. In exchange, they would help me for the
equivalent amount of time with my Spanish.
The last time I checked, My Language
Exchange was offering two memberships. There’s a Free membership. And
there’s a Gold membership. The Gold membership costs only $12 for a full
year. That averages out to just $1 per month.
Numero Seis: Become an Imitator
From the very beginning of your
learning-Spanish journey, try your best to imitate native speakers. Try
to imitate their pronunciations, their intonations, etc. This is not
something that you should delay. In fact, this is one of the most
important facets of learning any language.
Have you ever had someone come up to
you and speak in what sounded like a foreign language. Maybe the person
was asking for directions or some other information. And after the
person rambled on for a while, you realized that the person was not, in
fact, speaking a foreign language. He or she was actually speaking
English. But his or her accent was so thick that you initially believed
that the person was speaking a foreign language.
This can happen to you as a student of
Spanish if you are not careful. You must make a purposeful effort to
sound like native speakers. I know many Americans who claim that they
speak Spanish fluently but their accents are awful. When I hear them
speak, I say to myself “what a Gringo.” So I can only imagine what a
native speaker of Spanish says about the person.
If you wait until you reach the
intermediate level to start sounding like native speakers it will be too
late to break the chains of habit. Make a deliberate effort to start
now. It will begin to pay off when you start noticing how many native
speakers of Spanish tell you how great your accent sounds.
Numero Siete: Practice Makes Perfect
Practice Makes Perfect is more than
just a saying. It’s a language-learning reality. When we were children
we were completely unaware of the emotion called “embarrassment.”
Throughout my teenage years and adult
life, my mother would tell me about a story – a true one – that when I
was four years old I had wanted a drink of water, and I asked “wah wah –
wah wah.” My sister, on the other hand, barely two years old at the time
would say “mother may I have a glass of water please.”
Despite the fact that a child not much
more than a toddler was speaking perfect English and I was grunting like
a caveman, I never became discouraged or embarrassed. I kept at it until
I got it right. And now I can say water in two different languages –
actually three if I include Portuguese.
You have to take the same child-like
attitude toward learning Spanish. You will make many mistakes. You will
mispronounce words. You will use the wrong vocabulary. And you will make
grammatical errors. But never let this hold you back from practicing
your Spanish with a native speaker – even if the native is a total
stranger.
You must accept the reality that
making mistakes is a part of learning any language. If you are not
making mistakes, it’s because you are not speaking Spanish to anyone.
And if you are not speaking, then you are not learning.
Keep in mind that Rome was not built
in a day. And neither was Madrid, San Juan, Santo Domingo, Cali, Mexico
City, Colón, Havana or Buenos Aires.
Numero Ocho: “But First You Must Believe . . .”
I don’t know if it was Peter Pan who
first said this one, but I am going to borrow it. It is imperative that
you believe in yourself and your ability to learn this beautiful
language. I cannot overemphasize this point.
I am a strong believer in the power of
thought. This is a technique that has not only helped me to learn
Spanish, but it has also helped me immensely in everything that I have
ever set out to do in life. I encourage you to use this same technique –
not only in learning Spanish – but with any goal that you wish to
accomplish.
In anything that I am striving to
accomplish, I first visualize the successful outcome of the goal.
After I have visualized the successful
outcome of the goal, in this case speaking Spanish fluently, I then map
out the steps that I must take in order to arrive at the accomplishment
of my goal. For example, the steps may involve practicing Spanish
everyday for one hour. I then put in writing the steps that I need to
take on a daily basis to accomplish my goal. Then I take action. Not
sporadic action or inconsistent action. I take daily, consistent,
tremendous action until my goal is accomplished.
Numero Nueve: And now for my favorite
Learning-Spanish technique: Get a Latin Amor
This technique may get you in a lot of
trouble if you are already married or otherwise in a committed
relationship. In other words, this suggestion is only for the single
people.
If you really want to learn Spanish
quickly, find a “significant other” that’s a native of a Spanish
speaking country. Preferably, someone that speaks very little or no
English. This way you will be forced to listen to and speak Spanish.
Numero Diez: Last but Certainly Not Least:
NEVER, NEVER, NEVER Give UP
If you stay focused you will surely
accomplish your goal of speaking Spanish proficiently or fluently. And
you have total control over whether you reach that goal in a year or two
or a decade or two. I hope that the techniques that I have outlined in
this report will enable you to accomplish your goal as quickly as you
desire.
You are also welcome to pass this
report on to anyone who you think may benefit from this report. However,
I do ask that you do not make any changes to this report if you pass it
on to anyone.
Patrick Jackson
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Patrick Jackson is the Founder of the
Learning Spanish Like Crazy system of learning Spanish. To learn more
about his system of learning Spanish visit his web site at
Learning Spanish Like Crazy